Winter Leagues
Posted: November 17th, 2008, 9:00 pm
When I first fished the West Mids WL in the 60s these were the venues:-
R Avon, Eckington
R Avon, Hampton Ferry
R Thames, Lechlade (usually twice)
North Bank of the River Nene
Oxford Canal, Kirtlington
Occasionally there was a leg at Rowington on the GU Canal.
It was 12 a side and there were around 15 teams in the League.
Cofton Hackett was the team of the day (I can remember most of their early team).
This was years before Starlets entered.
The Thames were generally the best matches; Eckington was the hardest.
The winning weight on the Oxford was generally around the 3 lb mark.
Believe it or not the matches on the North Bank were really good. In those days there were plenty of roach caught. Bream generally won.
I can remember one of our guys weighing in 8 lb or so fishing for bleak. He had lots of bleak plus a 3 lb odd tench caught about 2.5 feet deep. The North Bank match was always in December and it was much colder those days.
I can't remember ever a match being cancelled because of floods; the yardstick then was if it is in the banks it was on.
R Avon, Eckington
R Avon, Hampton Ferry
R Thames, Lechlade (usually twice)
North Bank of the River Nene
Oxford Canal, Kirtlington
Occasionally there was a leg at Rowington on the GU Canal.
It was 12 a side and there were around 15 teams in the League.
Cofton Hackett was the team of the day (I can remember most of their early team).
This was years before Starlets entered.
The Thames were generally the best matches; Eckington was the hardest.
The winning weight on the Oxford was generally around the 3 lb mark.
Believe it or not the matches on the North Bank were really good. In those days there were plenty of roach caught. Bream generally won.
I can remember one of our guys weighing in 8 lb or so fishing for bleak. He had lots of bleak plus a 3 lb odd tench caught about 2.5 feet deep. The North Bank match was always in December and it was much colder those days.
I can't remember ever a match being cancelled because of floods; the yardstick then was if it is in the banks it was on.