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Disaster and partial compensation
Mike wrote in news:1189677425.941878.126290
@g4g2000hsf.googlegroups.com: In order to produce a 3lb stock rainbow, at least ten pounds, even by extremely conservative estimates, of wild marine protein is required. I thought there must have been a reason why that bubble gum dispenser full of extruded trout feed at the hatchery was labelled "wild marine protein" -- Scott Reverse name to reply |
Disaster and partial compensation
Monstrosities like this are the norm rather than the exception on many
waters; http://www.finandfly.com/gallery/ima...c8e7fe5a57.jpg http://members.fortunecity.com/timev...glad/trout.jpg http://www.samtsai.com/pix/yadayada/p238.jpg There are plenty more, because the unfortunate "anglers" who catch these objects of pity and contempt donīt know any better, ( much like you) and actually pose for photos with them. MC |
Disaster and partial compensation
For anybody who might be seriously interested in the problem, ( which
will eventually catch you up in America as well, as a result of "knock- on" marine ecological effects, rising human population, pollution, and the almost criminal ignorance of "anglers" like Kenny, among other things ) http://www.globefish.org/index.php?i...tid=1640476505 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fish_meal http://www.thefishsite.com/articles/...aculture-diets There are plenty of information sites. MC |
Disaster and partial compensation
Mike wrote:
For anybody who might be seriously interested in the problem, ( which will eventually catch you up in America as well, as a result of "knock- on" marine ecological effects, rising human population, pollution, and the almost criminal ignorance of "anglers" like Kenny, among other things ) http://www.globefish.org/index.php?i...tid=1640476505 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fish_meal http://www.thefishsite.com/articles/...aculture-diets There are plenty of information sites. Yeah, like I said earlier you're conflating aquaculture with fisheries management. Fisheries management has come a long way from simple "put and take" in most parts of the US, although some states still do it and some anglers still follow the hatchery trucks around and fish with "pellet lures". On the other hand there is a lot of fishable water that would have no fish at all if not for fish hatcheries and the economy of northern Wisconsin would take an enormous hit if not for the annual release of thousands of musky fry from the hatcheries. Besides, when folks are fishing stocked waters that makes more room for me on wild waters. ;-) -- Ken Fortenberry |
Disaster and partial compensation
"Gordon MacPherson" wrote in message ... Dear all, After Thames Water stopped Farmoor Flyfishing Club using the Farmoor 1 reservoir (they will reopen it next year as a catch-and-release water, allegedly with no trout under 3 lb) the Club reverted to Darlow - a very pleasant ex-gravel pit water. The recent floods however have devastated the area and the lake was closed to fishing until late August. When I went out at the beginning of September I was horrified to see many trout swimming around aimlessly just under the surface (dorsal and tail fins showing), many dead trout and a large dead carp. I did not even try to fish. I am told that it is most likely to be Argulus - a parasite - and that there is little that can be done to treat it. So I reckon that is probably the end of fishing at Darlow this season. The compensation is that Thames Water is offering concessionary tickets for Farmoor 2. I visited last Saturday and was pleased (and surprised) to come away with 5 fish - 1.5 - 2.5 lbs, one on a deep buzzer, one on a fry imitation and three on a baby daddy long-legs (many others missed - I think I strike too quickly). All fish caught on Farmoor 2 have to be killed - the compensation is that these fish have deep pink flesh and a lovely flavour. We cooked one last night - in foil (160 deg C for 25 min) with the zest from an orange, the juice from the orange, some salt and pepper. The juice was reduced at the end and a little Grand Marnier added - delicious. Tight lines Gordon For info 1. Yes - I would much prefer to fish for wild trout - and do this in Wales and elsewhere when I can. The amount of wild trout fishing in the South of England is negligible. 2. There is very good natural feeding in most UK reservoirs - masses of chironomids and sedges - most fish caight are full of chironomids 3. Stocking at Farmoor is generally before the season starts, and a fish stocked at 1lb will have reached 2-2.5 lb by the end of the summer. 4. I have caught and eaten wild sea trout, and the the flavour of a grown-in farmor trout loses little by comparison - I agree completely about fish which were stocked the day before they were caught. 5. Catching trout on UK reservoirs is no easy matter - read the excellent book by Brian Church - "Stillwater flyfishing". In the evening, casting to rising trout with a hatching chironomid or sedge imitiation is an exciting and delicate affair. BW Gordon |
Disaster and partial compensation
any articles on it at all? Not much on the UK sites.
