Annual spawning board placement usually takes place in the
first week in April just in case of an early warm spell which has once before
triggered early spawning. However, all Roach Project aficionados will by now
know that unless something very unusual happens (Floods, Ice Age, Heatwave),
spawning takes place on or around the 25th, so with the river still
full of snowmelt water and not even the remotest glimmer of Spring in the air,
there was no urgency.
Then to add to the feeling of ‘how much longer is this bloody
winter going on for’ some ridiculously heavy ‘April Showers’ sent the river up
and into the fields… Eeeeehh, you couldn’t write this stuff.
Suddenly, it seemed Spring remembered the time and got a
grip. The river began dropping, swallows started arriving, brimstones and bees
joined us and a Grannom hatch exploded as the temperature climbed and the river
warmed and cleared – once again hitting the ARP ‘Panic Button’…
By the third week in April all the spawning boards were in
the usual locations – plus one new one noticed and tried for the first time
last year, and we were ready to go.
Off the back of the most successful one year old yield and
the second highest number of three year olds ever returned in the few months
earlier, it was unlikely that we would score a hat trick with regard spawning
action, but nothing could have prepared us for what was to happen…. Oops! I’ve
given the game away again, haven’t I?
There are only a few spawning locations which allow decent
pictures to be taken, and even at these it’s a case of being there at the right
time and spending hours clicking away in the hope of a few jaw-droppers. And,
over the years we have always felt that the previous years pictures will never
be equalled, let alone bettered.
Well, this year simply blew my little mind.
I received a call saying the roach were splashing so popped
along with the camera to see. They were splashing but it would be a couple of
days before full-on spawning action would be happening. The first day is
usually the males all establishing territory at the spawning boards and chasing
each other around, which is what was happening.
I’ll not dwell on it here as most of you have probably
already scrolled past this to see the most amazing spawning pictures ever.
I stood in perfect light with perfect river conditions and in
a couple of hours took 959 pictures of the most amazing Avon Roach spawning spectacle
I have ever experienced. The roach were thrashing around all over, even
skidding across the tops of the spawning boards which they’d partially covered
with eggs.
The first thing that struck me was the sheer number of
individuals, large (huge) and small – the smaller ones very likely being some
of those we stocked downstream last year. Then there was the welcome return of
what we refer to as the ‘big girls’ – two roach we estimate to be well in
excess of three pounds. In addition to these beauties we were blown away by the
sizes of some of the huge males, which you’ll see in the pictures below.
The number and size of the roach, and given that they spawn
exclusively on our spawning boards in preference over any of the natural
substrate in the area, meant that careful management was essential as they’d
covered the netting with spawn within a couple of days – so the spawning boards
were collected and replaced with fresh for the roach to continue without any
risk of over clogging what had already been deposited.
It’s always a little unnerving, but the roach are on the
replacements and spawning like fury within minutes. I have even had roach
spawning on a board as I’m pulling the rope to retrieve it – a truly awesome
experience.
Safely back in the tanks, the eggs began to develop nicely
over the coming week, slowed slightly by a drop in temperature – the main
downside to this being my hands aching up to my armpits when taking the
underwater pictures. – but just twelve days later and hatching commenced. That
was it; I felt like I’d been fired from a cannon as I assembled and filled the
Brine Shrimp Hatchery in readiness for the roach needing this crucial feed.
Getting the roach hatched and starting to feed and grow on
the Brine Shrimp in the first few days is always a real buzz as thousands of
tiny new lives begin. I must admit that the novelty wears off within about
twelve seconds though as it is very time consuming and particularly dull – that
said, it is probably one of the most critical and important stages… That won’t
stop me bitching about it though.
This year there was yet another rather pleasant occurrence
and feather in our cap as we saw roach spawning on the stanchions of Ibsley
Bridge, once famous for its roach, but like much of the rest of the river
suffered the same level of decline. These were very likely either some of the
fish we stocked just above the bridge, a while back, or the progeny of
stockings further upstream at North End which are known to have flourished as
they now seem to be doing throughout the river.
Back in the day we placed our spawning boards at Ibsley over
a number of years in our attempts at finding roach spawning sites, unfortunately
without success. And, with roach finding our spawning boards irresistible if
placed in the right place it proved to us that there were sadly no roach left
at Ibsley. Not so now.
I’ll leave the words there and let the pictures and captions
tell the rest of the story.
Once again, I’d like to thank everyone for the continued
support and encouragement.
Initially, there is a lot of male territorial jostling. Again, great to see such healthy numbers.
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Here one of the ‘big girls’ is attracting the attention of some of the boys.
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As they come together the action starts to intensify.
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Then away they go… Just what is it about these spawning boards???
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