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 New Posts  Flooding and fisheries
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Daveb36
Posts: 312
Daveb36
   Old Thread  #22 23 Feb 2020 at 7.00pm    Login    Register
There will certainly have been some fish moving home along the valleys . River fishing for carp is usually quite profitable after a flood like this one.

I recall Docklow's 'landlocked' specimen pool flooding back in 2007. Their carp were getting caught at the bottom end of the Lugg from where they were 'helpfully' re-homed in a number of syndicate lakes. Docklow also lost a bunch of catfish but, to the best of my knowledge, they haven't turned up in the Wye.

mark1009
Posts: 4239
   Old Thread  #21 23 Feb 2020 at 1.39am    Login    Register
In reply to Post #20
Question has to be " How many fish are left in this lake I'm fishing". Only time will tell. Unless it's netted.
garyh47
Posts: 8
   Old Thread  #20 22 Feb 2020 at 9.29pm    Login    Register
In reply to Post #17
I feel it will be a terrible summer, lots of lakes will have problems especially if they have been flooded from rivers😥
mal
Posts: 8910
mal
   Old Thread  #19 19 Feb 2020 at 10.57pm    Login    Register
In reply to Post #15
Looks like somewhere Jeremy wade would be fishing....
warchild
Posts: 802
warchild
   Old Thread  #18 19 Feb 2020 at 10.06pm    Login    Register
In reply to Post #13
i was at the bridge down stream at preston bamber bridge/church deeps, and it was to the top of the flood walls and bridge, and all the fields around preston was a inland sea, a shark rod 160lb braid and 96 oz lead just to hold bottom lol

fished that spot on the drone for 30 years

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OaMGuMHtsmI

not my vid
ken
Posts: 939
   Old Thread  #17 19 Feb 2020 at 9.21pm    Login    Register
In reply to Post #16
Is it now attached to the river.
I remember some big floods probably 25 years back where after all the water receded a small local river that flooded into some lakes the carp,tench and bream found a new home and the lakes had to do a bit of restocking.
I imagine this flood will be the same. The weather is unpredictable in this country, we get so many weather fronts from the Atlantic, North Africa, Eastern and Northern Europe all mixing together. I wouldn't want to live anywhere else. Who wants predictable weather 52 weeks of the year.
madi
Posts: 337
madi
   Old Thread  #16 19 Feb 2020 at 8.32pm    Login    Register
Drove past broadlands lake in Southampton and it like one massive lake at the moment!
Dicky
Posts: 2346
Dicky
   Old Thread  #15 19 Feb 2020 at 5.02pm    Login    Register
In reply to Post #13
Link
mal
Posts: 8910
mal
   Old Thread  #14 19 Feb 2020 at 4.56pm    Login    Register
In reply to Post #13
Bloody hell! Yeah those arches must be 25ft plus!

Defiant.one
Posts: 4313
Defiant.one
   Old Thread  #13 19 Feb 2020 at 4.53pm    Login    Register
In reply to Post #12
Think they shut the M6 for a while at Tickled Trout, was told the Arches under the bridge could not be seen!

How high are those Arches Mal , must be 25 - 30ft?


https://facebook.com/675168385/posts/10157296335043386/?d=n

This is the drone footage if someone knows how to do a link, worth watching
mal
Posts: 8910
mal
   Old Thread  #12 19 Feb 2020 at 4.23pm    Login    Register
In reply to Post #11
I saw some footage of the ribble on north West news and it looked pretty mental.

Is the tickled trout still standing?
Defiant.one
Posts: 4313
Defiant.one
   Old Thread  #11 19 Feb 2020 at 4.17pm    Login    Register
In reply to Post #10
Oh it was serious, I've never seen anything like it - where I normally Park in the field, it's way above the River's normal level, was like a huge lake last weekend!
yonny
Posts: 7642
yonny
   Old Thread  #10 19 Feb 2020 at 3.51pm    Login    Register
In reply to Post #9
19 ft
Defiant.one
Posts: 4313
Defiant.one
   Old Thread  #9 19 Feb 2020 at 3.39pm    Login    Register
It was serious around here last weekend when Ciara hit, ground was already soaked – a farm road behind my house was there on Friday when I took the dog a walk, by Sunday all that’s left is rubble!

The private stretch of the River Ribble I fish was 19ft above normal levels (Highest ever recorded) I’ve seen drone footage of it during the Sunday; it looked like the Mekong Delta!

Amazingly only a 20ft section of walkway was ripped out (Vanished) all the rest was fine including the swims, it was a wise decision to pile those 6ft Posts in a full 4ft when building it all.
zmitchell
Posts: 147
zmitchell
   Old Thread  #8 19 Feb 2020 at 3.08pm    Login    Register
Yep, I work about 1/2 mile down road from A1 and its mental here. Flooding everywhere and will no doubt have a big impact on the fisheries when it does subside.
Robo67
Posts: 283
Robo67
   Old Thread  #7 19 Feb 2020 at 3.04pm    Login    Register
In reply to Post #3
Looking at the photos on Facebook it looks like A1 pits are the same.
carpstar40
Posts: 3563
carpstar40
   Old Thread  #6 19 Feb 2020 at 2.09pm    Login    Register
At about 46'seconds the old bridge and New bridge (1960's) and we still call it the new bridge , just North of the New bridge for three or four fields down to just past the south of the old bridge (tennis courts) are where some of the better carp reside in the city stretches.
carpstar40
Posts: 3563
carpstar40
   Old Thread  #5 19 Feb 2020 at 2.00pm    Login    Register
There will have been a few around Herefordshire that have been affected, North of the city the river Lugg that runs into the Wye has flooded all around the pits at Wellington The Oxbow at Letton and the lake at Kinnersley for sure a few others I can think of as well.

I wonder how displaced the river fish will be now.

COMBINATION OF CIARA AND DENNIS

Good job I live on a hill in the city, if it flooded my house half of the UK would be submerged.
NemesisWitch
Posts: 1349
NemesisWitch
   Old Thread  #4 19 Feb 2020 at 1.41pm    Login    Register
In reply to Post #2
Yep.. Pretty wild down in Dorset. Throop is seriously flooded.
Dicky
Posts: 2346
Dicky
   Old Thread  #3 19 Feb 2020 at 1.27pm    Login    Register
The hole of the pride of derby complex and the Trent are just one massive expansion of water
MARKerz
Posts: 1825
   Old Thread  #2 19 Feb 2020 at 1.13pm    Login    Register
In reply to Post #1
I was down in Christchurch, Dorset on Sunday until Monday midday and the River Avon that flows under the Christchurch Bypass had flooded, I'm not a regular to this area so not sure if this is the norm? Imagine the Stour would be similar?

The power of the water surging through Mudeford Quay was incredible and parts of the New Forest resembled a swamp, plenty of roads impassable also.
mal
Posts: 8910
mal
   Old Thread  #1 19 Feb 2020 at 12.35pm    Login    Register
So have any of your syndicates or fisheries been affected? I know in the past there have been places that have really suffered.

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