Fishing Lakes In Avon

Windmill Fishery

Windmill Fishery is one of the standout options when you’re looking for fishing lakes in Avon, especially if you want a venue that feels genuinely local rather than a long drive out. Windmill Fishery is at Westerleigh on the outskirts of Bristol – a well-known Avon venue with several lakes that cover match, carp and silver-fish fishing.

Like most venues around the county, Windmill Fishery has its own ‘best way to fish it’ depending on the season. Some days it’s a simple method feeder job; other days it’s building a swim, nicking a bite at a time, or even going mobile and finding fish that are showing.

In this guide I’ll run through how many waters you’re dealing with, what species are on offer, and the sort of tactics that tend to suit Windmill Fishery. I’ll also include a quick map, parking/access notes, and a few angler-style tips you’ll hear on the bank.

If you’ve fished Windmill Fishery yourself, feel free to drop a comment with what worked for you. Real-world feedback helps keep these fishing lakes in Avon guides useful and saves people wasting sessions guessing.

Where is it and what’s the setting like?

Windmill Fishery is at Westerleigh on the outskirts of Bristol – a well-known Avon venue with several lakes that cover match, carp and silver-fish fishing. The banks and swims generally give you a nice mix of easy access and a few ‘prime spots’ that regulars like to get on early. If you’re new to Windmill Fishery, plan on having a wander first – you’ll learn more in ten minutes looking for signs of fish than you will staring at a phone.

How many lakes are there?

Number of lakes: 4 lakes (Match, Specimen, Silver Fish and Carp lakes).

Fish species

Species list at Windmill Fishery: Common carp, Mirror carp, Crucian carp, Roach, Tench, Perch, Bream.

Windmill is the sort of place where you can bring a mate, try different tactics, and still feel like you’re fishing a ‘proper’ venue rather than a puddle.

What type of fishing suits this venue?

Carp fishing: If carp are your main target, Windmill Fishery can be brilliant when you fish for one bite at a time. Think solid PVA bags, a tidy baited area, and staying sharp for liners and subtle takes. Plenty of anglers rate Windmill Fishery as a good shout when you want a ‘proper’ carp session without trekking miles.

Feeder fishing: On waters like Windmill Fishery, the feeder is often the quickest way to work out what’s in front of you. Start with a small groundbait feeder, keep the casting spot consistent, and let the fish tell you whether they want it steady or more aggressive. If you’re getting plagued by small fish, step up the hookbait or shorten the hooklink to force quicker bites.

Float and pole fishing: When the top layers warm up, Windmill Fishery can switch on to simple float tactics. A waggler with pellets or corn can be deadly, and if you’re on the pole, positive feeding and tidy presentation usually wins.

Bank-side tips (the sort you actually hear)

  • Watch the water: at Windmill Fishery, the best swim is often the one with signs of fish – fizzing, small bubbles, reeds knocking, or the odd show.
  • Keep it simple: one reliable rig and a feeding plan you can repeat beats chopping and changing every cast.
  • Adjust with the season: in colder months, scale the feed right back and focus on a single bite. In late spring and summer, you can often build a swim and get them competing.

When to visit and how to plan a session

With Windmill Fishery, timing is half the battle. If you can, aim for calmer, overcast days in late spring through early autumn, when fish are comfortable and moving. In bright conditions, a bit of shade (trees, snags, islands, or deeper water) can make a big difference. If it’s windy, don’t fear it – wind can push natural food into a bank and get fish feeding.

Session-wise, I like to start with a simple ‘search cast’ to get a quick read. A small method feeder, a light groundbait feeder, or a tidy single hookbait on a solid bag lets you work out if anything is in the area. If bites come quickly, you can build the swim with controlled feed. If it’s slow, keep roaming until you find life.

Take note of where you got bites, where fish showed, and what the weather was doing. That little log of sessions turns into ‘local knowledge’ surprisingly quickly and is often the difference between a blank and a proper bend in the rod.

Google Maps

Final thoughts

Windmill Fishery deserves its place on any shortlist of fishing lakes in Avon. Whether you’re a carp angler, a feeder addict, or someone who just wants a relaxing day with plenty of bites, it’s a venue you can get to know and keep coming back to.

For more venues, browse the full category here: Fishing Lakes in Avon.

Liam

Creator of NorfolkFishingBlog. My goal is to create a community for the anglers of all abilities. I'm no way a professional angler by any stretch, I hope to learn as much as the next person.

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