Just wondering if anyone has come across the phenomenon of a pool that holds large quantities of fish in all heights of water but in which you rarely catch (relative to the numbers of fish present).
The pool I have in mind on the face of it seems a picture perfect pool for both salmon/seatrout. It has depth, cover (both bankside & underwater lies), fast water at the head with plenty of oxygen, middle section that runs over a mixture of gravel/boulders, nice wide tail running out over a weir plus because of the long trek over some unpleasant bogs it is very rarely fished!
I make the trek at least 3 times a month (bonus run upstream that does fish well) & have done for nigh on 30 years, probably longer as I used to cycle to the farm on my bike. Over the years it has become a bit of an obsession & I must have spent hours flogging away with only perhaps 3/4 fish a year. there are nearly always fish moving but they are very reluctant to take.
Any theories/thoughts? (beauty of a forum such as this is that having spent so long fishing the night away rarely seeing/speaking to another soul now I can pick my peers brains).
The pool I have in mind on the face of it seems a picture perfect pool for both salmon/seatrout. It has depth, cover (both bankside & underwater lies), fast water at the head with plenty of oxygen, middle section that runs over a mixture of gravel/boulders, nice wide tail running out over a weir plus because of the long trek over some unpleasant bogs it is very rarely fished!
I make the trek at least 3 times a month (bonus run upstream that does fish well) & have done for nigh on 30 years, probably longer as I used to cycle to the farm on my bike. Over the years it has become a bit of an obsession & I must have spent hours flogging away with only perhaps 3/4 fish a year. there are nearly always fish moving but they are very reluctant to take.
Any theories/thoughts? (beauty of a forum such as this is that having spent so long fishing the night away rarely seeing/speaking to another soul now I can pick my peers brains).
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