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#1
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Is it as difficult to find decent fly fishing in Scotland as it is
'fishing" (£££££) in the rest of the UK? John It is becoming increasingly difficult to find fishing in Europe which does not cost a considerable amount of money, and usually also involves extensive travel. This is mainly due to anglers being prepared to pay outrageous sums for even mediocre fishing. It will certainly get worse. There is nothing much to be done about it. Most "normal" anglers, are simply priced out of the market. Some places have become veritable angling tourist Meccas, and the fishing often deteriorates rapidly as a result. People looking for peace and quiet or a solitary experience on "good" waters are increasingly disappointed, despite having paid a veritable fortune for the privilege. Many ( Most?), can not even afford this doubtful experience. Add to this the ongoing problems due to pollution and massive overfishing, and the future is not very bright. TL MC |
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On Wed, 28 Sep 2005 10:56:14 +0200, "Mike Connor"
wrote: Is it as difficult to find decent fly fishing in Scotland as it is 'fishing" (£££££) in the rest of the UK? John It is becoming increasingly difficult to find fishing in Europe which does not cost a considerable amount of money, and usually also involves extensive travel. This is mainly due to anglers being prepared to pay outrageous sums for even mediocre fishing. It will certainly get worse. There is nothing much to be done about it. Most "normal" anglers, are simply priced out of the market. Some places have become veritable angling tourist Meccas, and the fishing often deteriorates rapidly as a result. People looking for peace and quiet or a solitary experience on "good" waters are increasingly disappointed, despite having paid a veritable fortune for the privilege. Many ( Most?), can not even afford this doubtful experience. Add to this the ongoing problems due to pollution and massive overfishing, and the future is not very bright. I couldn't agree more. As individuals, we fishermen can make a contribution by practicing catch and release at least. However, the environment is so out of kilter, more needs to be done at a national and international level. Look at the cormorant problem in the UK. Due to over-fishing at sea, these birds are heading inland, and the effect on wild fish stocks has been devastating in some areas. Over use of pesticides not only screw up the insect life on which the fish feed, but they stay in the food chain and accumulate to toxic levels in predator species. Unless something is done soon, all we will have to look forward to is days of stockie bashing in muddy puddles. John http://groups.msn.com/scottishflyfisher Responsible anglers catch and release. Lose the barbs or lose the fish! |
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![]() "Scottish Fly Fisher" schrieb im Newsbeitrag ... SNIP I couldn't agree more. As individuals, we fishermen can make a contribution by practicing catch and release at least. However, the environment is so out of kilter, more needs to be done at a national and international level. Look at the cormorant problem in the UK. Due to over-fishing at sea, these birds are heading inland, and the effect on wild fish stocks has been devastating in some areas. Over use of pesticides not only screw up the insect life on which the fish feed, but they stay in the food chain and accumulate to toxic levels in predator species. Unless something is done soon, all we will have to look forward to is days of stockie bashing in muddy puddles. John http://groups.msn.com/scottishflyfisher Responsible anglers catch and release. Lose the barbs or lose the fish! Practising catch and release is unlikely to solve any European problems at all. Even if you took all the fish you ever caught in your life, including undersized ones, you will never even get close to a fraction of the amount in one trawl, or drift net. Alone the fish being taken from the sea to produce pellets and similar material is in the millions of tonnes, and increasing daily. This is completely destroying whole food chains, beyond hope of recovery in a reasonable time scale. The cormorant problem is not only a result of overfishing at sea, but because the birds are protected. Populations have increased massively since these birds were placed under protection. Pesticides are a considerably lesser problem than fertiliser! Many anglers nowadays, especially in the UK and various parts of Europe, spend their lives looking forward to "days of stockie bashing in muddy puddles". Fishing for fish which have been raised at an incredible loss ratio, on wild protein obtained at the cost of massive and in the meantime irreparable damage to the environment. This is quite apart from the horrendous damage and wastage engendered by various other fish farming projects world wide. Anglers ( apart from the stockie bashers), are not responsible for these things, and as ever, most are quite powerless to do anything about it. While catch and release may be of some use in management of fisheries, ( or more accurately, in management of anglers who use them!), it will do no good at all in the face of the now huge problems in much of Europe, and indeed, in many cases it merely serves to sop people“s consciences, as many cite it as the moral high ground, when in fact, it is completely irrelevant to the problems we are now facing. TL MC |
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On Wed, 28 Sep 2005 15:11:59 +0200, "Mike Connor"
