FISHINGmagic
 Home » News > Politics & CommentSunday 27 July 2008 | Help  
Join FM today!
Join FISHINGmagic now
*
*
*
*
*
*
 Send me occasional exclusive competitions & relevant offers
 I accept the Terms & Conditions*
Why join?  
Our privacy policy
Competitions!
Win prizes with FM
Regional Weather
Shades or waterproofs

- Region weather
- 3 day Outlook
- City Forecasts
Most Active Members
... in the last 30 days
1.Graham Marsden
2.Ron 'The Hat' Cla...
3.Woody the Moaning...
4.Avon Aquatics - R...
5.Frothey
6.Mark Wintle (ACA)
7.Dicky (ACA)
8.Fred Bonney (ACA ...
9.Deanos
10.Paul 'Pikey' Howa...
See all active members
 POLITICS & COMMENT 29 / 10 / 04
 

Barrie Rickards' Angling - Disgraceful RSPB

PROFESSOR BARRIE RICKARDS


Professor Barrie Rickards is President of the Lure Angling Society, and President of the National Association of Specialist Anglers as well as a very experienced and successful specialist angler with a considerable tally of big fish to his credit.

He is author of several fishing books, including the classic work 'Fishing For Big Pike', co-authored with the late Ray Webb and only recently his first novel, 'Fishers On The Green Roads' was published. He has been an angling writer in newspapers and magazines for nigh on four decades. Barrie takes a keen interest in angling politics.

Away from angling Barrie is a Professor in Palaeontology at the University of Cambridge, a Fellow of Emmanuel College and a curator of the Sedgwick Museum of Geology.

The Attitude of the RSPB is Disgraceful

As I have said recently I get less tolerant of organisations - as opposed to individuals - as I get older, and the joyless utterances of the RSPB never fail to amaze me. Take the recent letter in Anglers' Mail by one Julian Hughes 'head of species conservation' no less. In it he describes the cormorant as “a species that is part of our fresh water heritage…” In the numbers it now is Mr Hughes? What nonsense. When were you born, incidentally, because, thirty or forty years ago if you saw one inland cormorant in a winter it was unusual. Twenty years ago they were markedly more common; and around twelve years ago their numbers rose dramatically. The Great Crested Grebes, after years on my lake - and welcome - cleared off because they had nothing left to eat. They haven't come back. Which species, exactly, are you conserving Mr Hughes? The one that has for a long time been an active and pleasant feature or the large black one that is totally out of control.

Mr Hughes seems deluded by the idea of some people that fish refuges work. Well, clearly, they work for some fish, some of the time. But how long do they have to live in refuges for Heaven's sake? All the time? What about the rest of the water? Refuges can have a variety of uses, but as a solution to the cormorant problem they are useless.

Mr. Hughes says that Ben Bradshaw has caved in “to the wishes of the few…” The FEW Mr Hughes? Do you know how many anglers there are? I haven't yet met one who was in favour of the glut of black terrorists that now predate on our waters. Then you have the cheek to raise all manner of red herrings about 'pollution from agriculture' and 'sewage' and others things. These things have been improving Mr Hughes - no thanks to the RSPB - whilst at the same time our waterways have been plundered by cormorants.

Mr Hughes was responding to a letter by a Mr Barker who wrote that restoring habitats will do far more for fish conservation than killing cormorants. What balderdash. The habitats have been improving, as I said in my last paragraph (if you exclude the effects of the pill on rivers) and all it does is fill the larder for cormorants to come inland - from a larder at sea that has been depleted by greedy EC fishing fleets.

No the attitude of the RSPB to this crisis is quite disgraceful, and ignorant, and bigoted. If, as Mr Hughes says, the public image of angling will be damaged, he should also be aware that the public image of the RSPB is already damaged in the eyes of several million people. Forget cormorants. Talk ruddy ducks. Talk cats in gardens, about which the RSPB dare not. In any case why should anglers get the blame for what a government Minister has decided? I hope the legal challenge, which the RSPB is said to be mounting, costs them a lot of money.

Ivan Marks

Lets get on to a nice subject. Ivan Marks. I have enjoyed recent attributes to the great matchman. I can remember, summer after summer, when Percy Anderson (ex all England Champion) and I used to organise angling training courses for hundreds of youngsters in the Cambridge area. What a headache that was! Ivan could always be depended upon to turn up and demonstrate his magic on the River Cam just below town. Ivan was at the top of his profession then, lively and charismatic, an absolute hero to a generation of match anglers. Yet he turned up and did his stuff. You could see how intuitively good he was, but he was always very clever and skilful and crafty. He had all the competitive instincts. As a caveman his family would not have starved, that's for sure.

