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By Tackle Tactics Pro Angler Adrian Webb
First published: May 31 2019

Adrian 'Meppsta' Webb is a trout fanatic from Tasmania, who has a long history of consistent success on trout using Mepps inline spinners.

Leven River Gold

By Adrian Webb

I headed on back to fish the dark tannin waters of the Leven River again yesterday. The river was at the perfect wading height and the weather was spot on, with overcast and humid conditions. It was another slow start with just the one soft hit on the Gold Mepps #1 Black Fury spinner from a solid brown.

It had taken close on twenty minutes before the brown followed the Gold Black Fury from a cast and drift from the opposite side of the river. I could see the silhouette of a large fish, following closely behind the spinner, as I let it drift with the flow. I gave the rod a couple of twitches to see if it would get the trout to take the lure. That didn't work until I had the lure and the trout within three metres of me, where I gave the lure another light twitch and then let it drop, which made the gold blade flutter. That did the job and the trout took the lure side on.

I felt weight on the line as the large brown took hold of the spinner and I quickly raised the rod to set the hooks... but missed setting them. For one reason or another it hadn't taken full hold of the Black Fury, it must have just had the tip of the hook on its outer lip. All that fish did was give a soft head shake and it was gone. I had missed a trout that would have been well over a kilo... not the start I was hoping for and especially when it was the first trout seen for the session.

After the missed chance of catching that brown, I moved into a long shallow fast water and it was time to change to the light weight #00 Aglia Gold blade spinner. The lure that's been working well in shallow tannin waters. After an hour and a half in the river I caught my first brown trout of the morning.

Following its release I caught another seven in a row, a total of eight brown trout caught and released over a mere twenty metres of fast water. Then nothing for another thirty minutes and that's when I decided it was time for a move to another area on the river.

I was going to head downstream to a nice wide, medium flowing stretch of river, however once back at the car I changed my mind and headed to another fast water run a kilometre further up from where I had just fished. It was a poor decision to head up there because I only caught one small brown from three hook ups. Those trout were all within five metres of each other.

I fished on for another forty five minutes without a sign of a trout. The time had come to call it a day. Nine trout for the session was reasonable but also very disappointing as I was expecting more trout to be in the upper reaches at this time of the season. Still, that's just part of the ups and downs one has when trout fishing.

Adrian (meppstas)