A Hugely Sad Goodbye

J

John Bailey

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TheWye.jpg

The Wye means the world to me!

Fifteen Months in Retrospect…

It is with much sadness that my time on the Thomas Turner websites has drawn to a close. For me it has been a fascinating adventure and I’m eternally grateful to the Hewitt family for making it happen. It hasn’t all been good news. Like many who experience web vitriol from time to time, I wonder where it comes from, why detractors bother, why they feel the right to be abusive. Constructive criticism and even-handed debate are both eminently desirable, but nastiness in a sport we purport to love has left me frequently disturbed. I don’t think that I ever wrote a word I did not believe in and hoped would be helpful or interesting. I guess too I was always disappointed that those who did engage did so to be negative and little more.


Bless JS!

Wish I’d bought that rod!

But enough of that. John Stephenson has been a Trojan in at least helping me to understand the intriguing fascinations of tackle collecting. I’ll never get my head round why one Perfect will cost a hundred quid and another goes for a thousand, but that is JS’s lifetime experience for you. I loved the Redditch Tackle Fair, and my high point missed was my near-purchase of an Andrew Davis Avocet cane rod… looking back, God knows why I didn’t buy it on the spot. What actual fishing pleasure it would have brought me bankside in my declining years. I love the sustainability concept behind vintage tackle, and of course the new gear that a genius like Andrew can create. Fishing is a sport that feeds the soul and tackle of distinction only enhances the feast.


Wensum roach spawning – for how much longer?

The sites have allowed me to air my views on conservation, which I know might have seemed half-baked. However, I feel deeply that today’s professional fish/water experts speak with huge academic weight, but not always with an equal experience of how habitats actually work in reality. The Wye and the Wensum are the rivers I love most and I vary between frustration and fury at the glacial slowness progress takes place… when in fact it does. Is either river in a better state than when I knew them in my childhood? Almost certainly not, despite a whole conservation industry that has sprung up within the last thirty years.


JB with Reg Sandys, Bill Giles and Roger Miller

In keeping with the Thomas Turner ethos, I have tried to keep alive the memory of great anglers from the past. I suppose the best example of this hope would be the examination of the letters between Fred Buller and the Rev. Alston through the Seventies. When we were children, the heroes of even Victorian times were remembered. In the digital age, anglers come and go and are forgotten overnight. In the process, we have forgotten many of the essentials that make angling so important.


Angling literature means the world to me

The genius of Paul Cook

I’ll have my 15 pound Wye barbel carved for sure

Angling literature has always driven me since since childhood and I have tried to spark interest in something like a TT Book Club… and largely failed. Anglers were historically readers, but I’m unsure if they are now. Angling and art continues to exist, if not flourish. I’ve looked at today’s eminent float makers, and admire Andy Field and Ian Lewis beyond words. Paul Cook also makes angling artefacts to gladden the heart. Roger Brooks carves your trophy fish copies for a ridiculously small sum… when I catch my 15 pound Wye barbel I will be hammering on his door.


Our winter Wye barbel quest in full swing!

Talking of barbel, TT’s websites have given me a platform to describe my own angling quests and challenges, notably attempting the capture of a barbel in each of the winter months. I’m sure this privilege is what drove me on to complete the job… had I simply been doing it on my lonesome, I would have given up in November!

Yes. The last fifteen months have been a joy – for me at least! I bought a new camera, and took photography seriously again for the first time since leaving film for digital. And how I loved settling down around 7.00pm, perhaps with a glass of something, roughing out thoughts for the next day’s website offerings. I wish TT and all who sail on with her well. And most of all, I thank the many of you who listened to my ramblings these months, even those who told me exactly what they think of me! Here’s to fishing and the succour it can bring to another challenging year. Tight lines all of you!



The post A Hugely Sad Goodbye first appeared on FishingMagic Magazine.

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Crystal Bend

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Many thanks for all your articles @John Bailey
They will be sorely missed. You are a true Angling Ambassador and are to be commended. I have enjoyed your naturalist views and fishing advice, especially on Tench Fishing. I wish Enoka & yourself the very best in life & business going forward.
Kind Regards
John
 

John Aston

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Thanks for some insightful and sometimes provocative thoughts JB. But there is more than a little irony in the fact that you (rightly ) deprecate abusive posts while you have a record of sneering and sniping at habitat improvement programmes , environmental and fishery science. 'We've had enough of experts ' as Mr Gove put it - so we go back to folk lore and anecdote instead ?
 

john step

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Best of luck for whatever comes next. I have enjoyed your articles.
 

xenon

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Sorry to see you go John-always looked forward to your articles as models of thoughtfulness and insight. Good luck for the future.
 

Keith M

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I have also really enjoyed your FM articles John and I have also enjoyed reading a lot of your books; which I have in my bookcase; however a little time actually engaging with members more on the forum and answering the occasional question to do with your articles would I’m sure have placated any critics on here.

I will definately miss your contributions.

NB: However there’s nothing stopping you from occasionally joining in on this forum as a normal member engaging with us in live discussions and trivia etc.

Keith
 
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Philip

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Thanks for the Articles which where enjoyable, thought provoking and will be missed.

I found it a pity that you didn’t engage more on the open forum although I think I can understand why.

Also if I may, its worth considering that FM is probably one of the most reasonable fishing forums around with some really good anglers posting & members will for the most part debate hard but fair. If you found it a little harsh on here then perhaps its worth considering Public web forums may not be the best platform for you going forward.

Whatever you decide to do I wish you the very best of luck & keep up the good work !
 

DerrickBurt

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If you found it a little harsh on here then perhaps its worth considering (link removed as off topic) Public web forums may not be the best platform for you going forward.
 
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