Archive for the ‘Fishing Report’ Category

A long thaw, and more to come.

Sunday, April 28th, 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

It is two weeks since I last updated this blog space, during which spring salmon have arrived in reasonable numbers off the coast. There has been a good run of MSW salmon, some in the upper teens of pounds, into the North Esk, with some beats such as Pert, The Burn Estate and Stracathro reporting much better catches than a year ago. On the South Esk there are fish well up into the catchment above the meetings, with normal seasonal catches in the middle beats with Kintrockat, Careston, Finavon, Inshewan and Cortachy all catching fish in greater or lesser numbers and Kinnaird doing much better than in recent years, probably because fish have been held back below the dyke by low water temperatures.

If we take the 60+ spring salmon caught on rod and line and in the Marine Scotland tagging net at Kinnaird, the total number of spring salmon caught in the South Esk should be pushing towards 100. While that number is not stratospheric, it is an indication that the spring run – or remnants of what it once was – still exists. Reports of fish seen in the upper catchment, fish lost (at least half a dozen at Finavon), remembering that the water temperature is still struggling to get above 40F (yesterday morning it was 38F) and that April isn’t quite finished yet, we certainly shouldn’t be panicking about the South Esk as the doom-laden Westie report in Trout & Salmon magazine asserts. That report is simply incorrect in stating that this is the worst year ever on the South Esk. I personally would like to read about facts in river reports, rather than the opinions of an individual, especially when those opinions are so far removed from the truth. You only need to look at the long term catch statistics quoted in these bulletins on the 20th of November 2011 to see what I mean.

Beeches Pool (Castle Beat) from the Aqueduct

Beeches Pool (Castle Beat) The photo above was taken from the Aqueduct (now converted to a footbridge) and shows the Beeches Pool where fresh spring salmon have been seen, despite the cold water temperatures, since the middle of March. It is also the pool where John Wood caught and returned a particularly fine salmon of 17lbs (See previous blogs).

Those of us who fish the South Esk regularly know all too well that our spring salmon are not always ready takers of the fly. I have fished over newly arrived fish in the Beeches Pool (Castle Beat) on a number of occasions this year without any perceptible reaction. There is no consensus on the percentage of fish in the river that are catchable at this time of year, but it is probably true to say that on the South Esk it may be a lot less than the 25% quoted for some Scottish rivers. An average percentage of salmon that will respond to the fly, from opinions that I value, would perhaps be about 12.5%. It may be that the percentage is higher when rapalas or other spinning lures are used. Of course this tentative indicator of fish numbers does not take account of fishing effort which on the South Esk, with one or two exceptions, is extremely low. For example, at Finavon the take-up of rods to the end of April was about 15%.

DTH on 27 April 2013

David’s Tree House, the fishing hut on Castle Beat, at daffodil time 2013.

I have repeated in these bulletins over the last three years that we have very little idea of the structure and numbers of the South Esk’s stock of wild Atlantic salmon. That is an accurate statement. We really don’t know. I have made various attempts to find a broad-brush way of indicating numbers, but they all come with a health warning because my methods are at best amateur, but at least they represent an attempt to put numbers on the spring component of the South Esk stock, and they have never been challenged.

We can but make intelligent guesses. Readers will remember the delared catch of 2,307 salmon killed by Usan nets in May 2011, on which I surmised, on the basis of the 2012 Marine Scotland tagging project, that over 750 ‘belonged’ to the South Esk, and the 2500+ salmon from other rivers whose spring salmon were plundered by that indiscriminate mixed stocks fishery. That was just May month 2011, when good numbers of fish escaped the nets and entered the river to provide a show of spring salmon that was “the best since the 1960s” according to some experienced observers. It is not really plausible to claim that 2011 was a one-off year, although I accept that it was a year of an abundance of returning MSW salmon. After all, it takes five years + to produce an MSW spring salmon. In other words, an awful lot of things must have gone right over a period of five years to produce such healthy numbers of spring salmon.

So, in the context of the 2013 season, what could these points indicate?

Here is my tentative list:

1) 2012/13 was a very cold and late winter. Spring water temperatures remain low, and there is plenty more snow to melt. The development of the spring salmon run has been correspondingly slow.

2) South Esk catches to the end of April are about 100 MSW salmon, which at (say) 15% catch rate might indicate 600+ fish already in the catchment.

3) Recent seasons, especially 2011, indicate that the South Esk may consistently be generating a viable spring component. Annual fluctuations in abundance are to be expected in small rivers with variable water levels and temperatures. The South Esk shows over more than 100 years of catch returns that huge variations from season to season have always been the case. While not exactly a spate river, as some on the Scottish west coast are, the South Esk is severely affected by drought at times (as was the case in March and April 2012 when very few spring salmon were caught).

4) Current concern about the spring component of the South Esk stock is encouraging us to adopt a precautionary approach. That must be a good thing in the light of the continuing decline of returning MSW salmon as revealed by ICES. I believe the work being done by Marine Scotland to identify where South Esk springers spawn, and where their progeny spend their juvenile years, is valuable. The fact that the project is also defining the extent of the Usan mixed stocks fishery is a huge bonus.

5) We now await the returns in May because recent years have shown that the bulk of the spring run of MSW salmon takes place in that month. From personal experience and observation I make an assumption that the total numbers of salmon entering the South Esk between 16 February and 31 May averages out in percentages as 1) Feb and March 10% 2) April 20% 3) May 70%. Each of these three periods is affected by water levels and (especially in the early season) by water temperatures. Therefore, if we get a drought in May, we shouldn’t expect many salmon to appear in S Esk rod catch returns. However, it may well be a different story in the Usan net catch returns.

