Wye dusk pike: reading gudgeon shoals
Lower Benhall and Town Water tributaries at Ross-on-Wye hold evening gudgeon shoals that cue pike ambushes

Gudgeon stack tight in 1–2 ft gravel runs and shallow bays where tributaries meet the River Wye. Minnows and chub often patrol the same margins, and that mixed baitbed draws pike into striking range when water sits around 10–14°C. The pattern is clear: bait moves to shallow edges 15–30 minutes before sunset and pike shift into 0.5–1.5 ft ambush lanes behind weeds or stone banks.
Reading shoals and habitat
Look for ripple lines, rapid bait flashes and the hollow sound of fish boiling near tributary mouths feeding Town Water and Lower Benhall. Gravel runs in summer and weedy bays in warmer months concentrate gudgeon; in chill months the same fish tighten to 2–4 ft gravel edges. Quiet observation beats blind casts.
Choose lures that match scale and sink fast. Rapala 5–7 cm minnows and 0.5–1 oz weighted spoons or pellet-style soft plastics work in 1–3 ft runs. For typical Wye pike of 3–6 lb use stout hooks and a stealthy approach: 3–5 lb fluorocarbon line, light leader and a subtle retrieve into cover.
Stalk dusk windows with silent wading, long casts along weed margins and small pauses to trigger reaction strikes. A dark silhouette erupting from the shallows and a flash of gudgeon is the common scene; strike promptly and leave the fish to run into the snag-free current below Ross-on-Wye.