There are a few articles of mine on the matter scattered around the internet, and I am still active in various organisations such as the SACN of which I am still an executive member ( Info here; http://www.sacn.org.uk/ ), but we are mainly fighting rearguard actions, complacency, and ignorance, and have been for years. It really is quite disheartening when people on various boards ask "Where are the seatrout", or "Where are the cod", etc etc. Any angler who fishes for such fish, or expects his children to be able to, has no right to be so ignorant. Five minutes on any search machine, or the websites of various organisations which concern themselves with such matters, would give anybody interested far more answers than they want to hear. Salt water fly-fishing has become a bit of a fad for quite a few, but with the severe lack of fish, that too is fading. American groups and websites are even worse, they donīt know anything at all about many of these problems, as they are as yet not personally involved to any considerable degree, and donīt even realise they are already on the same slippery slope. It will be the same there as it is here, and they will all be weeping and wailing "how could this happen"? and similar laments, but it appears to be human nature to be preoccupied with money and personal problems, especially those matters about which one feels more or less powerless. Quite a number are totally obsessed with "catch and release" as some sort of "magic solution", but of course it does not work when there are no fish! The effects of decimating the food chain in large areas of ocean, in and around America, also has severe effects on their pelagic and anadromous fish, but it seems most just fly to Alaska or Russia or somewhere and remain blithely ignorant and/or complacent to problems at home. ROFF is a special case, and much of the animosity there is doubtless my own fault for antagonising some people. This more or less precludes any sensible discussion, as they donīt want the info, they just want to **** me about. Not much I can do about it. Most people e-mail me nowadays, as you have done. The UK group seems to have died, some loonies with a load of rubbish about MI5 or something, more or less blanketed the group recently. I think that may have been the last straw for some people. Anyway, the basic facts are fairly clear. Once large areas of ocean die as a result of these machinations, ( there are a large number of such dead areas already, they are increasing daily) they are unable to regenerate in any reasonable time frame. Even with the poisoning which is occurring to many as a result of eating "farmed" fish, ( they accumulate far more toxins than wild fish, for various reasons, and are also subjected to a massive bombardment of chemicals and hormones, [many illegal], known carcinogens, heavy metals, and a variety of other things), most farmed salmon is actually dangerous to eat now, many people still buy it, despite extensive information campaigns.. Even the most widely used colouring matter is a known serious carcinogen, it will have to kill or damage a lot more people before anybody really takes any notice. Several million anglers in the UK alone go fishing for these execrable stocked rainbows. Even when they are informed about the effects and dangers, the only result is complacency, or indeed anger and resentment at those who would "take away their pleasure". Selective blindness as a result of not wanting to lose personal gratification, such as it is. Of course it is not angling, but the vast majority know no better. In the meantime, there are a massive number of factors, especially affecting stocked fish, some extremely complex. For those who go along to their local reservoirs and pay their money for a day fishing, they just want to haul out more and bigger monstrosities. Many actually throw the fish away. There are also a large number of "anglers" clamouring for "catch and release" in these places. This is gross contempt and misuse of the unfortunate creatures involved, quite apart from any other considerations. With regard to the sandeels, these are being hoovered up in incredible masses and used as fish meal or pet food etc. For a while they were even be used to fuel power stations, maybe they still are. It has become increasingly difficult to obtain specific information, especially from the fish food companies and the "gammel-fishers". Of course these fish, ( it is a fish, related to the cod family, and not an eel) are a basic food item for many fish, and if there is no food, then there are no fish, or far fewer and smaller ones. Overfishing and pollution does the rest. Despite years of campaigning and lobbying, a very great deal of time and effort, and not a little money, our bass campaign was at last a failure, because the politicians went back on their words. It is only a matter of time before the bass are extinct around the UK coast. The same may be said of many other fish. There is no end to it, and it is a very steeply sliding spiral. There are limits beyond which fish populations can not regenerate, even if left alone, and once the basic food chain is seriously disturbed, this can happen very very quickly indeed. It is not likely that the bass will recover at all. Just following a few links from the SACN site will give you a lot more info. If you wish to do something, then join. Money is always welcome, but it is better to educate others if you can. Also, you must not expect to gain any personal advantage, or better fishing in your lifetime. Indeed, it may simply be all a total waste of time, but then again it might not. We have had a few successes as well. Anyway, have a look at the site first. Best wishes, regards, and tight lines! Mike Connor |
Disaster and partial compensation
On 13 Sep, 16:06, "Gordon MacPherson"
wrote: For info 1. Yes - I would much prefer to fish for wild trout - and do this in Wales and elsewhere when I can. The amount of wild trout fishing in the South of England is negligible. Doubtless, but fishing for stocked rainbows causes heavy environmental damage. Next time you catch one of those fish, do yourself a favour and have it analysed. I guarantee you will never eat another one after seeing the results. It takes a long time for the colouring matter to disappear from a stocked fish. In the wild it is only usually apparent in fish with a good portion of shrimp or similar in their diets, this mainly results in orange flesh, not pink. Stocked rainbows are coloured up by various means, often by means of astaxanthin. Just do a search on "carotene colour trout", or similar for a lot of info. Stocking policies vary considerably, most "top up" as required. Of course they donīt tell you that. In order to be a viable concern, a certain stocking density is required, and heavily fished fisheries like Farmoor and many others are replenished continuously, as otherwise people would not go there and pay their money. TL MC |
