In Praise of the Stream

FishingMagic

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Do you live close to a stream or minor river? Do you ever look at it? If it’s only what you might call a town trickle, have you ever consulted an O.S map and been to explore that blue capillary where it ventures away from the traffic and out into the fields? If not (and please excuse the accusatory tone here) why not? If you’re pretty certain that the water you see flowing over the bike frames and supermarket trolleys is unpolluted there’s no reason to assume a lack of fish life up or downstream of your rather insalubrious viewpoint, and to do so might be to pass up the chance of some fabulous fishing.

As we know, fish and fishing thrive on neglect. Find a stretch of untouched water that’s substantial enough to hold fish life and there’s an excellent chance that it will. Follow it along. Stop where it turns then study the deeper water on the outside of the bend and flick a few grains of corn into the dark water…watch them drift down and you might see one or two suddenly disappear on the drop or change course – FISH! Don’t assume that the water’s insignificance will determine the size of any fish present because even the most modest trickle is capable of harbouring some pretty mean specimens – chub and roach in particular.

I found one such stream a while ago in Essex and, yes, I initially wrote it off as a relatively lifeless waterway fit only for insect life and the odd moorhen; but I gave it a bash one afternoon when I had nothing better to do. Armed with my favourite Avon rod and an old Mitchell Prince loaded with 6lb line I ventured out into the field and found the widest and most likely section – perhaps 9 feet wide and 2 feet deep. Bait was bread-flake, and this was fished on a light link-leger and size 8 hook. I was on the field side of a barbed wire fence and I cast from this position feeling sure of little or no action. How wrong I was! Within minutes the rod-tip flickered then took on a determined curve; I struck and disbelievingly found myself latched into something rather heavy! Wrenching the rod as it rocketed downstream I was forced to give the fish both line and a plea for mercy: if nothing else I wanted to see what the hell lived in this little river! My 10ft cane Avon continued to take a pounding but the line held until I could slacken-off a little and insinuate myself under the barbed wire to net my very worthy opponent – a chub! On the scales that fish went 4lb 8oz! I clearly recall saying out loud “What, exactly, are you doing a few miles from Basildon??” I went on to winkle-out two carp of 5 and 7+lbs and a half pound vegetarian perch – all from this lowly, unprepossessing little Essex stream. The real icing on the cake this memorable day was the realization that nobody else knew of this place (and nobody would know of this place!)

For 10 years I had the river to myself. The more I explored, the more I found: bends over 10 feet deep, gravel runs, a forested stretch where carp to double figures could be seen cruising beneath chestnut-laden overhangs; there were elderberry bushes, giant hogweed, Japanese balsam, hawthorn and even bamboo strongholds to be found close to the crumbling red-brick bridge. In that decade of secretive, undisturbed fishing I kept the company of voles and kingfishers, weasels, a stoat and a great many chub to 5lb 4oz. I had roach to 2lb 7oz no less, pike to 11lb which would seize my struggling chub, carp to 9lbs and a few more perch of modest weight.

Like all good things though, it came to an end. The stupid woman who’d moved into the big, expensive house by the old mill decided to shore-up her brook-side garden and, of course, the easiest way to do this was by emptying the river! That’s right. The stupid, thoughtless woman took it upon herself to open up the sluice-gate and pour the entire waterway into the sea. Water per se returned eventually and the miracle that is Mother Nature threw in a few little fish for good measure; but the rot had set in to reduce a once thriving little river to an overgrown ditch.


Not very far from the scene of this crime is the Essex Blackwater, yet another of this country’s rivers to have its glorious past overtaken by the effects of abstraction, pollution and, well…time. It was one Sunday morning around 20 years ago (really quite recently!) that I fired-up the renovated Moggy 1000 and drove off to discover what lay behind the fine blue Ordnance Survey line running from Coggeshall to the sea at Maldon, Essex. I headed for a bridge – a humpty-backed one as it turned out – and parked immediately on the north side. I’d never before set eyes on the rural Blackwater, only the tidal estuary up to ‘Watersmeet’ at Langford, so it was with a blend of pending disappointment and excitement that I left my car and walked to the brow of the bridge.

Looking downstream I was nothing less than delighted to have a good flow of substantial width fill my eyes; it was quite beautiful and, bringing my sight closer to the shallow water beneath my nose, I saw a fish… quite a big fish… an enormous roach…five or six enormous roach!! I swore out loud and craned my neck out and down to get a better look at these monsters. Yes, they were roach and no mistake; furthermore, each and every one of them would have nudged or broken the national record which at that time stood at 3lb 14oz. This was in the month of May so pursuing these prizes was out of the question, but come June 20[SUP]th[/SUP] or thereabouts I was back at the bridge with my tackle and a loaf of fresh crusty bread.

The fish were nowhere to be seen but I side-cast my bait from upstream of the bridge to where I’d seen their bellies scraping the shallows just a few weeks before. I caught a 2lb chub, and then another, then all went quiet. I kept an eagle eye on the rod-tip until way after sun-down but no further sign of life was to be seen on my short stretch of river for the rest of that season. I sometimes ask myself – albeit very fleetingly – if I really had seen those record roach, but I surely had. Do such monsters still inhabit the Essex Blackwater, I wonder. A careless fork-lift driver miles upstream near Kelvedon punctured a drum of chemical a decade ago and caused the deaths of a great many fish in that locality. Whether or not the curse affected the river further down I do not know but the occasional good ‘un still comes out of the privately owned weir pool at Langford, 5 miles downstream by the Steam Museum.

