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Nowadays, living near Coffs Harbour, which is less than two hours from Armidale, it's been an impatient wait for some free time to link up with Matt Graham again; and get stuck into some of the great freshwater fishing that exists both sides of the Great Dividing Range; upon which Armidale sits.

Arriving at Matt and Millie's house just in time for dinner on Friday night, we spent a memorable evening eating, drinking, and exchanging fishing and hunting stories; all the time with Matt psyching up two cod beginners with stories of massive fish caught just the previous week.

With so many great cod spots up his sleeve, the decision of exactly where we would fish was a collaborative one, eventually tipped Gwydir River way by a mate of Matt's; Mike Wagner, a Bundarra local who that week had done really well on the cod in the Gorge country to the South West of Copeton Dam. As well as getting numbers of fish in the 2 to 5 kilo range, there was also a confirmed story of a lure caught 30 kilo fish over the previous weekend.

An average Namoi cod

Before we hit the sack that Friday night, both Mike Colless and myself were beginning to wonder whether our lures, line classes, rods, and leaders would really be up to the sort of trench warfare you'd expect when going toe to toe with a big cod. Bringing a range of tackle with us, it was Matt who gave the nod on 14lb gel-spun line, 10 kilo leaders, ABU 1500's , and an Ian Miller Ultimate Boomer Bass rod that was to be my chosen weapon, and a GL3 Loomis C662 which was to be Mike's.

A pre-dawn start, and a 2 hour drive soon had us pig spotting as we low-ranged- it into the Gwydir Gorge country in Matt's Zebra painted Bushcruiser, packed to the roof with fishing and camping gear. The plan for the day was to hike and fish our way upstream, and then turn around and fish our way home until dark. Lure choice for the trip pretty well ranged from Oar-Gee Plow to Oar-Gee to Oar-Gee Plow.

Feeling that some sort of Wayne Lennon(Oar-Gee lure maker) conspiracy was under way, and not owning a Plow of my own, I was the odd man out. I opted for an alternating combination of green bass viper, and a new deep diving Deception Shrimp that Paul Kneller had slipped me a few weeks prior while down at Glenbawn Dam.

Hiking and casting is great fun but hard work

With expectations high, it took us no time at all to extract the fishing gear, get changed, buckle into haversacks, and start out on what was hopefully going to be an experience to remember. As expected the first large pool closest to where the 4WD track met the river looked great, but as I was told it often does, it produced nothing; although it was hardly suprising considering the hammering it coped by set liners and non-catch and release lure tossers.

Little did we know as we past it by, offering only a few almost disrespectful half-hearted casts, this pool was to provide an unexpected prize later in the day.

With only a minimal amount of water being released from Copeton, the river was a series of pools with small runs of water linking them. It didn't take us long to work out that most of the smaller cod were in the moving water at the heads of pools, with the larger fish probably down deep under ledges and boulders in the main pool bodies.

An experienced cod angler, it became pretty obvious why Mike Wagner wore a wet suit, on walk and cast trips like this. For a start, to make our way upstream we had to cross the river many times to avoid unwalkable banksides, and secondly to get casts into the deep and dark corners of pools, swimming to, and casting from, mid stream boulders, was a definite advantage.

Continued...

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