Well, a crayfish is a shellfish, or more correctly a crustacean, and
as far as I am aware it is not a fish. I am also not using a rod, but
a trap. So in terms of plain english and definitions I do not require
a licence.
TVMIA
I think you will find that a "Trap" could be deemed to be an "Illegal
instument" if used unlicenced.
You need to read the Full conditions from the EA and not the Rod Licence
regulations.
Bye Laws are different from one region to another.
KW
In areas with signals only permits are free - but you do have to have the
permit.
http://www.environment-agency.gov.uk/aboutus/1105530/1086477/1086480/1087835/1087809/
Provides contact information - (phone) for local info.
Cheerio,
--
Fishing: http://www.fishing.casterbridge.net/
Writing: http://www.author.casterbridge.net/derek-moody/
uk.rec.fishing.game Badge Page:
http://www.fishing.casterbridge.net/urfg/
I've not been following any research but they must be having a significant
effect on fish stocks - I wonder if they're anything to do with the eel
situation.
Consider: a large, tough, prolific, scavenger has to clear up a lot of what
would otherwise have been food for bottom feeding fish, they must take a lot
of fish spawn and might even be predators in their own right.
Boil 'em for five minutes and serve with dill sauce.
I thought signal crays were known to predate on small fry and young eels
have to be easy pickings for such a set of claws I would have thought.
--
Gandalf
"Derek Moody" <derek...@clara.net> wrote in message
news:ant16040...@strongarm.dereks.pad...
OK, a generous squeeze of lemon and brown bread and butter - thinly sliced
cucumber is optional extra.
> I thought signal crays were known to predate on small fry and young eels
> have to be easy pickings for such a set of claws I would have thought.
Yes. What I haven't seen is any sort of survey of the effect of a
population of signals on the rest of the ecosystem. Do they just cream off
a surplus or is there a significant shift?
Like the idea of the lemon but brown bread kills the old tummy and cucumber
repeats so I am guessing a good crusty bit of break and an ice cold cider,
no finesse me.<VBG>
--
Gandalf
"Derek Moody" <derek...@clara.net> wrote in message
news:ant17112...@strongarm.dereks.pad...
It might equally be the effect of a large percentage of the young stock
being eaten and so there is little competition for the (dwindling) food
resource - those adults that do survive therefore grow well.
This is all very well until there are a few hard years in a row when the
populations might be distorted. For eg: How many small tench are surviving?
What about bream?
We know that eels are already under pressure - will this add to the problem?
> They have been there for awhile so you would think the
> Rivers Authority would have done some studies.
I'm sure someone has looked at it but so far (OK I haven't tried very hard)
I've seen no hard figures.
> Like the idea of the lemon but brown bread kills the old tummy and cucumber
> repeats so I am guessing a good crusty bit of break and an ice cold cider,
> no finesse me.<VBG>
I'll take my cider at cellar temperature thanks - but use the signals
anywhere a tv cook would use tiger prawns or langoustine** and you won't go
far wrong.
Cheerio,
** Just double the portions and pile the plate up anyhow ;-)
http://www.defra.gov.uk/fish/freshwater/crayfish.htm
Richard
> http://www.defra.gov.uk/fish/freshwater/crayfish.htm
A useful page, ta. I'd like to see some figures though - some quantitative
survey(s).
Cheerio,