6) We need better data. A stock assemment and management programme for the river has been kick-started by Marine Scotland. I believe we should support that initiative by identifying the most cost-effective means of counting out our smolts and counting in our returning survivors. I think we all know that the only credible way to develop effective management is a) to find out how healthy the South Esk’s stocks of salmon and sea trout are, b) to understand what those stocks comprise in terms of genetic groups (populations) and then start counting…. and continue counting until we are satisfied we have a true picture..

TA on 28 April 2013

The temperature rises and the snow starts melting

Sunday, April 14th, 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

This morning, woken by the rain pattering against the windows, I looked blearily at the webcam on this website at about 7am to see that the river was running high and brown, and it has continued to rise all morning. At 1400 it was at 5’0″ in the Red Brae (that’s 3’6″ above the lowest part of the Wall) and still rising. The weather map is showing that the 7 degree C lift in temperature is likely to be sustained, so we can expect the river to run high for a few days as the copious amounts of snow in the corries leak out into the burns and fill the main stem of the River.

View of Beeches Pool from the Aqueduct

This photo was taken from on top of the Aqueduct looking upstream at Beeches Pool (Castle Beat). The pool is fished from the left bank, where wading is easy on fine gravel. The best lie at this height is close to the willow trees on the right bank in the foreground of the picture. This is a big fish lie, as has been demonstrated by John Wood’s 17lbs fish and a very much larger salmon lost by Alec Towns after an epic (and witnessed) struggle in July 2013.

After John Wood’s stunningly beautiful 17lbs salmon from just above the Aqueduct (technically in Beeches Pool), not much happened before last night’s change in temperature which came with the arrival of a south-westerly airstream. In fact the river level droppped away for the rest of the week and the water became crystal clear, more like the Cascapedia or St Jean rivers in Canada than our little South Esk. There were still a few kelts about, which will likely have dropped back to the sea in this spate. I think this change is in climate rather than just a bit of warmer weather, as we move from winter into spring. If there are salmon off the coast waiting to enter the river, there really could not be a better moment for the coincidence of their arrival and the current snow-melt. If there are fish, then it is highly probable that beats all the way up to Gella, and perhaps beyond, will have fresh salmon in their pools during the coming week. Always the optimist!

Talking of sea trout, we should start to see the odd one appear in catch returns very soon now. Usually the Kinnaird beats record the first of these fish, and late April is about the time.

Looking back on the first two months of the 2013 season, my view is that the River isn’t doing badly at all. Taking the Marine Scotland tagging catches at Kinnaird (22 fish to date), plus fish tagged at sea and now in the river (one or two fish), plus the declared catch from the Kinnaird beats (about 40), plus fish caught above Kinnaird Dam (Kintrockat 1: Inshewan 2 and Finavon 1) we are looking at the declared catch of spring fish, caught and returned to date, at about 70 MSW salmon. Given the conditions, that is not a bad start to the year, and of course there may be other fish I don’t know about.

A minor digression: While the river was fining down in the latter half of last week, I was in the far north-west highlands, giving talks, and visiting rivers and people in the area covered by the West Sutherland Rivers Trust. I stayed at the Scourie Hotel, which must be one of Scotland’s few remaining west coast fishing hotels, although it is great news that the Loch Maree Hotel has just reopened. Even in mid April, with night temperatures well below freezing, the Scourie Hotel was nearly full of optimistic fly fishers from Yorkshire, Nottingham and Glasgow. Their catches weren’t great – just a few hardy brown trout from Scourie’s famous hill lochs – but the crack was, and I was reminded of how important to the remote rural economy tourist angling is, especially in ‘shoulder season’ months like April. In the area between Laxford and  Loch Ewe, it is particularly noticeable how damaging the collapse of sea trout stocks has been to the local economy. Let us hope that one day the sea trout will return in the abundance that I remember them in lochs such as Maree, Na Shealagh, Oscaig and Stack only 40 years ago. Hotels will reopen, take on ghillies, guides and boatmen, and local communities will immediately benefit. For that to happen, we humans will have to start behaving differently in the way we manage the coastal environment. No more said!

View across Scourie Bay towards the Hotel

The view across Scourie Bay to the hotel. The Scourie Hotel has served many generations of game fishers and continues to thrive. The contribution this hotel makes to the local economy provides a reminder of how different the west highlands could be if more hotels like this were available to game fishermen and the general tourist.

When I returned from the north-west last night it was perishingly cold with a freezing haar and a river that didn’t suggest “fish”. By this morning all that had changed.

TA

First FCW salmon of 2013 & what a beauty!

Thursday, April 11th, 2013
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
I can do no better than quote the whole text of John Wood’s report on the capture of a very beautiful first fish of 2013 for FCW.
John Wood's 17lbs salmon from Beeches

John Wood's 17lbs salmon from Beeches

John’s own words:
“What a result and many thanks . I was very happy to have caught 2 kelts (aqueduct and red braes) but about 4pm I thought I would give aqueduct another go . I put on a VERY thin yellow ally’s 8 double . The fish took with an almighty snatch half way between the top of the old wooden croy (above the eroded pier) and the big black rock at the waters edge just upstream . I had just said to myself that this was the spot for a fresh fish !
There was no similarity with the kelts . It shot about and ran all over with a brutal force. I could see it fighting in the clear water all the time and it jumped once to show a pure white belly and a short deep fish.
After about 20 mins it was tiring and I took it down to under the aqueduct to the still water to get its head up and into the net . The net weighed it at 16.5 lbs and I did’nt see any sea lice . It was a hen fish . The handle of my rod in the photo is 26 inches long . The fish obligingly lay still while I took a picture and I returned it safely ..It was the thickest and deepest fish for its lenght I  have ever caught – an absolute beauty .
I will look forward to fishing the lower half of the beat on Saturday.”