I came across these attributes of his on another occasion, a big conference organised by David Hall at Reading. Looking back I doubt if there have been as many successful conferences: and there was Ivan telling specialist anglers what they were doing wrong. At the end of a super talk he challenged anyone present to underarm cast a lead into a bucket at the other side of the stage. A lot of hesitation…! I thought I could do it, so I volunteered. As I came down the auditorium to take the rod from him he recognised me and promptly moved the bucket off the stage and out into a corridor! As I said, crafty and competitive! I didn't get the lead in the bucket, but I hit it. To tell you the truth I look forward to the day when match angler and specialist angler, and others, can sit round a table and organise the defence of angling. By defence I actually mean attack, of course. Identify our enemies, work out their weaknesses, and go for them.

The PAC Annual Convention

Talking about conferences, let me mention the highly successful PAC annual convention, this time held at the Royal Armouries in Leeds. Well attended, though not perhaps the biggest, but with the best atmosphere I can remember. Good talks, lots of stalls, and almost all the big names in piking to talk. Entry fee £5. Could you talk to David Beckham for half an hour for £5? No, but you could talk to Mick Brown, and a dozen others, and you could buy good gear at knock down prices. It's in the same place next year, again in September. I suggest you have a good day out. But don't bring all my books: I signed over 70 copies this year!

Take a Leaf from the French on Lead - Ignore it

I don't think this lead-in-the-environment debate going on in Europe is directed at anglers deliberately, although you'd think so reading some reports. Clearly it will affect us though. It seems a pity because our lead now does no damage to speak of to anything. They can hardly make exceptions of one group; does make you wonder though about lead on church roofs, or lead on window pains, or lead in old pipes in old houses etc, etc. We should take a leaf out of the French camp here, and simply ignore it. They will.

One More Comment about Cormorants

I do have to go back to make just one more comment about the cormorant fiasco. Enormous credit must go to the people who have presented the case for angling, notably people like Terry Mansbridge, Bruno Broughton, Terry Fell and Martin Read - and others too, of course. Dr Mark Avery of RSPB has described Ben Bradshaw's decision as “A snap decision”. A snap decision would have been one taken twelve years or so ago. It's taken that long to get people to see sense. Just think of the enormous damage in the meantime.

Uptraces for Pike Fishing

I'd be interested to learn what people feel about up-traces in pike fishing. Personally, I would never fish a live or deadbait without an uptrace, whether I was legering or float fishing. I choose a hook trace of around about twelve inches and an uptrace of about eighteen inches. If a deadbait cast goes jerky, or the bait bumps a rock or log when sinking, then it can, and will sometime, loop back and hang on the reel line. The swivel joining the two traces, when you use two, actually seems to prevent backlash occurring. Yet I see many diagrams in magazines at the moment showing rigs with no uptrace. Surely this is wrong. When uptracing I have never had a bite off: before that I had a few over the years. A few too many I thought.

Big Roach in Keepnets

Very interesting to see Des Taylor coming out against keepnets for big roach. I think I agree with him. I've always been uneasy about big roach in keepnets and have never, in fact, put more than two in at once. Of course, if I catch two big roach it makes a change! It's perhaps the one fish that worries me. A properly staked out net seems to harm little else, and not always roach for that matter, either. Returning fish to your swims immediately can move a shoal away, certainly for perch. Perch in a keepnet seem perfectly safe anyway so I don't have any worries there. So often it's a question of how easy it is to stake out a keepnet properly. If I can't do it to my satisfaction, then I don't use a keepnet (or keepsack either).

Ship Out the Antis!

Finally, someone just came back from a foreign trip - Matt Hayes in Poland I think it was - and he was appalled at the attitudes of the ordinary angler there. I agree, having been there a few time. As I've often said, and as Matt Hayes also concluded, angling behaviour in the UK is Heaven itself compared to many places in the world? I reckon we should ship out all those antis for an education course!


Bookmark thisPrinter friendly version
Want to send this article to a friend? Please join here
 

Discuss this article, 1 of 36 messages, read more:
Jim Gibbinson 
Posted: 29/10/04 15:37:00 00
The Great Crested Grebe became almost extinct at one stage (Victorian times, I think) due to the popularity of Grebe feathers in ladies' hats. As fashion changed so the G.C. Grebe staged a comeback, and as recent as 15 years ago there were G.C.Grebes on virtually every water I fished. Now, this is not so. Quite apart from the fact that G.C.Grebes and cormorants compete for food, there's a territorial aspect involved in that each breeding pair of G.C.Grebes requires about 5 acres of water. Cormorants move in, G.C.Grebes move out - as the RSPB would realise if they examined the situation objectively.

