Sywell Reservoir


Tench


Tinca Tinca


A hard fighting, distinctive fish with olive green flanks, yellow bellow, red eyes, and large paddle like fins. With two barbules on upper lip.


A common fish in estate lakes, reservoirs, gravel pits, and some slow flowing rivers. It is most common in central and southern England, and in recent years, the tench has grown to enormous sizes in southern gravel pits, and reservoirs.


The Tenchfishers is a small group dedicated to the research, and pursuit of the tench as a species.

http://www.tenchfishers.net

 

SYWELL MEMORIES
Angling Exploits On A Famous Tench Water - Continued

I decided to put pen to paper and write this piece because Sywell has always been a special angling venue for me, and I had so many good days fishing there during 1990’s, which I will never forget.

Sywell first got in the angling news in the early 1960’s when the exploits of anglers such as Bob Church, and Len Head, first got publicised. In those day’s, a tench of 5lb+ was a very big fish, and in the 60’s a fish of that size was very uncommon. But Sywell reservoir (true to form) was at that time producing them quite regularly. Sywell in the 60’s was relatively unknown nationally as a big fish water, and it was the exploits of a small group of pioneering anglers who first put Sywell on the map as a big tench venue, as a large amount of big 5lb+ fish were caught, which were serious tench in those days!

Over the years, Sywell Reservoir continued to produce numbers of big fish, and the venue record for tench increased in the late 1960’s, when well known big fish angler Phil Smith caught a 6lb 10oz tench from the venue, which was at the time a monstrous fish, and the fishing continued to be very prolific! However, by the early 70’s the fishing on Sywell appeared to be in decline, as the tench year classes of the time appeared to be dieing out, and by the mid 70’s the tench population had almost disappeared and Sywell Reservoir as a big fish venue was eventually forgotten about, (for the time being)!

However, the summer of 1976 proved to be a big year for the famous venue, for reasons that are not immediately apparent. The long hot dry summer of 1976 proved to be an excellent year for spawning fish on the reservoir and a new breed of resident tench soon became established! By the early 1980’s, some anglers began catching tench again, and these ‘new’ fish began to appear in anglers catches more and more often. These juvenile fish were young fit deep bodied tench, with a fast growth rate and they proved to be the new life blood of this famous water.

By the mid 1980’s large catches of tench between 5-6lb again began to hit the headlines locally, and by 1988, large numbers of tench to nearly 9lb were caught from Sywell, and it now became apparent the 80 acre venue was definitely back as a big tench water, and more and more specialist anglers began seriously fishing the reservoir, as the word soon got around.

 

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