This Day — April 27: Rivers, Birds and Flood Works
April 27 — Rivers, Birds and Flood Works

John James Audubon (April 26, 1785)
John James Audubon, born April 26, 1785, left a ledger of waterfowl and river scenes that anglers still use as shorthand for good habitat. His plates in Birds of America put ducks, geese and river terns in living color. Audubon painted marshes and estuaries with the same care a seasoned angler reads a tide chart. His notebooks helped make wetland value obvious long before modern conservation law.
Jubilee River opening (April 27, 2002)
On April 27, 2002, the Jubilee River sluices near Windsor began working as a flood relief channel for the upper Thames. The engineered channel changed flows, protected towns and altered fish passage. Salmon and trout runs downstream faced new challenges; fish passes and habitat works followed. Engineers, riverkeepers and local clubs learned to manage the channel without killing runs that anglers depend on.
Practical tie-in for modern UK anglers
History keeps a lesson: habitat art and civil engineering shape catches. Good habitat draws birds and fish alike. Modern anglers rig a light rod, check waders, and look for the bends and backwaters that history made and industry altered. Respect the change. Fish the seams.
Recommended: waterproof chest waders