Disaster and partial compensation
On 13 Sep, 15:48, Ken Fortenberry
wrote: Mike wrote: Yeah, like I said earlier you're conflating aquaculture with fisheries management. Fisheries management has come a long way from simple "put and take" in most parts of the US, although some states still do it and some anglers still follow the hatchery trucks around and fish with "pellet lures". On the other hand there is a lot of fishable water that would have no fish at all if not for fish hatcheries and the economy of northern Wisconsin would take an enormous hit if not for the annual release of thousands of musky fry from the hatcheries. Besides, when folks are fishing stocked waters that makes more room for me on wild waters. ;-) -- Ken Fortenberry The subject is stocked rainbow trout in a UK fishery. You donīt know anything about it. But never fear, I am sure you eventually will. Because you obviously have very extensive resources in America, it will take longer for some of these effects to have the same results, but many of your anadromous fish runs are already severely affected, and will continue to decline unless the rape of the seas around and in the vicinity of your own coastlines is stopped. Nothing on this planet is entirely divorced from anything else, ( excepting human understanding). Marine ecology has massive effects on fresh water ecology, initially the effects are mainly restricted to various marine and anadromous fish, but this has other effects. many of the interdependencies are extremely complex. So, the results of completely undermining the basic marine food chain are drastic and comparatively sudden. MASSIVE amounts of bait fish are being caught, turned into fish meal at another MASSIVE loss ratio, to produce inferior farmed fish, pet food, and a host of other things. Left in place, that bait would produce more and better fish. Quite apart from its other functions, many of which are not even known. ALL the stocked rainbow trout in Europe are the result of limited gene pool breeding from a few original steelhead strains. MASSIVE numbers of these fish are bred, reared, and grown on to "catchable" sizes using fish meal. This is accompanied and compounded by the use of chemicals and hormones, and the increased incidence of various diseases, some previously unknown, as a result of intensive farming of these fish. Deformities and the lack of fins and tails are common and symptomatic. Some extremely serious diseases have already been spread, and completely decimated even large salmon runs, as a result of transporting farmed rainbow trout for stocking purposes. Some countries have had to resort to completely poisoning rivers of all life in an attempt ( probably quite futile) to damn the problem. This could only work if there were enough fish to restock the rivers anyway. This alone is now a problem. Fish farms have absolutely devastated whole areas of coastline, making it impossible for salmon and sea trout to survive, as under and around the farm cages, and for wide areas beyond, massive concentrations of sea lice, kept largely at bay in the cages with various chemicals, attack the wild smolts, and kill them before they can move out to sea. Most predatory fish ( especially salmonoids) which are grown on beyond the fry stage, require fish meal/oil in their diets. There is no substitute for this as yet. Practically all this is provided by catching bait fish. Your resources are large, but not infinite, and your population is as yet relatively thinly spread, but growing apace. Quite a few things are affecting you now, when your population increases further, as it is steadily doing all the time, those problems will multiply and intensify. Enough. I am sure you can Google it if you are interested at all. MC |
Disaster and partial compensation
"Mike" wrote in message ups.com... On 13 Sep, 16:06, "Gordon MacPherson" wrote: For info 1. Yes - I would much prefer to fish for wild trout - and do this in Wales and elsewhere when I can. The amount of wild trout fishing in the South of England is negligible. Doubtless, but fishing for stocked rainbows causes heavy environmental damage. Next time you catch one of those fish, do yourself a favour and have it analysed. I guarantee you will never eat another one after seeing the results. It takes a long time for the colouring matter to disappear from a stocked fish. In the wild it is only usually apparent in fish with a good portion of shrimp or similar in their diets, this mainly results in orange flesh, not pink. Stocked rainbows are coloured up by various means, often by means of astaxanthin. Just do a search on "carotene colour trout", or similar for a lot of info. Stocking policies vary considerably, most "top up" as required. Of course they donīt tell you that. In order to be a viable concern, a certain stocking density is required, and heavily fished fisheries like Farmoor and many others are replenished continuously, as otherwise people would not go there and pay their money. TL MC In fact many Farmoor trout do have "orange" flesh. Gordon |
Disaster and partial compensation
Mike wrote:
"Gordon MacPherson" wrote: For info 1. Yes - I would much prefer to fish for wild trout - and do this in Wales and elsewhere when I can. The amount of wild trout fishing in the South of England is negligible. ... 3. Stocking at Farmoor is generally before the season starts, and a fish stocked at 1lb will have reached 2-2.5 lb by the end of the summer. snip Stocking policies vary considerably, most "top up" as required. Of course they donīt tell you that. In order to be a viable concern, a certain stocking density is required, and heavily fished fisheries like Farmoor and many others are replenished continuously, as otherwise people would not go there and pay their money. I am quite impressed at the breadth and depth of your knowledge about all things fishing, Mike. I mean a guy living in Germany who knows more about the stocking policies of a particular place in the UK than the person who actually fishes there must possess vast amounts of arcane, detailed knowledge. We are truly blessed to have you in our presence and to anyone on roff who considers you a laughingstock I would offer this post as affirmation of your worth here. -- Ken Fortenberry |
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