on the button issue 8 | Page 7

tench to over 10lbs.There are undoubtedly very large perch and roach in there and reports on the angling “grapevine” suggest a very big pike of over 30lb has been caught this winter. I have fished the lake myself in the past, in the early 1990’s Arthur Crouch was the Bailiff, he used to let me fish for a mere £1 a day and I caught many Tench up to a weight of 5lb 10oz. One day sticks out in my mind when I hooked a big fish and played it in for nearly 3/4 of an hour before it broke my 5lb breaking strain line, this fish was no Tench in fact I’m 100% sure it was one of the pits resident carp, I was using breadflake on the bottom in the area known as “crane hill”, I never even saw the fish as it eventually snapped me up! The fishing these days is controlled by Letchworth Garden City Angling Association, information is available from their website-www.lgcaa.co.uk or from “Mainly Tackle” on Arlesey High Street. The potential of the pit as a specimen fish water is virtually untapped, there could well be record nudging perch or roach swimming in the depths. If it wasn’t such a rubbish tip, I believe more anglers would fish it. Walking around the pit recently I was astounded to see that a lot more of the bushes on the west side and also in the south west corner have been cut down. What is the point of this? I have a suspicion that the resident sailing club are responsible, to allow more wind on the water which is nonsense! anyone visiting the pit on a windy day would see how rough the waters are. In my opinion the lakeside is being vandalised. I have never seen so much litter by the side of a lake in all my years of walking around and fishing the place, the mess is unbelievable, this is due to unwelcome summer visitors treating the place like a rubbish tip, they have barbecues, parties and generally wreck the place, its disgusting! There are literally thousands of beer cans scattered all over the place along with food containers, disposable barbecues etc, etc. I wonder if anything will ever be done to clean the place up? The lake is a place of natural beauty but it is totally ruined by the rubbish littered everywhere. I recently thought about buying a permit and fishing the place again but after walking around I decided against it.The bailiffs of the fishing club are up against it, how do you ask dozens of people who are likely to be drinking or partying to leave? They’d end up in the drink! Maybe turning the place into a country park would be the answer? Having somebody actually running the water perhaps would alleviate some of the problems? It was the subject of a consultation, to turn the area into a Leisure facility, after three children were drowned in 2001 but this was not pursued. If the lake was bordered by a housing estate or even an industrial development I believe things maybe different. This is something that may have to happen to ‘save’ the place. Some of you reading this piece may think it wrong to do such a thing around the Blue Lagoon but I can’t see an alternative. There are huge clay and gravel pits throughout the country, I’d bet none of them are in the same state as the Blue Lagoon. Image: Steve Maddox The ‘crane’ is salvaged from the Blue Lagoon in 1977. The picture was supplied by Ray Hooley who took it to his yard in Lincolnshire. It is now at the Threlkeld Quarry and Mining Museum near Keswick. These days the Lagoon is surrounded by rubbish and the area around parts of it is being cleared of growth presumably to let more wind flow across the water. to advertise telephone: 01462 834265 or go to the website: www.onthebuttonarlesey.co.uk | April 2013 | 7