Now this represents a classic example of how a humble piece of water can astound even the optimistic. The pool is not at all large (we’re in Essex, remember) and it is deep on one side only, so the size and variety of fish produced by this foamy little backwater is nothing less than miraculous: salmon? Yes! The club secretary once had his pike lure snatched by a low-double Rex that led him a frantic dance around the pool before coming to the net. Carp? A fellow member won our winter match with one carp that registered 17lbs on the official scales after revealing its self to be somewhat…flamboyant! The captor had lifted it for a photo and we’d all gasped to see long, surreal, whiskery fins reminiscent of Japanese plate and fabric designs, but in every other respect it looked like a standard common carp – a bizarre specimen indeed! There’s a barbel in there too -one barbel! I caught it at 4lb 2oz during a pre-membership ‘guesting’ session less than an hour before my inevitable ejection from this jealously-guarded piece of Paradise.

I spoke with the bailiff as I packed up but said nothing of my capture. “Are there barbel in here?” I asked in apparent innocence.
“There’s actually one” he told me, “and it weighs 4lb 2oz”! How I managed to deny myself the satisfaction of confirming his statement I’ll never know because at thirteen feet in depth and twice the size of a tennis court the pool isn’t so intimate as to hold no mysteries; my barbel was still a rare capture and unknown to most members.

You ignore or write-off those brooks and back-streams at your expense, and as I write there could still be untold numbers of stonking specimens just waiting to be lured from thousands of insignificant, unexplored ribbons of cartographer’s blue. As Fishing Magicians we can share this advice and tell of our results…just don’t shout about it.

Cliff Hatton


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no-one in particular

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I found one such stream many years ago and still fish it.. You cant see it from the road, 4ft wide and overgrown in the summer. But when you walk up it clears a bit, never very wide or deep but holds bream, carp and rudd, nothing big but some very good roach shoals of 1lb + fish. There are tench in there as well so I have been told but never caught one and sea trout as well. None of the locals fish it because it has to be rubbish and once you get up in the farm land beyond the human habitation one of the best valleys for birds, Hobbies, Peregrines, Kestrels and all manor of things. All the Swallows and Martins follow the stream through the valley on migration and in September, I have sat in the middle of hundreds of them streaming past me all day, quite a sight.
The farmer did challenge me once but after being as charming and as polite as I could muster he gave me permission to fish whenever I want, a little gem.
I have studied an OS map and a lot of walking and inquiring done and many were dead ends but don't give up, you only have to find one or two and they are life long friends and all free and wild fish.
 
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103841

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Enjoyable read Cliff, thanks for sharing. Unfished streams are making FM news at the moment what with Ray’s find and Ralph plundering chub almost on his door step.
 

theartist

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Yes, I have found several over the years. I have mentioned this one before; In the village of Cookham, Bucks we have the vast area of land owned by John Lewis and all the 'partners'. At the bottom of the side road leading to this we have an small bridge which goes over a Thames off-shoot and this rejoins further down stream. Halfway down this stretch a very narrow stream leaves the main stretch and meanders also to the Thames. All of this is adjacent to public land and get busy in high summer....

The stream is narrow and of varying depths with a high bank over most of it. I have fished it many times with varying success in the early am and late pm. What is amazing occurs in the close season, when during May one can walk along its length and see (in full view) huge shoals of prime roach, which seem oblivious to those standing in full view of the fish. It is a sight to behold, BUT only regular visits will enjoy the show and this not every year.

Needless to say, come June 16th at dawn with nobody else around, having crawled to the edge of the water to ones regularly prebaited swim, one might just manage half a dozen roach up to a lb which, despite every effort to draw said roach from the swim, the fight manages to disperse the remainder!!

I can tell all of this because I haven't fished the place for many years and who will make the effort to fish it - not too many I'm thinking.......................

It is actually quite heavily fished still and when I was down there last year there was stickers on the bridges advertising a Polish tackle shop in Slough, it's a shadow of what it once was.

This is the thing with hidden gems, they cease to become hidden if too much info is given as to their location
 

tigger

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This is the thing with hidden gems, they cease to become hidden if too much info is given as to their location


Your bang on there, it beats me why people feel the need to blow the whistle when they find one of these places. I know one very small river that's like an aquarium at times and I did fish ot a couple of times and had great catches but decided not to fish it as I know i'll be seen and then the place will be ruined. Daft as it sounds I get more pleasure knowing the place exists unmolested than I would fishing it.
 

Keith M

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I know of several such places in Hertfordshire and Bedfordshire some of which you can quite easily jump across in some places.

One such water (in the photo below) holds Barbel, Chub and some decent sized Roach and Dace plus one or two old wisened Carp which very occasionally swim up and down.

The Barbel are not huge and tend to average about 4 to 6lb with the very occasional 7lb’er but hooking them in this tiny stream is very exciting. I’ve also had Chub up to 3lb and a small number of decent sized Dace nudging the 1lb mark and a small number of Roach up to 1lb 15oz.

Most anglers around these places fish local stillwaters or travel far away for the larger rivers and have no idea that the tiny overgrown stream that they drive over nearly every weekend holds such fish and I’m hardly going to tell them otherwise I’m sure these small streams would very soon be spoilt.


This pic shows the small stream that I mentioned above.

There’s also a part of another small stream near me which in the past has not held any fish of any note so is generally ignored, but Ive seen a couple of large trout of around 5lb-plus swimming along its length (escapees from a trout farm a few miles downstream) and even the locals don’t appear to have noticed them (yet) although we did find a rod rest fashioned from a small branch sticking out of the bank once.

The now deceased Keith Speer pointed the trout out to me and a friend of mine a few years ago and he said they had been in there for quite a while.

Keith
 
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