wrote: "Scottish Fly Fisher" schrieb im Newsbeitrag ... SNIP I couldn't agree more. As individuals, we fishermen can make a contribution by practicing catch and release at least. However, the environment is so out of kilter, more needs to be done at a national and international level. Look at the cormorant problem in the UK. Due to over-fishing at sea, these birds are heading inland, and the effect on wild fish stocks has been devastating in some areas. Over use of pesticides not only screw up the insect life on which the fish feed, but they stay in the food chain and accumulate to toxic levels in predator species. Unless something is done soon, all we will have to look forward to is days of stockie bashing in muddy puddles. John http://groups.msn.com/scottishflyfisher Responsible anglers catch and release. Lose the barbs or lose the fish! Practising catch and release is unlikely to solve any European problems at all. Even if you took all the fish you ever caught in your life, including undersized ones, you will never even get close to a fraction of the amount in one trawl, or drift net. Alone the fish being taken from the sea to produce pellets and similar material is in the millions of tonnes, and increasing daily. This is completely destroying whole food chains, beyond hope of recovery in a reasonable time scale. Sadly, you're right, and I probably only doing it to salve my conscience. However, it is something that I have the power to do. The cormorant problem is not only a result of overfishing at sea, but because the birds are protected. Populations have increased massively since these birds were placed under protection. LoL. I had an interesting conversation with a twitcher on the Clyde early in the season. The RSPB had set up a peregrine watch near a nest near the Falls of Clyde. I was only out for a walk, so I wasn't kitted up, and it wasn't obvious that I was a fisher. I was spoiling for a debate, so I asked them if they had seen any cormorants in the area. The guide proudly told me that he'd seen several in the area, including several fledglings. I know it was petty, but I was smarting from a few unproductive outings on what used to be some of my favourite stretches of the river, and he was a convenient target for my griping. The sad thing is that conserving the cormorants is probably their version of catch and release... trying to do something in the face of overwhelming adversity. If only the could adapt like the gulls, and live off land-fills and by mugging the occasional drunk for their kebab. :-) Pesticides are a considerably lesser problem than fertiliser! One I forgot to mention. Many anglers nowadays, especially in the UK and various parts of Europe, spend their lives looking forward to "days of stockie bashing in muddy puddles". Fishing for fish which have been raised at an incredible loss ratio, on wild protein obtained at the cost of massive and in the meantime irreparable damage to the environment. This is quite apart from the horrendous damage and wastage engendered by various other fish farming projects world wide. I could be wrong, but isn't the fish food made from the wastage... the stuff that people don't eat? I could be wrong here, but does the production of fish food pellets make a significant difference to the amount of fish that are hoovered up from the sea? Anglers ( apart from the stockie bashers), are not responsible for these things, and as ever, most are quite powerless to do anything about it. But it feels better if you try to do something, no matter how insignificant. Most of us are stockie bashers, BTW. There are few truly wild waters left in Britain, (I can't speak for the continent.) It's hard to find any water that doesn't have its population supplemented by triploid stockies. If these fish are wasteful, ecologically speaking, we are fooling ourselves that they help to prop up the resident populations of trout. While catch and release may be of some use in management of fisheries, ( or more accurately, in management of anglers who use them!), it will do no good at all in the face of the now huge problems in much of Europe, and indeed, in many cases it merely serves to sop people“s consciences, as many cite it as the moral high ground, when in fact, it is completely irrelevant to the problems we are now facing. You're probably right, but it can't hurt, can it? If I don't kill my fish and treat them with care when returning them, that still makes a difference, albeit a small one. Every journey starts with a single step... John http://groups.msn.com/scottishflyfisher Responsible anglers catch and release. Lose the barbs or lose the fish! |
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![]() "Scottish Fly Fisher" wrote in message ... ...The cormorant problem is not only a result of overfishing at sea, but because the birds are protected. Populations have increased massively since these birds were placed under protection..... ...If only the could adapt like the gulls, and live off land-fills and by mugging the occasional drunk for their kebab. :-) I don't recall ever seeing a cormorant when I was a boy growing up on the shore of Lake Michigan. As far as I knew, even many years later when I developed an interest in birds, they were strictly marine birds. As a matter of fact, I still don't know whether they are considered native on the Great Lakes. I first started noticing them (much to my excited pleasure) maybe 15 or 20 years ago. These days it's nearly impossible to spend any time on the beaches or the lake without seeing many of them, and their numbers seem to be increasing steadily. Presumably, they are also protected here as they are not considered to be either game birds or pests......not yet, anyway.....and protected is the default status for anything not covered by the other two categories. Not that protected status makes much difference, I suppose. Nobody seems to be much interested in shooting them; the days of widespread shooting of anything that moves are pretty much gone around here. Interesting that they are burgeoning both here and there. One wonders whether the same sorts of dynamics are at work.....and what they might be. Also interesting.....and disturbing.....is the fact that the populations of gulls (primarily herring gulls and ring-billed gulls) have also been increasing at an alarming rate, much to the detriment of many of the shore birds from what I've heard. I haven't researched the matter, so I don't really know what's behind this rise either, but I do know that it has a lot of wildlife scientists and managers very concerned. And then, just about a month ago, I saw my first ever Lake Michigan pelican....a brown pelican. Not sure that the existence of a pelican here means anything, but watching all the changes that have taken place in the past 50 years or so is very unsettling. The Great Lakes ecology is reeling from one serious blow after another, with no end in sight. Wolfgang |
