The
top half of its tail had gone. The fish’s ability to manoeuvre was severely
constricted. It was slowly swimming about in sunny open shallow water, facing
downriver when I took these shots.
I had caught a grayling nearer the Rowsley
stretch a few weeks ago, with distinct marks of a sawbill (Goosander or
Merganser) on its flanks.
Whilst fishing the Manifold on Derbyshire
CountyAngling Club water, a few years ago, walking along the high bank of
this small waterway, I spotted 2 strange creatures swimming fast, together
upriver. As I watched, wondering what kind of fish they could be, they suddenly
emerged from the water and flew off!
The RSPB site gives excellent images and
sounds of the Red-breasted Merganser and the Goosander.
What with mink, otters, osprey, sawbills,
and poachers, it’s a surprise there are so many fish in the river.
The test for an apparently empty river is,
of course, bread. I delighted my granddaughter on a visit to Rowsley Mill using
a little bread saved from her lunch which she tossed into the river, just where
the water comes out of the mill (no ducks here). We saw no fish until the
second piece of bread. How many fish appeared from nowhere in seconds was
amazing. Big fish they were too. Now dare I tie and use a white fly? Perhaps,
but I would need to put on a stronger tippet.
Tight
lines