Graham Elliott
Senior Member & Supporter
Just noticed.
This has already been posted under headline Ribble. Have a look. Very Sad.
This has already been posted under headline Ribble. Have a look. Very Sad.
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they have all ready emptied two large ponds in two large houses on the north bank .that stretch has the largest dog otter i have seen comes close to you and hisses at you.still have my two cards for the river who control most of the river from the m6 to ribchester bridge .what makes it worse is this area is the spawning ground for the barbel.they move from the lower to above the M6 to were the weir used to be to spawn around this time of year all gravel there .Whilst this loss of fish is a obviously a big shame, I don't think that otter predation is a huge problem on most of the Ribble where anglers fish.
To put it in perspective we have just had extremely cold weather conditions coinciding with low water levels. Any otter living in this area (which I do recognise) would have few options to feed itself in the nearby stillwaters (I guess they'd be frozen solid) and would be forced to hunt in the river during this cold spell. Any barbel in this stretch would be very inactive and, because this length does not afford any deep water shelter, they would be relatively easy to find. Chub, trout and roach would have an advantage over sluggish barbel and bream at this time of year. On top of that, the fact that there will have been reduced presence of any anglers would mean that the otter would not suffer much disturbance.
The angler who posted the video has previously posted many videos of himself fishing on this stretch and he does say that he has not come across anything like this before. I suspect that what the video shows is the result of a single otter catching one fish per day over a week of extreme conditions. Any smaller fish caught in this period would probably been completely eaten. An otter only needs about 2lbs of food per day so there is always a depressing wastage if it only succeeds in catching a bigger fish.
If it came up to me it'd get a landing net handle over its head. How depressing this situation is. When will they do something about it?they have all ready emptied two large ponds in two large houses on the north bank .that stretch has the largest dog otter i have seen comes close to you and hisses at you.still have my two cards for the river who control most of the river from the m6 to ribchester bridge .what makes it worse is this area is the spawning ground for the barbel.they move from the lower to above the M6 to were the weir used to be to spawn around this time of year all gravel there .
Ed.I've heard reliable reports of otters taking up residence in the wilton bridge area of the Wye, this being followed up of poor catch returns. I just hope that we are not witnessing the same.
Do you actually fish the ribble? It’s rife with otters I fish different stretches and every stretch I fish have them,I agree there’s a lot going on on the ribble but to say you think there’s not a problem is naive,I can’t understand why anglers say that otters EEs cormorants etc are not a problem I’m convinced most of them don’t fish very often..thanks DteWhilst this loss of fish is a obviously a big shame, I don't think that otter predation is a huge problem on most of the Ribble where anglers fish.
To put it in perspective we have just had extremely cold weather conditions coinciding with low water levels. Any otter living in this area (which I do recognise) would have few options to feed itself in the nearby stillwaters (I guess they'd be frozen solid) and would be forced to hunt in the river during this cold spell. Any barbel in this stretch would be very inactive and, because this length does not afford any deep water shelter, they would be relatively easy to find. Chub, trout and roach would have an advantage over sluggish barbel and bream at this time of year. On top of that, the fact that there will have been reduced presence of any anglers would mean that the otter would not suffer much disturbance.
The angler who posted the video has previously posted many videos of himself fishing on this stretch and he does say that he has not come across anything like this before. I suspect that what the video shows is the result of a single otter catching one fish per day over a week of extreme conditions. Any smaller fish caught in this period would probably been completely eaten. An otter only needs about 2lbs of food per day so there is always a depressing wastage if it only succeeds in catching a bigger fish.