Archive for the ‘Sea Trout’ Category

Temperature rises still further, & river level falls

Saturday, July 20th, 2013

These bulletin blogs represent news about Finavon and the South Esk, and my views as a riparian owner. While I may digress at times to write about other places, these 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

In my last blog I mentioned the shoal of sea trout in Boat Pool. I have been away for a few days and, on my return, paid a visit to the Boat Pool again in bright sunshine. This time, in much more helpful light than on my last visit, I was able to make a rough assessment of the numbers of salmon and sea trout in the section of Milton Beat between Tyndals and Volcano.

Colin Gibb at Boat Pool

Colin Gibb and I surveyed the sea trout and salmon in Boat Pool on 21/7/2013.

As a result of that informal survey, where we could count numbers of fish lying on the bed of the river in about two thirds of the river width from the south bank, I estimate that there are about 200+ seatrout in that pool and about 20-30 salmon, all lying in the main dub of the pool immediately upstream of Volcano.

Seatrout shoal in Boat Pool

I tried to take some photos (see photo above) from which you can just pick out the grey shadows of little clusters of sea trout lying doggo on the bed of the Boat Pool. The salmon were more elusive, but you can just see one or two of them too – well, perhaps not quite!

Sanctuary for heat stressed fish

This photo shows the holding section of the Boat Pool in very low water. On 20 July 2013 there were more than 200 sea trout and between 20 & 30 salmon lying quietly in the deeper, shaded water of Boat Pool.

Conditions for catching sea trout at night have been good at times, but more recently, with the high daytime temperatures and rising water temperature, fish have been reluctant to take the fly. Sea trout have been seen in good numbers ion both Red Brae and Boat Pool, but the other pools on all four beats have shown only occasional fish. Some people will argue that the low catches reveal a disastrously small sea trout run.

While I agree sea trout numbers may be less than the abundance traditionally associated with the South Esk, I also acknowledge the capricious behaviour of sea trout in fresh water, and the lack of evidence of numbers, that are so vital to accurate stock assessment. I will continue to argue that fishery management based on guess-work is generally inaccurate and ineffective.

Willows in June

Photo above. Willows (Milton Beat) in the low water of July 2013.

Until management of the South Esk salmon and sea trout fishery is based on sound stock assessment, we will continue to receive knee-jerk calls for hatcheries to be reintroduced to the river (as is happening as I write this blog). While there is certainly a place for hatcheries and stocking in the fishery manager’s toolkit, it should not be the first remedy to which we turn on the basis of one or two seasons poor rod catches. Perhaps the first step should be to have a management plan based on the best available assessment of numbers of salmon and sea trout? We can then identify which groups of fish are in a fragile state – close to or below conservation levels – and then take remedial actions in an organised, prioritised and realistic way to target those identified groups.

It is undoubtedly a poor year for sea trout rod fishing, but, as yet there is little evidence of a collapse in sea trout stocks: just an impression that numbers are low. So let’s get on with managing our little river on the basis of common sense & good husbandry, supported by science.

Sea trout arrive in numbers

Wednesday, July 10th, 2013

These bulletin blogs represent news about Finavon and the South Esk, and my views as a riparian owner. While I may digress at times to write about other places, these 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

At last there are some good shoals of sea trout in Finavon’s pools. It is not much of a surprise to me that the main run arrived about two weeks late. A discussion with an eminent salmonids scientist at the Scone Game Fair, when he reminded me that the North Sea has taken an unusually long time to warm up after the very cold spring, convinced me that there is no need to be unduly pessimistic about South Esk sea trout – or at least no more than last year or the year before.

Copy of Flow into Craigo

The flow into Craigo Stream at the head of the Red Brae Pool. A great place for a big sea trout in the hour before dawn.

My observations of three or four of FCW’s best pools in the unhelpful light of late evening confirmed that there are two or three hundred sea trout spread among these pools, and doubtless others in pools I didn’t visit. I did notice however that the average size of the fish is smaller than normal, although there are a few fish of 3lbs + in evidence too. In general I think the level of abundance at Finavon is healthy, but nothing to shout home about, and certainly nowhere near the levels of the early 1990s.

