Greg Buxton
Senior Member
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/20...g-yorkshire-field-swimming-50-miles-britains/
From today's Telegraph!
From today's Telegraph!
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If you release it back to sea it will only come back......usually within a few days apparently...It would be so easy for a vet to dart it with a sedative, load it into the back of a truck, and take it back to the coast, and release it with all its mates, where i'm pretty sure it would be much happier, a few beaters would be enough to scare it away from the river to stop it escaping until the drug takes effect.... or am i talking rubbish ?
Deja Vu .A few years a go we had '' Sammy ' seal in residence on the Yorkshire Ouse mainly around Linton on Ouse lock / weir but it did go for jaunts often for many miles . It was present for the best part of a year often lounging about on a sandbed just below the weir / Salmon ladder . It became quite the celebrity with TV crews turning up from as far away as Japan to film him ! The theory was that these Seals follow the Salmon runs up from the sea which seems plausible . Sammy appeared to eat mainly pike and didn't seem to adversely effect the barbel fishing , indeed he popped up in my swim on numerous occasions just to say hello . Eventually Sammy ' disappeared 'probably shot .Seal sightings in Sammys day were common and he usually got the blame, however it became evident that there was more than one Seal in the river system. As for negotiating weirs and other obstacles , clearly they are no problem as this seal has gone up x 2 major weirs on the Ouse before arriving at Topcliffe . As for sorting this situation out , netting , darting , were contemplated for Sammy but not pursued , as has been said he was probably ' dispatched ' by person or persons unknown .Who knows what will happen to this one ......
In a word Mike, Yes , there is a significant run of both . I think you will find that the many full time keepers on the Scottish rivers will be busy ' discouraging ' Seals 'Is the run of salmon and sea trout in the Ouse big enough to lure a seal up river ?
If so how do rivers with big runs, like the Scottish salmon rivers, survive ? Surely they would have hundreds of seals in residence.