I once met someone who worked in the RSPB membership rectruitment office, and pointed out the above to her. "Oh, our members would be upset if ...
Read more...
Related articles:
Opinion Piece - Shouting into a Vacuum
Angling MUST get itself scientific representation, that is why I endorse the idea of a levy on rod licences, says Mark Williams.
Barrie Rickards’ Angling – The BBC & Other Anti's
Professor Barrie Rickards with more news and views about angling politics and those like the BBC and RSPB who do the dirty on us
That Radio 4 Programme on Cormorants
This is the exact transcript of the dialogue that took place between the Chairman of the Moran Committee, the RSPB and the presenters on Radio 4 about cormorants
Anglers Group Challenges RSPB Line on Cormorants
Anglers and their representatives regret the RSPB’s second press release containing further misleading statements on cormorant control, their numbers, and the numbers of birds being killed under licence
1500 Cormorants Already Shot say RSPB
The RSPB is outraged that the Government has licensed the killing of 1500 cormorants in England in a ‘misguided attempt’ (say RSPB) to protect the sport of angling
Cormorants, RSPB Back Off Judicial Review
The RSPB has decided not to pursue a judicial review of the new policy regarding the control of cormorants
Barrie Rickards’ Angling – Gags & Deep Hooking
Professor Barrie Rickards gives his views on gags and deep hooking, amongst other things
Barrie Rickards’ Angling – Piking Matters
SAA and LAS President Professor Barrie Rickards with many and varied comments about pike, piking and pike fishermen
Barrie Rickards Comments on the ACA Crisis
Life member of the ACA Professor Barrie Rickards comments on the current crisis
Barrie Rickards’ Angling – Rivers, Too Clean?
”There have been recent reports that our rivers have serious problems in terms of aquatic insects: in short, there aren’t any.” Says Professor Barrie Rickards in another hard-hitting column
Barrie Rickards’ Angling – Big Fish Lists
Professor Barrie Rickards discusses eel netting, big fish lists, seeking personal bests, and has a whinge at the over-use of ‘inappropriate’ words…….
Barrie Rickards’ Angling – Deadbaiting for Pike
Professor Barrie Rickards in non-political mood for a change, shares with us his thoughts on deadbaiting for pike
Cormorant Damage to Fish Stocks
Anglers welcome new measures by defra, says Martin Salter, in a press release following the announcement of the new measures
Cormorant Cull is to Appease Anglers - RSPB
Press Release from the RSPB - More cormorants are to be killed in England after the government today introduced a shoot-to-kill policy, claiming it is preserving freshwater fish for anglers
The Responsible Management of Cormorants
Press Releases from The Moran Committee and The British Association for Shooting and Conservation on today’s announcement
Government Announcement on Cormorant Predation
Britain’s 3.5 million anglers await government announcement to tackle cormorant predation following a parliamentary question tabled by Martin Salter MP
Barrie Rickards’ Angling - The Silly Season
Professor Barrie Rickards with more about the BRFC, the political silly season, Peter Collins, and lots more in angling politics that should concern us
Barrie Rickards’ Angling - The Chattering Classes
Professor Barrie Rickards reveals what he considers to be the greatest danger to angling. Forget the labelled anti-angling groups, the real danger lies in the Chattering Classes

Members Logon
Email:
Password:
 
forgot your password?
Article Search
Great Deals!

Forum Hot Threads
620424 Total Messages
Guess the Weight Competition
by Graham Marsden
A backwards look (in retrospect)
by Derek Gibson
Freebies in the Angling Press.
by Deanos
Aah I remember.......
by Dal (The merchant of Mennace)
Mono Hook Lengths for Barbel
by Matt Corker
» Loads More Threads
Coarse Fisherman Mag
Want to know what's in the latest issue of Coarse Fisherman before it hits the shelves?

Join the mailing list!
FishingMagic on tap!
RSS the latest FM news straight to your desktop
FM Photo Gallery
Add your fishing pics to the
FM GALLERY!

 Send to friend | Join Now ^ Top of Page
About FISHINGmagic
- About Us
- Privacy Policy
- Terms and Conditions

Subscribe to FISHINGMAGIC RSS news feed.
Contact Us
- Support
- Advertise with us
- FAQ
- Retailers: free site review
Affiliates
- Take our news for free
- RSS Feed
Magicalia Digital Publishing
Cycling
- BIKEmagic
- RoadCyclingUK
- SheCycles
- LondonCycleSport
- Visordown
- ProTourNews
Outdoors
- OUTDOORSmagic
- FISHINGmagic
- GOLFmagic
- TheMainSail
Lifestyle
- ThinkBaby
- Gardening.co.uk
- AVReview
- ThinkCamera
Hobbies
- ModelFlying
- MilitaryModelling
- ModelBoats
- GetWoodWorking

- Full Portfolio
© 1999-2008 Magicalia Ltd.