I just had some wonderful fishing on the Test sight fishing the Pheasant Tail Nymph. This days fishing inspired me to write an article that will appear in Fly Fishing and Fly Tying magazine. Here is a picture of one of the grayling I caught.....
Tuesday, 20 October 2009
Great fishing on the Test
I just had some wonderful fishing on the Test sight fishing the Pheasant Tail Nymph. This days fishing inspired me to write an article that will appear in Fly Fishing and Fly Tying magazine. Here is a picture of one of the grayling I caught.....
Thursday, 7 May 2009
Fishing by waterfalls - shutter speed.....
Just had some more great fishing on the Usk! What a great river. While I was there I messed around with my Canon EOS 40D SLR camera. In particular I was trying to catch the movement of water by adjusting the shutter speed.... Now this may sound like a simple thing to do and, to be fair it is a simple technique. The great thing about using a slow shutter speed on water is that while the water moves, everything else stays perfectly still so the motion is really captured in the image. See the two shots below to see what I am talking about....
Image 1 - taken with a fast shutter speed to capture all the action of the water from the tiniest droplet to the fractured appearance of the water....
Image 2 - slow shutter speed captures the movement of the water giving the still image a sense of movement.
If you adjust the shutter speed you need to take that into account by changing the aperture accordingly (to avoid over or under exposure). Most digital SLR cameras have an auto adjust which is really useful. That is to say that if you change the shutter speed then the camera will do the hard bit by working out what aperture to use. This is how the above shots were taken.
So there you have it - a really simple and well known trick, but one which was pretty much new to me until a couple of weeks ago so it just might be useful to you.......
I'll be back soon,
Robbie
Wednesday, 22 April 2009
Here is a picture of one of the magnificent Usk trout we caught. A cracking 2lber! Notice the idiosyncratic blue sheen on its cheek. The Usk trout are particularly well camerflouged to their surrounding environment and the red sandstone overwhich the Usk flows. This is because the trout population have retained much of their genetic integrity since the last ice age and have not been inbred with stocked fish. Most the fish we caught over the last few days were on Large Dark Olive immitations (LDOs hatch in droves during the early spring and the trout on the Usk, and elsewhere in the UK, can really lock onto them making for some great fishing. If you want to learn all about the detailed techniques of fishing the Usk Olive hatch or just want to pick up some tips then see the article section of my website: http://www.wildaboutfishing.co.uk/Articles.htm and take a look at 'Leopards and Large Dark Olives' which was published in the March edition of Trout and Salmon.
The leopard spotted brown trout in the picture took a 'peaping caddis' fly fished deep through the gutter. Fly choice is important, but fishing your fly exactly where the fish expects to see it is more important than worrying too much about fly choice.
More Usk photography and fishing tactics to follow.......
Cheers,
Robert
Fishing and Photography on the Fantastic River Usk, Wales
Hi Folks,
I have just come back from a wonderful few days of fly fishing and wildlife/landscape photography on the stunning River Usk, Wales. The fishing was fantastic and the light made for some awesome photographs (see below).

For this waterfall pitcure I used a slightly slower shutter speed than usual in order to capture the motion of the water - a trick often used by photographers. This image is soon to be published in the book I am currently working on a number of fishing and wildlife websites. Would you believe that every autumn you can stand at this waterfall and watch Atlantic salmon leaping the falls in their spectacular bid to spawn!
More Usk photographs and fishing tactics to follow..... watch this space,
Cheers,
Robert
Monday, 13 April 2009
Hi Everybody and Welcome to Wild About Fishing
Hi everybody!
Welcome to my new blog. Amongst other things I am a passionate fly fisherman, a writer and an ecologist. With your help I hope to build this blog into an interesting and useful resource for people who are interested in fly fishing, ecology, wildlife and landscape photography, wildlife documentaries, writing and much more. Please feel free to get involved and write on the blog because after all that is what makes a blog go round.
A bit about me: I have been writing for some time and I am a passionate fly fisherman, naturalist and ecologist. I also have a photographic interest which is echoed by my regular contributions to the world wide angling press. I am a regular angling writer for various fishing magazines including Fly Fishing and Fly Tying, Trout and Salmon and Fish Wild online for whom I write about wildlife, ecology and world fly fishing. I am currently developing my photographic skills and I have numerous wildlife photographs published to support my writing and have exhibited my angling and river photography in Oxford, UK.
What am I doing now? Next month I will be working on BBC Springwatch as a story developer and I hope to bring back some great pictures from the Pensthorpe Nature Reserve in Norfolk. I am also going fly fishing on the Usk this week where I hope to catch some beautiful hard fighting trout. I also hope to take some photographs and to see some otters, red kites, buzzards, grey wagtails and dippers too - fingers crossed. I will be posting on here following that trip to let you know how I get on and to discuss the fly fishing techniques and tactics I used and why.
Watch this space and please contribute your thoughts to this blog........
Cheers,
Robert
Welcome to my new blog. Amongst other things I am a passionate fly fisherman, a writer and an ecologist. With your help I hope to build this blog into an interesting and useful resource for people who are interested in fly fishing, ecology, wildlife and landscape photography, wildlife documentaries, writing and much more. Please feel free to get involved and write on the blog because after all that is what makes a blog go round.
A bit about me: I have been writing for some time and I am a passionate fly fisherman, naturalist and ecologist. I also have a photographic interest which is echoed by my regular contributions to the world wide angling press. I am a regular angling writer for various fishing magazines including Fly Fishing and Fly Tying, Trout and Salmon and Fish Wild online for whom I write about wildlife, ecology and world fly fishing. I am currently developing my photographic skills and I have numerous wildlife photographs published to support my writing and have exhibited my angling and river photography in Oxford, UK.
What am I doing now? Next month I will be working on BBC Springwatch as a story developer and I hope to bring back some great pictures from the Pensthorpe Nature Reserve in Norfolk. I am also going fly fishing on the Usk this week where I hope to catch some beautiful hard fighting trout. I also hope to take some photographs and to see some otters, red kites, buzzards, grey wagtails and dippers too - fingers crossed. I will be posting on here following that trip to let you know how I get on and to discuss the fly fishing techniques and tactics I used and why.
Watch this space and please contribute your thoughts to this blog........
Cheers,
Robert
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