InCodweTrust
Well-known member
Figures don't add up ?
Figures don't add up ?
Over fishing at sea is hitting all returning fish, but fish returning to rivers along the same piece of coast follow the same migratory routes from the feeding grounds ....they tend to hug the coastline...so should come under similar pressure from netting. These are the latest figures in T&S mag. lifted from EA fishcounters:
Tyne @ Riding Mill: 30,907 for year...with 7,156 in Oct.
Wear: 12,915.....which is now being seen as poor, when compared to recent years.
Tees:.......380.....with 42 in Oct.
Last years figures were impressive, by comparison ....1,123 fish for the year
The Tees historically, (Long, long time ago!), has as good a pedigree as any of the NE rivers. So what when comparisons are made is the difference?
There is the boast that there is now 3 - 4 fish passes past the barrage....if that is so, and that they are not blocked most of the time ?
Why aren't the fish using them ?
Why are they staying below in a battle field where they are getting annihilated.....fish in the shoal, sense the predation / demise of there number. Combine the instinct to flee from a predator, with the hormone driven need spawn, if there was a truly viable means open to the fish they would use it ??
But they aren't ????
Mel.....
Figures don't add up ?
I wonder what effects commercial catches of Salmon at sea (wether legal or illegal) are having on stocks? Similarly, how much illegal netting is occurring along the coast? Water quality in the Tees catchment is not too bad, indeed it's improved exponentially since the 80's.
When I was a bairn we had a caravan at Crimdon Dene and I can remember that there more seals then than there are now, so blaming seals alone is being simplistic, seals eat a hell of a lot more fish species than just salmon and trout.
However, if you read this :
https://canalrivertrust.org.uk/media/library/7183-cefas-report-river-tees.pdf
, it would appear that few salmonids are capable of passing the barrage, and when they are immediately downstream of the barrage, seal predation is exacerbated.
Based on that document, it would appear that the main problem is the barrage - the seals are indirectly benefitting benefitting from the fish being forced to shoal in a small area.
Over fishing at sea is hitting all returning fish, but fish returning to rivers along the same piece of coast follow the same migratory routes from the feeding grounds ....they tend to hug the coastline...so should come under similar pressure from netting. These are the latest figures in T&S mag. lifted from EA fishcounters:
Tyne @ Riding Mill: 30,907 for year...with 7,156 in Oct.
Wear: 12,915.....which is now being seen as poor, when compared to recent years.
Tees:.......380.....with 42 in Oct.
Last years figures were impressive, by comparison ....1,123 fish for the year

The Tees historically, (Long, long time ago!), has as good a pedigree as any of the NE rivers. So what when comparisons are made is the difference?
There is the boast that there is now 3 - 4 fish passes past the barrage....if that is so, and that they are not blocked most of the time ?
Why aren't the fish using them ?
Why are they staying below in a battle field where they are getting annihilated.....fish in the shoal, sense the predation / demise of there number. Combine the instinct to flee from a predator, with the hormone driven need spawn, if there was a truly viable means open to the fish they would use it ??
But they aren't ????
Mel.....