Chris Thomson
Senior Member
Nicely sweved
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If you mean fishing for barbel then I very much doubt it Chris. Most on here are thoughtful and considerate barbel anglers that will wait untill the conditions are suitable.Am i the only one on here advocating not fishing wholst these extreme conditions exist ??????
That is a very good pointIn this hot weather, catching fish and give it a good rest is a joke IMHO. We normally rest the fish in shallow water close to bank, where the water is the warmest and with the lowest oxygen level, how can a hard fighting fish be properly rested in such condition, I really think this is the most misleading thing.
That made me smile coming from you ...considering your avatarAm i the only one on here advocating not fishing wholst these extremr conditions exist ??????
The fish showed no symptoms of discomfort. It could have chosen the deeper, faster water that is just over 100 metres from a larger weir and has far more weed growth. The confluence was less than 5 to 10 metres away. Instead it was quite happy to browse in what would have been warmer, shallower, slower water with less dissolved oxygen. The fish is there all summer and always chooses the same side of the confluence. As do a shoal of 10 plus middle teens carp that are regularly seen.I have only barbel fished a few weeks ago. On a big river.
I am happy to wait until things cool down.
Watching a barbel swim and feed in warm water and saying its all OK is a very different scenario from after it has been caught
We were down Herefordshire on Monday Graham. The river was low. We weren't fishing but had a look at some beautiful stretches. This one was from Prince Charles stretchI have only barbel fished a few weeks ago. On a big river.
I am happy to wait until things cool down.
Watching a barbel swim and feed in warm water and saying its all OK is a very different scenario from after it has been caught
Couldn't agree more.I saw this on another facebook and agree with it and thought it was worth copying and pasting here please read it
Some people seem to be under the impression that if you rest a fish caught when the water temperature is high and dissolved oxygen levels are low, it will be fully recovered when you release it.
THIS IS NOT THE CASE!
If the oxygen is not there, the fish WILL NOT recover like it would DO if levels were high.
Imagine climbing Everest, the oxygen level at the summit is very low and the slightest amount of activity requires a huge amount of physical effort. You can rest all you like but you'll never recover fully because the required oxygen is just not available. It's exactly the same for fish when dissolved oxygen in water falls below a certain concentration
Sadly I cant give the author the credit as I dont know who he was
Been once as Rodger has quoted in a post the Ribble. most of the reading stations are to low to give a reading. Would go down to the Dove but that it is giving a very low reading.Am i the only one on here advocating not fishing wholst these extremr conditions exist ??????