Graham Elliott
Senior Member & Supporter
Crooky it was a reply to Howard. And he will be aware of what I may refer too.
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Crooky it was a reply to Howard. And he will be aware of what I may refer too.
Neil from where i am sat in the Thames valley some rivers still appear to be in the halcyon period eg Dove, Derwent, Wye (or is this just the Facebook phenomena)...which brings me back to the point about cycles, these will not last forever. However, i do think there are some rivers in which barbel probably should not be present...as a kid i used to fish the Calder i could never imagine it would ever support barbel, it does...but then i fished the Wharfe at Collingham and thought there should be barbel but caught more grayling than anything else. Rivers should surely have a balance withe the most dominant species being that which is best suited to the conditions - chances are large dominant fish will drive out other species...big fish surely become big as they are the most effective in sourcing food/feeding pushing out others when doing so.
Neil.
You said.
and limiting the number of angler/ rods on the bank.
My point regards the Wye RR comments exactly.
So, guessing you have around a dozen photos of double figure Barbel with chunks missing from their tales, caught from the Kennet to share?
Just off the top of my head , and I haven't read back through the thread particularly carefully . Could there be a link between signal crayfish and decline in barbel numbers ? As a generalisation , and I know there are exceptions , the rivers where the barbel are in apparent decline are also the ones where the crayfish have got the strongest hold , I am thinking particularly of the 'Southern '' rivers .I like to read the river reports on here and it is amazing how anglers are hauling in barbel both large , small , and medium size from rivers like the middle Trent , Derbyshire Dove , Ribble and many others , and yet down on the Cherwell , Loddon , Wandle , Thames barbel anglers really struggle . Do the crays eat all the barbel eggs ?
It's an uncomfortable truth that we have to include ourselves as anglers as one of the threats to a healthy barbel population. The only dead barbel I've seen this season was on the banks of the Wye and while I can't be 100 per cent sure, from all the circumstances I strongly suspect its demise was due to inadequate resting after capture. I've read elsewhere today about two double figure barbel being found dead on a day ticket stretch of the Warks Avon reportedly due to poor handling.
It always makes me uncomfortable when I see reports of anglers catching 30 plus barbel (usually on the Wye) during the course of a morning or afternoon. I don't see how that many fish can be adequately rested in that timescale. Even when it's been a fish a chuck, personally I've struggled to catch more than four an hour once playing and resting has been taken into account.
There's a swim on the middle Wye (and we may be talking about the same one, Antony) that gets hammered day in, day out, to the extent where the river keeper has booked it out on a morning and afternoon basis. I fear the mortality rate in that swim will be high, and sadly for once it will be human predation to blame.