Archive for the ‘Sea Trout’ Category

A good day at Finavon

Sunday, September 4th, 2011

These bulletin blogs represent news about Finavon and the South Esk, and my views as a riparian owner. They are not the views of any other organisation, nor are they designed to promote the interests of any individual or organisation other than Finavon Castle Water and factors affecting the fishery.  Tony Andrews

Yesterday the weather was fine at Finavon, but in the hills there must have been a downpour because at about 1900 the river rose by two and a half feet, and it was still rising as dusk fell. Salmon and grilse were splashing around all over the place, especially in Milton Beat’s Willows and Boat Pool. The water is rather peaty with blobs of foam from organic material washed out by the rain, but the water is surprisingly clean, despite what was obviously a pretty violent rain storm with resulting floating debris and leaves in the water.

Monday could be very interesting…

Harbour sea in Willows

This photograph of a harbour seal in Willows on Milton Beat at Finavon was taken by Derek Strachan in October 2008. Willows Pool is about 12 miles from the high water mark at Dun. To get to Finavon this seal had to swim upstream and traverse two substantial dykes, one at Kinnaird and the other at Kintrockat. I am sure that seals do this regularly in their pusuit of the South Esk’s abundant autumn run of salmon, but this is the first time we have photographed one. I have mixed feelings about seeing this particular wild animal here. Part of me delights in seeing a wild sea mammal in our pools, while the fisherman in me reflects on the mayhem this predatory creature must have caused in the confines of this small river. On balance, with some reservations, I was pleased to see it. 2008 was a record year for catches of salmon at Finavon and, by all acounts, it was a good spawning year. I doubt this seal did irrevocable damage, but I wouldn’t want such visits repeated too often!

We had eight salmon and grilse and a sea trout during the day (3/9). The main feature of the day was the number of fish showing in all the main pools. You often hear the expression “the river was stuffed with fish”, usually in fishing hut banter at the end of the day. While I would baulk at that term, what can be said with a degree of certainty is that the South Esk has had a good year in terms of its spawning escapement (fish, mainly females, on their way to the gravels and cobbles of the upper river to make their redds and deposit their eggs). My friend Colin Gibb and I have observed this year’s runs of salmon and grilse in the South Esk in the context of our long experience of the River. We share over 80 years of experience of observing the river and agree that there have been good runs of salmon from March onwards., and that the spring run was possibly the best we have seen for many years.

Cock Sea Trout

Cock Sea Trout

The sea trout are a bit of an enigma because, as I have mentioned in earlier blogs, these fish had superb water to encourage them to run through the system into their spawning burns. My guess is that the bulk of the sea trout run was safely ensconced in these little tributaries by the third week in July. It is therefore not a year to lament the collapse of our sea trout stocks because they were mostly unavailable to the angler. The sea trout that have been caught (80 of them so far at FCW) have been in superb condition – veritable little suckling pigs some of them!

Plenty of water, fish lost and a few caught

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

The middle of July has turned out wet. With two spates in the last five days there has been ample water for salmon, grilse and sea trout to move through the river system, which is exactly what has happened. On Friday Andrew Robertson hooked and lost a very large salmon in The Bridge Pool. He played the fish for more than twenty minutes and described it as sea-fresh with a tail breadth of at least 9″ tip to tip of the tail fin.

Then, also on Friday, Derek Strachan caught and returned a beautiful sea trout of 30″ in length and an estimated weight of 7.5lbs to 8lbs. From scale readings we learned that this female sea trout is (still alive and on its way to spawning!) is nine years old having smolted after two years in the river and spent one year at sea before returning to spawn in each of the last seven years. The picture below shows Derek with the fish just before returning it to the river.

Another big Finavon sea trout

8 lbs sea trout from Finavon Castle Water

Since then, with the level of the river up and down with heavy showers in the hills, and the water too peaty for optimum fly fishing, we have caught two grilse, one nice one of 7.5lbs – his first salmon – by Simon Walter and half a dozen sea trout. Needless to say there was much rejoicing and a celebratory dram or two because Simon is the designer and maintainer of this website, which many of our readers tell us they enjoy. I caught a small grilse early on Monday in Tyndals, but on Tuesday no less than three salmon and seven sea trout were hooked and lost. I don’t find this particularly surprising because in my experience running fish in the South Esk tend to take the fly with less conviction than when they have settled into their lies in a falling river.

As I write this on 21st July the river is roaring down in a brown spate after heavy rain throughout the night. We should see more grilse in the river after this spate, especially with the weekend lay-off of the coastal nets starting at 1800 on Friday.

There are still a few days left in early August, so if you would like to rent a beat at Finavon, now is the time to contact us.

TA

Sea trout arrive in numbers at last

Tuesday, June 8th, 2010

Last night, just before darkness fell, I fished through Volcano and the Flats looking for a sea trout or two. In the middle section of Volcano I had a savage take from a good sea trout of about 3lbs, but it snatched at the fly and, probably fresh from salt water, its mouth was still soft and the hook came away. Further down the pool, just below the big (17 ton) boulder, another sea trout swirled at the fly. With the night approaching and the water coloured after freshets throughout the day, I decided to take the dogs home and leave the fishing to improve overnight. If the river hadn’t been so up and down I would have stayed later, but expereience tells me that erratic water levels aren’t really conducive to good sea trout fishing at night.

Night fishing

The best sea trout fishing is at night

And improve it did, with Moray Macfarlane taking three nice sea trout (2lbs, 3lbs and 2lbs) in daylight! It is fairly obvious that the sea trout shoals are now building up in all the main pools. Places where you can expect action are Tyndals, Willows & Upper Boat, Volcano, Lower Boat, Kirkinn, Haughs, Melgund, Indies and Marcus House Pool. Over the next few days & nights we should see the catch figures increase substantially. There are beats available (£100 per night for two rods: no single rods) for the rest of the week. The night fishing for sea trout should be really good, and improving all the time.

TA