We knew it was going to be special, but even we were surprised
at just how special it ended up being.
The week beginning March 15th (the first week of
the fishing closed season, and the usual week we stock our roach into the
river) started with the unpleasant task of netting the thirty unfortunates to
be taken off for the health check and it was this first casual sweep of the net
around a quarter of a pond, expecting just a few hundred roach at most, that
revealed just how special the week ahead might be. There were so many roach
that we even considered stocking additional locations – perhaps five or six
instead of the usual three.
As usual, the health checks came back clean so we had the
go-ahead to stock.
Looking back, we have never failed a health check. We’ve had
a bit of blackspot and eye fluke and mild Echinochasmus in scale pockets, but
they’ve always passed and our size to age ratio has always been comparable with
historical records, so all in all us boys done good… Or we’ve just been lucky.
Unlike previous years, when the netted stews would be
receiving fish from the tanks to grow on, this year was the final netting, so
we were able to drop the water to assist and increase effectiveness as,
usually, despite repeated sweeps of the net, there are always a few (perhaps fifty
or so) which evade capture and live for a further few years in our care. This
year we were aiming to remove every roach, then drop and dry the stews.
One of the most obvious things that was evident on many
levels, should we have decided to continue, was the need for significant
investment in desilting our feeder stream and stews and re-posting and netting
them against avian predation. Not surprising after more than a decade.
Being our final lot, we thought long and hard about where we
wanted to stock which, as a result of the extraordinary level of success of our
efforts over the years, now wasn’t so critical to the ongoing recovery of roach
in the river. However, we were happy with the spacing of the deliveries and the
continuing huge natural impact they’d have. We even had enough fish to put some
where, at the beginning of the project, might have been regarded as needing
them the least. However, with the rest of the river now in as good a state
regarding its roach for a generation, we could afford to be generous.
The stockings happened on the Wednesday, Thursday and Friday
with a great deal of extra care and consideration having to be applied due to
Covid, meaning the nettings had to be critically coordinated. The EA guys, Jim,
Phil and Lewis, stepped up to the challenge and made it the amazing experience
it always is. They once again not only supplied all the equipment, tanks, nets,
oxygen etc. but also an astonishing level of expertise. We’ve said it before,
but we could not have achieved what we have without them.
By the end, we all agreed that the story of this week would
have made the perfect final chapter to the book – copies of which are still
available, by the way. So, for those who still haven’t got your copy yet… Shame
on you! How do you sleep at night?
We have had some eyewatering comments about it, with folks
saying the simply can’t put it down; so to all who have one, we thank you very
much.
Here’s the link for those who haven’t:-
www.avonroachprojectshop.co.uk
It was a very strange feeling both Budgie and I shared while
dismantling elements of what we have spent a decade and a half building,
maintaining and caring for. But we also agreed, the system has done its job to
a level beyond what any of us could have anticipated.
This final stocking is unquestionably the greatest number of
roach we have deposited in a single year. It was mind-blowing…
Although this was the ‘final’ stocking; as we have said
before, there will always be an Avon Roach Project, if only in name and to
enable us to advise and assist others to do what we have, and front or
encourage or advise on ongoing habitat enhancement. And, you never know; there
might even be an encore…
We will also uphold our promise of ensuring sufficient
spawning substrate at the locations at which we have helped bolster the roach
population density and look at improving gravel spawning substrate, in
partnership with the EA, for species such as barbel in the Avon – now we are
‘experts’…
Again, in partnership with EA Fisheries, we are also looking
at allowing adaptations of our techniques to be used in management of some
stillwaters – watch this space.
We’ll let the pictures and captions tell the rest…
As well as the water being dropped slightly, work is carried
out in the weeks prior to netting to remove all marginal sedge and weed growth,
alive or dead, to assist the smooth running of the net.