Urban fly-fishing: 10 top tips in Eat, Sleep, Fish

Having spent the last couple of years travelling around the UK, visiting the Wild Trout Trust’s Trout in the Town chapters and investigating the state of our urban rivers at the start of the 21st century, I’ve come to the startling but joyful conclusion that there’s probably now more water in and around our towns and cities with pollution-sensitive wild trout and grayling living in it than without

Alongside an interview with April Vokey and fly-casting tips from Jim Williams, the latest issue of Westcountry guide Pete Tyjas’ not-for-profit Eat, Sleep, Fish ezine features my (mostly hard-learned) 10 top tips to get aspiring urban fly-fishers started on this exciting new frontier of our sport.

Fish stealthy, stay safe… and watch out for aliens!

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Miracle on the Irwell

It’s all happening in Media City. Just a few days after Nick Carter’s big lunchbreak trout hit the blogosphere, ITV News has aired this 2-minute local spot charting the Irwell’s recovery over the past 30 years, thanks largely to the (uncredited) Mersey Basin Campaign. 

Chub, trout and several Salford Friendly Anglers are briefly interviewed… 

This is a miracle… I never thought in my lifetime I’d ever see a fish in this river, it’s improved a thousand percent… 

… and as we watched we found ourselves wondering if the prospect of scenes like these were playing through Michael Heseltine’s mind when he looked out over the filthy Mersey system after the Toxteth riots in 1981, and decided something truly radical had to be done to link community cohesion, urban regeneration and whole-catchment river restoration?  

In the end it took a riot, plus 30 years’ hard work and at least £1billion of investment, but on the Irwell, Tame, Bollin, Goyt, Sett, Etherow and other rivers, the Mersey Basin Campaign’s payoff is here for all to see.

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Lunch break trout

Is it possible to catch a trout on your lunch break in Manchester city centre? 

As existential questions go, this one has clearly been haunting Salford Friendly Anglers‘ co-founder Nick Carter for a while. But after surviving at least one close encounter with something of the Mancunian night (hint: it’s 18 stone and wears a wig, a dress and hobnail boots), several demons finally seem to have been laid to rest at once…  

(Photo: Nick Carter)

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Breaking news: Thames Water’s £400k for the Crane

It’s been months in the making… but finally comes news of a breakthrough in the negotiations on north west London’s River Crane. 

As this Thames Anglers’ Conservancy report reminds us, the river suffered a catastrophic sewage spill at the end of October last year when a 6-tonne penstock jammed in Thames Water’s main sewage pipe out of Heathrow airport. In an act of calculated desperation, more than 7 miles of the Crane were flooded with raw sewage (and who knows what else?), killing at least 10,000 fish and burying the river’s ecology under hundreds of tonnes of stinking grey sludge.  

Since then, TAC and many other local groups including FORCE and London Wildlife Trust have come together as the Crane Valley Partnership to negotiate a sustainable way forward for the river. No doubt encouraged by the success of the Living Wandle project, which was seed-funded by Thames Water after a similar-but-different spill from Beddington sewage treatment works in 2007, the water company has now pledged funding worth £400,000 for the Crane over the next 5 years

Cynics will probably suggest that this is a ploy to reduce Thames Water’s fine when the Environment Agency’s criminal case eventually comes to court, but we reckon this misses the point.

Even if the settlement does persuade the Court of Appeal to reduce the fine, which in any case will be severely limited by sentencing guidelines, the £400,000 will help the Crane to start recovering in the here and now… whereas any fine is guaranteed to sink without trace into the gaping black hole of the Treasury’s budget deficit. 

When the Angling Trust’s Fish Legal lawyers finally get a day off from the 70-odd cases they’re fighting at any given moment, this will be an interesting policy discussion for them to take to government.

