Thought I'd put this thread here under other species.
Well it's not often we heap praise on the environment agency and to be honest I'm not 100% sure it's the EA or a thing called the Ribble trust.
As rivers have got cleaner because it of loss of industry both Salmon and Sea trout started appearing in the Calder which is a tributary of the Ribble,the problem was the fish would get as far as an old industrial weir at Padhiam and get no further.
Anyway five years later fish passes have been made at great cost from the weir at Padhiam and then many miles upriver into two smaller tributaries which includes a small river near my house called Colne Water,I've fished it for years for wild brown trout but tonight I caught a beautiful Grayling around a pound a lost a few more,not since before the industrial revolution will this river have Grayling in if they were ever in at all,a few salmon Parr were also found last summer which surprised everyone inc the EA as it's happened quicker than what they thought.
There's still a lot of work to do as so much habitat has been lost due to flooding and bad farming practices but it's amazed me as those Grayling have travelled over twenty miles from the Ribble up the Calder and all the way round the other side of Pendle hill,I know on the Teifi you've witnessed em inhabiting the system,I truly had no idea they would use the fish passes like this to find new ground?
Well it's not often we heap praise on the environment agency and to be honest I'm not 100% sure it's the EA or a thing called the Ribble trust.
As rivers have got cleaner because it of loss of industry both Salmon and Sea trout started appearing in the Calder which is a tributary of the Ribble,the problem was the fish would get as far as an old industrial weir at Padhiam and get no further.
Anyway five years later fish passes have been made at great cost from the weir at Padhiam and then many miles upriver into two smaller tributaries which includes a small river near my house called Colne Water,I've fished it for years for wild brown trout but tonight I caught a beautiful Grayling around a pound a lost a few more,not since before the industrial revolution will this river have Grayling in if they were ever in at all,a few salmon Parr were also found last summer which surprised everyone inc the EA as it's happened quicker than what they thought.
There's still a lot of work to do as so much habitat has been lost due to flooding and bad farming practices but it's amazed me as those Grayling have travelled over twenty miles from the Ribble up the Calder and all the way round the other side of Pendle hill,I know on the Teifi you've witnessed em inhabiting the system,I truly had no idea they would use the fish passes like this to find new ground?
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