Where do you start on this one?
I like to read the River reports that are relevant to me ( Northern rivers). For me it's nice to track someones progress and a lot of these are HARD rivers so I can fully appreciate how much an 8 or 9lb barbel means to a fellow member and I'm genuinely chuffed for them. They should be able to share the journey, blanks & gruellers and get some adulation for their efforts when it comes good. It's human nature.
I think if it's suitably vague to protect people's fishing, our River Reports are OK.
I'm not allowed to publicize the stretch of the river I fish a lot so that makes my life easy, although I have to confess I'd like to share pictures of nice fish, but I also like to see nice fish be it a big roach, chub, pike and of course barbel. But as has been said on here, I fish for me not the gallery and I have plenty of blanks and mediocre sessions - just an average angler.
But this whole issue of instant success/ social media does my head in.
On Pike forums there are STRICT no-naming polices of any waters, and posts are regularly redacted, and it's normally newbies asking for information on a certain place instead of doing the spadework.
I'm odd in that I don't mind a bit of hardship in my fishing if it ultimately leads to a goal being achieved. This goal might be a 7lb chub or 15lb barbel or 30lb pike or it might just be ANY pike from an unknown water or ANY barbel on the float? But then that's why I fish rivers and the odd natural water for pike, and not commercials or carp lakes.
What I've never been interested in is targeting known fish of any species or competing with other anglers for bank space, and in my experience social media does more harm than good if you fish like I do. Everytime I go in my local tackle shop I get shown pictures on Facebook of decent fish ( normally pike, barbel and perch - they know I'm not interested in carp) , I get told which water, swim or area and method but honestly it just turns me cold and consequently they must think I'm the world's worst angler as I never seem to report that I catch anything or post it online.
There are certain guys on You Tube who post videos on river stretches and there is absolutely no effort whatsoever in even attempting to conceal the location. WHY?? Why would you advertise to the world, good swims on tough rivers and blow your own fishing?? One I looked at recently on A Northern River which has been ravaged by everything( seals, otters, cormorants, set-lines etc....) had over 40,000 views. In You Tube terms this is tiny but that's 40,000 people with intimate knowledge of the swims, if only 1% of them acted on it that's still 40 anglers to compete with.
This particular individual has no regard whatsoever for fellow anglers or his quarry and can only be doing what he does for a huge EGO trip and probably financial gain. And to me this is the real problem, not river reports although there is no surprise we keep things a bit quiet.
Last season I started to catch reasonable pike on a water I'd fished without success for 4-5 years. So on the 1st trip after catching my first pike from the water ( before this I'd had well over a dozen blanks) I was sat as normal waiting for a run when a bloke decided to stop and talk to me.
Sods law, the drop-off went and I quickly struck the run. Fish on and it was clearly a good-un from the bend in the rod.
I carefully played it for well over a minute as I was fishing at range, when the hooks pulled and it was gone. Only the 2nd fish I'd connected with in 5 years of trying.
However my over-riding emotion was one of relief. While I was playing the fish, the bloke decided( as is his right) to start filming me and he was pretty peed off as he wanted to post the whole thing on Facebook! I was content to know that whatever I'd hooked was there for another day, and after years of struggle I was in the right place using the right methods.
This year the water is blown, idiots have posted videos on You Tube showing fish being unhooked on rocks, landed in pan nets etc. What was once a stress-free water, has now become a circus and dead pike will appear. That's how quickly social media can destroy a water, but alas it's here to stay, encouraged by tackle companies who seem to want to apply the ' carp' formula to all species and with little long-term thought on the sustainability of our waterways.