Graham Shaw
Senior Member
As a project in the last 3 weeks or so of the closed season, I intend to spend quite a lot of time clearing banks and pegs on a mile or so of river that has not been fished for years and where there is not even any sort of footpath parallel to the overgrown banks - just jungle. Decades ago it was well fished. This is a small river, averaging just two rod lengths wide, with plenty of overhanging tree cover. It is one part of a longer club stretch, but is more than a mile from the parking in either direction, so people naturally prefer pegs nearer to their cars, where there are plenty of fish anyway. There is plenty of natural food in the river and previous experience confirms that even 'virgin' pegs miles from any bait will yield good barbel.
I intend to clear at least twenty pegs which haven't been fished for years, and then hopefully keep them open through the season. This will involve hundreds of yards of slashing undergrowth, both initially and then in maintaining it. Clearly I will affect only a tiny percentage of the total 'overgrowth' and will be highly sensitive to the needs of other wildlife in this wild corridor between farm fields and the river.
I just like the idea (don't we all?) of having access to pegs that are kind of 'mine', well hardly fished by other anglers anyway, with un-pressured fish but the challenge of finding them and turning them on to my baits. Which is where my questions start. While I'm there, clearing the pegs, in the 3 weeks before the season, would you be feeding the swims? And if I'm covering a whole mile of un-fished river, and I'm there say once a week for those 3 weeks, say my first visit is on May 29th, second on June 5th, third on June 12th, how much should I feed and how far (in distance) should I leave it between 'fed' swims? If I just throw a few bits of bait into every swim each time I visit, am I spreading it too thinly?
Or is it just not worth it for barbel anyway, 'cos the barbel may have migrated quite a way to spawn? As far as I know, there aren't any gravelly spawning beds on the stretch I have in mind, but these are probably about a mile or so away. Last year the fish on this river spawned just before the season started. But if there aren't many barbel around I do enjoy catching decent chub too, so I'm not bothered about feeding them up instead!
The water tends not to be very clear, so fish-spotting is not easy on this river except on the gravelly stretches.
I intend to clear at least twenty pegs which haven't been fished for years, and then hopefully keep them open through the season. This will involve hundreds of yards of slashing undergrowth, both initially and then in maintaining it. Clearly I will affect only a tiny percentage of the total 'overgrowth' and will be highly sensitive to the needs of other wildlife in this wild corridor between farm fields and the river.
I just like the idea (don't we all?) of having access to pegs that are kind of 'mine', well hardly fished by other anglers anyway, with un-pressured fish but the challenge of finding them and turning them on to my baits. Which is where my questions start. While I'm there, clearing the pegs, in the 3 weeks before the season, would you be feeding the swims? And if I'm covering a whole mile of un-fished river, and I'm there say once a week for those 3 weeks, say my first visit is on May 29th, second on June 5th, third on June 12th, how much should I feed and how far (in distance) should I leave it between 'fed' swims? If I just throw a few bits of bait into every swim each time I visit, am I spreading it too thinly?
Or is it just not worth it for barbel anyway, 'cos the barbel may have migrated quite a way to spawn? As far as I know, there aren't any gravelly spawning beds on the stretch I have in mind, but these are probably about a mile or so away. Last year the fish on this river spawned just before the season started. But if there aren't many barbel around I do enjoy catching decent chub too, so I'm not bothered about feeding them up instead!
The water tends not to be very clear, so fish-spotting is not easy on this river except on the gravelly stretches.
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