There are also some MSW salmon in the deeper pools. By now these fish, remnants of the spring run, will be well settled into their freshwater role and probably very hard to catch. A rise in the water level might persuade an occasional fish to take a fly, but in my view they are best left alone to get on up river to spawn.

Those of us who live on the banks of rivers, observing migrations of salmon and sea trout day by day and season by season, sometimes find it difficult to separate the wood from the trees. I try to avoid too much pessimism by keeping the big picture in mind. A small blip in one annual migration, such as with our sea trout this year, is just that – a small blip. If I look at FCW catches on their own I will inevitably have a distorted picture of what is happening within the South Esk catchment and, perhaps more importantly, what is happening regionally (I like the term ‘bio-region’ which describes the coastal and marine habitats of the Scottish east coast where our sea trout feed). The health of the Atlantic Ocean, and its surrounding seas, such as the North Sea or the Celtic Sea, is the much bigger context, the importance of which we are only just starting to grasp. Avoiding pessimism and doomy prognostications of future dearths of both species is a favourite passtime of the angling community. Perhaps we need to take a wider and longer view?

Our fishing effort at FCW is extremely low at present because syndicate members and our visitors have been discouraged by the low water and absence of fish. I hope that will now change because we now have good numbers of fresh sea trout to encourage more late night stints on the water.

TA 10/7

 

 

Grey ghosts at Finavon

Saturday, June 22nd, 2013

These bulletin blogs represent news about Finavon and the South Esk, and my views as a riparian owner. While I may digress at times to write about other places, these 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

As June draws to a close each year, and spring flows diminish to summer low river levels, I start to peer into the quiet pools on Milton Beat, such as Tyndals, Willows and the Boat Pool, looking for our first sea trout.

The photos below were all taken in the low summer water of late June and show some of the best sea trout pools at Finavon.

Martin Busk nets a sea trout in Tyndals: June 2009 Red Brae Wall Tail Flats Volcano low Copy of Flow into Craigo Willows in June

The photo immediately above shows our top sea trout pool, Willows, at a perfect height for night fishing. It is easy to understand how important it is to keep a low profile and make as little noise as possible to avoid disturbing the shoals of sea trout.

Yesterday, for the first time this year, I spotted a small shoal of sea trout at the head of the Boat Pool. These early fish are hard to see because they are fresh in from the sea, bright silver and very well camouflaged. But there they are in about 4′ of water, lying quite close together alongside one of the old lie boulders positioned by the old Colonel (Colonel Greenhill-Gardyne who died in 1953). These early outriders of the main sea trout run appear, as if by magic. Yesterday they arrived. The day before that the pool was empty. Like a roe buck at dusk appearing on the edge of a wood, these elusive fish return to fresh water from their coastal habitats, as if they have never been away. They are most welcome, both as our reassurance that life continues, despite the clumsy damage we inflict on river and coast, and of course as our quarry.

This is a ‘late year’, as everyone has been saying. As is so often in the natural world, the season is now catching up. We have had a period of tremendous growth over the last two weeks. The trees are all in full leaf. Early summer wildflowers are in their full glory. Seed pods are starting to show. Grasses are at the zenith of their annual growth. Swallows are on the wing eighteen hours each day, intercepting their insect feasts. Fledglings are stumbling into flight and, amidst all of this, the grey ghosts have arrived!

Next week we will start to catch sea trout. It will be interesting to see how strong the 2013 migration of these fish turns out. It is still early days, but the next two weeks will reveal all….

The late Peter Ward fishing the head of IndiesPool from the South side.

The late Peter Ward fishing the head of Indies Pool from the South side.

As I write this on Saturday morning, with the Lions about to engage with the Wallabies in Brisbane, a faint drizzle has stated to fall. A cool wind, overcast sky and sea trout arriving in Finavon’s pools. This is our Scottish summer. The biscuit landscapes of southern Europe, with their unrelenting sun and daytime temperatures of 28C can keep me going for a week, but late June in Angus, with its promise of natural events and harvests, reaches parts of me that no Italian mediaeval hilltop village can ever get close to!

More about fishing in my next blog.

TA