Eddie Bray
Senior Member & Supporter
Does anyone fish the River Chew for Barbel?
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Good luck Eddie...as an aside my son's knew a Eddie Bray from Sherston....don't suppose.Okay, thanks for the info Neil.
Sherston is the SW (Just) Eddie, nr Malmesbury, Wilts I was a member of Kempsey AA opposite Pixham, so far it's been a struggle there I am told, as is Pixham, but does fish better later in the year...hopefully. Chew as you will know is a great little River, as a young man I fished there virtually every Saturday with a mate, down the steep hill in Keynsham, lots of Trout Chub Dace etc, fond memories.No, not me I'm afraid, I'm a (South-West) country boy.
I bought a ticket for Keynsham in March for the year, not really intended to use it but it is a bit closer to home than the Severn and I couldn't be bothered trying to get a day ticket at short notice and £24 didn't seem too expensive for the year. Was looking through things and noticed it mentioned Barbel (hence my question).
The Severn still beckons though, I am on the middle next weekend and in early September before returning to Pixham mid September.
Stay safe.
I like your optimism, but looking at the current state of small river barbel stocks, not confident the Chew will ever be a barbel river. Surely it would have been populated by Avon fish by now if it was to be viable?Barbel have been stocked annually since 2009 (along with roach and bream) and as recently as early 2019 (by Keynsham AA, as far as I know with permission from but without the involvement of the EA).
I know for a fact that "a few" have come out but not reported, and not many people fish for them - most Keynsham AA members stick to their ponds and stretches of the BA, whilst most of those that do fish the Chew tend to go for the trout and grayling on the fly. Those that do target the coarse species tend to use float only (what Andy B said above about the park stretch being snaggy goes for pretty much the entire river - VERY few areas with a clear bottom), so barbel tend to be low down on the catch list.
I did hear a rumour of a double, which isn't beyond the realms of possibility given the richness of the river and how long they've potentially been in there, but equally there's every chance it's a BA fish which got in during a flood (this has happened in the past with known carp).
The current official club record is something like 4lbs (it was 6lb 2, but that was retracted from their FB page - if memory serves because it was actually a Keynsham Avon fish) which also seems to be the rough average, but I've seen pics of a 7 that came out early this season but wasn't submitted or shared about on social media (it was actually caught from a private part of the river, but within the catchment of where the stockings have been introduced, so almost certainly from one of the earliest stockings).
I would say rather than the barbel not doing too well that it's a combination of relatively early days and the river being largely untapped.
You have 'done' the Mullet? Wow anyone who feels they have achieved that must have not much left as far as fishing ambitions they are surely the most coy and difficult of all species to set a hook into.Done the Mullet had my own boat as well, done the Carp too.
No, my missus will not be pleased if it's raining.
Some mullet fishing can be easier than expected if you use coarse fishing tactics of continual feeding and then put your bait in, this only works in relatively calm waters, but bread flake on top of continually feeding small lightly rolled bread balls works well, as does feeding with white maggots with a maggot on the hook. I only caught thick lippet mullet to just over 8lb but caught many smaller ones. As for Carp, my biggest was just over 28lb, not exceptionally large but large enough for me.You have 'done' the Mullet? Wow anyone who feels they have achieved that must have not much left as far as fishing ambitions they are surely the most coy and difficult of all species to set a hook into.
Some mullet fishing can be easier than expected if you use coarse fishing tactics of continual feeding and then put your bait in, this only works in relatively calm waters, but bread flake on top of continually feeding small lightly rolled bread balls works well, as does feeding with white maggots with a maggot on the hook. I only caught thick lippet mullet to just over 8lb but caught many smaller ones. As for Carp, my biggest was just over 28lb, not exceptionally large but large enough for me.
I'm not pretending to be a great angler though, just happy to use different tactics to suit.
The reason Mullet are deemed hard to catch is that they are, when using even light Sea Angling tactics, you need to go much lighter than that and thus using much lighter line, small hooks and letting the bait drop slowly amongst your feed will increase your catches.
Surely it would have been populated by Avon fish by now if it was to be viable?
My point I suppose was, that in the event that Barbel did populate the Chew, what damage would that cause to this little River, in that it is so diverse, and can you imagine hoardes of Barbel anglers descending? I can't recall the concrete channel Steve, perhaps it's a fairly new addition, like the 70's? . But Barbel being the great pioneers would find such a hurdle not beyond them, would you think?Not necessarily Neil - they'd first have to swim up that long channel where the Chew joins the BA (and, as I'm sure you know, it's just basically a concrete funnel similar to the flood relief channels in LA, and which most of the year is only a few inches deep), and then they'd have to get up and over that weir, which I've only known to be flooded enough a few times to make that possible in the last couple of decades. That being the case, I reckon only a very small handful of BA fish ever got into the Chew as opportunities have been very few and far between.
The reason I'm optimistic is because of how well grayling have done in the river, the fact that eels never went away (like they did in the BA and a lot of other rivers around the country), and how well the river is managed generally by Keynsham AA (their stretches of it, at least).
Sure, there may be an element of rose tinted vision and a dose of blind hope, but it's at least based on reasonable evidence (plus the fact I know that fish ARE coming out, just not being reported or shared on social media).