In the meantime, Thames Water certainly isn’t the only water company with a record of environmental destruction in the UK. But so far it’s the only big utility which has voluntarily tried to make meaningful financial contribution to cleaning up its mess, first on the Wandle and now here. For that, we think Richard Aylard and his fellow directors deserve a lot of credit… and we’ll certainly be following the Crane’s next 5 years with interest. 

(Photo: Thames Anglers’ Conservancy)

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Trout in the Classroom 2012: South London’s carnival of the alevins

As we’ve almost come to expect here in South London, this year’s Wandle Trust Trout in the Classroom programme went off with a bang… and a triumphant release day in Morden Hall Park filmed by Philip Williams, covered by the BBC and now reported on the Wandle Trust website.

It’s always inspirational to see the next generation of kids learning to care for their local river… and this year’s festival of fish was no exception. 

Our only question is: what can Gideon do next year to top his giant prosthetic trout?

(Photos: John O’Brien)

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Film night: Jazz and urban fly-fishing in Oslo

Via those krazy kats of the Nordic Jazz & Fly Fishing collective comes this outstanding video of trout spawning in the centre of Oslo. 

As guitarist-presenter Havard Stubo says: “It’s like the Kola Peninsula or something, and I’m just two minutes from a bar!”

Urban fly-fishing in Norway… maybe last month’s enquiry about stocking Trout in Dirty Places in Sykkylven’s Flue.no flyshop wasn’t so totally left-field after all?

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Blogging it large in Bakewell…

What happens when Stanton’s leading river restorationist, Mick Martin, takes an evening off from his beloved River Erewash Foundation to pound the pavements of Bakewell on the legendary Derbyshire Wye? 

Dry Fly Expert Richard Ward comes to the rescue and shows us the football-shaped, rainbow-hued goods… 

(Photo: Richard Ward)

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Urban fly-fishing: 10 top rivers in FF&FT


Sixteen miles upriver from central Manchester, between the cricket ground and the carpet factory in Ramsbottom, the early-season Irwell surges with smooth, deceptive power.  

Raindrops splash into eddies along the banks, and a hatch of dark olives tacks across the leaden surface. Under those little grey sailboats, the trout I’ve just hooked on a dead-drifted spider runs heavily upstream, dragging my rod-tip down into a deep, alarming curve. Suddenly, nothing’s moving… just a horrible sawing, thrumming sensation that tells me the line’s wrapped around a snag of rusty rebar at the head of the pool.  

Stand-off.  

Already chest-deep, I glance across to my fishing-partner Adrian for inspiration. He shrugs, squints intently for a moment, then clambers down the loose riprap bank and edges into the chute of white water.

The fish spooks and miraculously comes loose. Reinvigorated by its snag break, there’s hell to pay in all four corners of the pool. At the critical moment, my foothold on the steep concrete rubble gives way, and I crash sideways, landing heavily on my rod hand.

But Adrian has his net out too, and he’s gone for the finish. If I look slightly shaken in the trophy shots, it’s because I am: pumped with adrenaline, nursing bloodied knuckles and a quickly-swelling knee, hardly believing this trout I’d doubted ever being able to land from a post-industrial river with a reputation like the Irwell’s…

The current May issue of Fly Fishing & Fly Tying magazine reveals 10 of my favourite urban rivers across the UK – including the Irwell, Kelvin, Lowman and Wandle amongst many other city streams which have been brought back to life by hard-working local charities and angling clubs.

For the full feature, pick up a copy from your local news stand… or get a sneak preview of those rivers on my personal blog!

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Trout in the Town: Eat Sleep Fish tells the back story

If you’ve ever wondered in an idle moment how the UK’s urban river restoration movement really got started, this freshly-minted cometh-the-hour-cometh-the-man interview with the Wild Trout Trust’s Trout in the Town project manager Paul Gaskell will probably tell you all you need to know.

(Fair warning: as I’ve just suggested in this cross-post over on the Wandle Trust website, some of the rest of us may find Paul’s words hinting that somewhere down the line we may not have made quite the right career choices…)

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Urbantrout sidecasts: Monday 30 April

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