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![]() "Scottish Fly Fisher" schrieb im Newsbeitrag ... On Wed, 28 Sep 2005 15:11:59 +0200, "Mike Connor" wrote: I could be wrong, but isn't the fish food made from the wastage... the stuff that people don't eat? I could be wrong here, but does the production of fish food pellets make a significant difference to the amount of fish that are hoovered up from the sea? No, unfortunately, practically all fish farming, including the breeding and raising of triploid rainbows and other fish, especially salmonids, not to mention very large numbers of crustaceans and similar, depends entirely on large amounts of wild protein which is obtained from the high seas, and then processed very wastefully. Do a google search on the consumption of wild protein pellets, ( and there are no viable substitutes) in the UK alone. A very large proportion of this is used for fish farming, although there are a number of other uses, including cattle feed, chicken feed ( which is why the boiled eggs stink of fish!), and fertiliser. If you check global figures, which are increasing very rapidly, then you will be even more shocked. Fish farming is increasing rapidly, but the wild protein consumption is alsready far beyond the capacity of the oceans to replace it, quite apart from the resultant food chain destruction, and all the other severe collateral damage. TL MC |
#7
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![]() "Wolfgang" schrieb im Newsbeitrag ... SNIP Interesting that they are burgeoning both here and there. One wonders whether the same sorts of dynamics are at work.....and what they might be. SNIP Ongoing and well founded research suggests that the dynamics are much the same. The single main cause being the massive overfishing of food chain items. Large areas of ocean around the Americas are now almost devoid of life, forcing birds and other predators to seek alternatives. These alternatives are of course also slowly, or even rapidly eroded, as the birds then increase to beyond what the resource can bear, and then go into sharp decline, but only after much damage and destruction has taken place. TL MC |
#8
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![]() "Mike Connor" wrote in message ... "Wolfgang" schrieb im Newsbeitrag ... SNIP Interesting that they are burgeoning both here and there. One wonders whether the same sorts of dynamics are at work.....and what they might be. SNIP Ongoing and well founded research suggests that the dynamics are much the same. The single main cause being the massive overfishing of food chain items. Large areas of ocean around the Americas are now almost devoid of life, forcing birds and other predators to seek alternatives. These alternatives are of course also slowly, or even rapidly eroded, as the birds then increase to beyond what the resource can bear, and then go into sharp decline, but only after much damage and destruction has taken place. I can't deny that overharvesting the cormorants' food supply in marine habitats has contributed to their dispersal in search of greener pastures, but the Great Lakes even at their most fecund are virtually sterile as their compared to oceanic environments. There must be something more going on, I think. Wolfgang |
#9
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![]() "Wolfgang" schrieb im Newsbeitrag ... SNIP I can't deny that overharvesting the cormorants' food supply in marine habitats has contributed to their dispersal in search of greener pastures, but the Great Lakes even at their most fecund are virtually sterile as their compared to oceanic environments. There must be something more going on, I think. Wolfgang Oh doubtless there are other mechanisms at work as well, there always are, often ( indeed, usually!) extremely complex to boot. I have no really specific information on the Great Lakes as such, although they are also mentioned in some research I have read. Large numbers of cormorants have now apparently developed quite specific behaviour for exploiting inland areas. This is especially evident in parts of Europe, where the birds have indeed virtually denuded even large areas of fish. Where there were once no birds at all, there are now quite large numbers, and very active nesting colonies. Some gulls have also been observed to have completely modified their feeding areas and behaviour, now coming inland and feeding almost exclusively on rubbish tips and in similar areas. Huge flocks of these birds can now be observed in such places. There is quite a lot of literature on the matter, and a google search will also turn up a great deal. Perhaps there is indeed something a little more specific on the Great Lakes? TL MC |
#10
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May be of interest;
http://www.fws.gov/migratorybirds/is...tlakes_q&a.htm It should be remembered of course that there are quite a number of cormorant species, and not all will necessarily behave in the same manner, or for the same reasons. TL MC |
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