Ouse barbel is too big for the net! - Derek Olsen

“I’d heard that barbel were being caught from the Yorkshire Ouse at Linton so I took my brother Richard there to see if we could catch one. 

“We got into our pegs for 8am and I fed a few cubes of meat around three rodlengths out, before casting in my free-running lead carrying a hair-rigged chunk of Spam.

”At 1pm my rod tip smashed round and this barbel ran 40 yards downstream towards a willow tree!

“I managed to turn the battle into open water, and 10 minutes later the biggest barbel we’d ever seen surfaced.

“I started to shake! Richard had the net ready and it went in first time, although it was too big for our net really!

“The beautiful fish weighed 14lb 7oz.”

Derek Olsen and his 14lb 7oz Yorkshire Ouse barbel

Derek Olsen and his 14lb 7oz Yorkshire Ouse barbel

New barbel fishing competition!

This year marks the 25th anniversary of the Barbel Society, and to celebrate we’ve teamed up with the organisation to launch a new competition that will reward readers for their catches. 

Called ‘Barbel Masters’, the competition will award the captor of what’s deemed to be the best fish landed each week with a year’s free membership to the society. Prizes will be awarded on the basis of merit, rather than just the sheer size of the fish, meaning barbel landed from tricky waters, or those that result from dedicated campaigns, are more likely to scoop the prize.

As well as gaining access to renowned society fisheries on the rivers Severn and Trent, members get a twice-yearly magazine, regular newsletters detailing upcoming events and fish-ins, and access to a network of hundreds of experienced barbel anglers. 

The competition is live now and running in Angling Times magazine each week.

Time to go and catch some barbel!

Time to go and catch some barbel!

Time to stamp out bankside drugs and alcohol

IN a week that saw a fishery boss have to pull a drunk angler from his lake, senior figures from within the sport are calling for clubs and venue owners to adopt a zero tolerance policy towards bankside drug and alcohol use.

Darren Bailey, the owner of Pembrokeshire’s Yet-Y-Gors Fishery, revealed that he had to save the man’s life after he fell into the 7ft-deep margins while drunk.

He said:

“Luckily another angler and I saw it happen and we raced over to pull him out of the water. 

“There were families and young children on site too, and understandably they found the incident distressing. It quickly became clear by the smell and the amount of empty beer cans that he’d been drinking heavily.  

 “I hate to think what would have happened had we not been there to help, but it shows that drinking while fishing could have severe consequences. Anyone caught drinking on the bank from now on will be told to leave immediately.”

Anglers drinking on the bank has often left severe consequences

Anglers drinking on the bank has often left severe consequences

Heavy drinking on the bank is an issue that Barbel Society co-founder Steve Pope is keen to see eradicated from the sport, and believes such a move would help to strengthen the image of angling as a whole.

Barbel Society co-founder Steve Pope is keen to see drugs and alcohol eradicated

Barbel Society co-founder Steve Pope is keen to see drugs and alcohol eradicated

“From day one, the Barbel Society has prohibited drugs and alcohol from being brought to the bank and we haven’t had a single issue as a result,” he told us. 

“Our fish and anglers have remained safe.

“Excessive drinking, drugs and fishing just don’t mix, and fisheries who don’t enforce a ban are putting themselves, the fish and other anglers at risk. As fishery managers we have a responsibility to make our sport more appealing to families and future generations of anglers.

“By implementing a zero-tolerance policy in this instance we’ll be able to promote the right message and create a more positive image of angling.”

“Our fish and anglers have remained safe”

“Our fish and anglers have remained safe”

Steve isn’t alone in his feelings on the subject. When fresh cases of bankside disorder emerged after fishing’s return on May 13, hundreds of anglers took to Facebook to campaign against the issue, using the slogan: “If you’re not fit to drive, you’re not fit to fish.” 

Here at Angling Times we think the welfare of the angler and the fish we love to catch is high on the agenda. 

A tighter restriction on bringing alcohol and drugs to the bank is surely a step in the right direction.