Terry Harman
Senior Member & Supporter
Make a nice pair of slippers
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Also no mention of the one of the real reasons EU bank gypsies ??Saw a report on the news this morning the Queens official swan upper reports that numbers of Cygnets are seriously down after the count on the Thames this week. The count has been going down rapidly since 2015,he blames youth with air rifles,destruction of nests and American Mink,no mention of Otters.
21 Swans disappeared from a popular feeding spot on the Itchen last winter. Mallards also a bit scarce and they've gone right off of bread.Also no mention of the one of the real reasons EU bank gypsies ??
( gangs of them now live on the banks of the Thames) that trap and eat them ?
they have even been found in Hyde park with a fire and a sack with dead swans plucked about to be cooked these people are from a country where its normal to trap and eat all ducks and Swans and of course any fish
I feel its at a stage now with all these big fish turning up that possibly there is place for some otters? Now if it's your water, your fish, I understand you may feel differently. But I've always been a Naturalist first, and a fisherman next. I only mentioned to a chap fishing yesterday that the Purple Loosestrife beside him look amazing, but he really didn't care, fine! Almost all waters now are producing bigger fish, and wild waters like the Thames and Trent big fish are turning up all the time. In enclosed waters like carp lakes (man made) it's different, we don't need them in places people have invested time and money in. But wild waters, well I'm a little more pragmatic these days to be honest? A 50 lb fish has lived a long life and maybe seen the bank a few times, given pleasure too many. So if an otter family feed on an old fish at the end of its life, it was a natural occurrence. It's simply how I feel. Our club water that cannot afford fencing lost two big fish this year to an otter family, yes it bloody sad as both fish were big 30s. It's not the otters fault in this case, but the people that re-introduced them in the first place?
Your argument doesn't stack up, if a 37lber is over 60 years old than a 50lber would also be old, if not older?
My Club added 15 carp to one of our lakes on Feb 28th 2017,the fish were 9lb to 15lb. A mate caught the smallest fish (9lb when stocked) on December 2nd 2018 at 20lb 4oz. That fish had pt on over 11lb in 18 months and a couple of days,and is not at all gutty. Few anglers fish the lake in the winter and its never busy,though it has signal crayfish.These carp are specially bred and picked to increase weight fast,though their life expectancy is expected to be shorter.A mirror carp around 28lb was caught in Billing Aquadrome lake about 15 years ago.That fish had been caught in the late 1950's at 36lb. How old was she when last caught and how special was that one fish. I saw some horrible video and photos today from the Wasing estate two big carp missing just a couple of pounds of flesh,one still alive.Because its not happening on your stretch of river please do not turn a blind eye to what is happening. If they are not eating your Trout at the moment it means there is an easier food source.Eventually they will exhaust that and your trout will just disappear.
Yes I know the man who pulled it out of the river there was NO damage to it by otters or anything else !!Apparently a few people saw the 50 floating (dead) down the river before it came to a stop and was removed, and none of them reported any marks, bites or chunks taken out of it, so the likelihood is that the state it was in when the carcass was finally retrieved was caused by post-mortem predation and, possibly, boat propellers.
As I said earlier in the thread, cause of death is likely to have been natural causes, POSSIBLY poor handling after being caught again.
That’s exactly the point I’m trying to make you can’t tell a carps age from its weightYour argument doesn't stack up, if a 37lber is over 60 years old than a 50lber would also be old, if not older?
My local Brook, which I fly fish, is full of trout, grayling and chub, you could jump across in many places. I was stood in the middle of it last week when two otters swam right past me, 30 seconds later I caught a trout.
Otters have been in there for years, I still catch fairly regularly.
I'm no expert but it seems clear to me they obviously don't devastate all fisheries, but do seem to do well with fat, lazy fish full of boilies and pellets.
Evolution?