Archive for the ‘Fishing Report’ Category

The South Esk in winter mode

Tuesday, November 8th, 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

Walking down Milton Beat yesterday, across the two bridges and on down to David’s Tree-house, I disturbed some Teal on the wildlife pond and saw at least two salmon preparing to spawn in the tail of Kirkinn, and another one scooted away from beneath the new bridge in the shallow flood channel . Winter is nearly here. The light is dusky, the sun weakening, and hours of daylight reducing noticeably each day. The winter solstice is only 36 days away.

The FCW Beat totals for the season are below: a feature of the season has been how evenly distributed across the 4 beats both salmon and sea trout catches have been. I think the lower catch of sea trout on Castle Beat reflects the lack of night fishing effort there. Perhaps David’s Tree House may be just a mite too comfortable!

Beat Salmon & Grilse Sea Trout
Milton 38 28
Castle 31 17
Bogardo 36 24
Indies 34 32

Pools Totals

Bridge 5 2
Tyndals 8 2
Willows 7 15
Upper Boat 3 1
Volcano 7 3
Lower Boat 3 2
Flats 5 3
Craigo 2 1
Red Brae 15 4
Kirkinn 5 4
Pheasantry 4 3
Nine Maidens 2 2
Beeches 3 3
Haughs 9 6
Harry’s Bar 9 2
Melgund 11 8
Frank’s Stream 14 14
Indies 9 10
Martin’s Cut
Tollmuir 6 2
Steps & Toms 4
Marcus House 9 6
FCW TOTALS 2011 139 101

 

Salmon

Best Pool     

Red Brae 15

Runner up          

Frank’s 14

 

Sea Trout

Best Pools   

Willows 15

Frank’s 15

 

Most fish

Best Pool            

Frank’s 28

Runner up          

Willows 22

 

Best salmon       17lbs Volcano

Best sea trout    4lbs 8oz Frank’s

 

Salmon killed    20 = 85.62% caught & released. Thank you very much to all those visitors, syndicate members and guests who have shown their commitment to the future of the South Esk’s salmon by returning such a high proportion of their catch. I am of the view that as game anglers we have every right to kill the occasional fish, provided it meets the advice criteria of the Esk Fishery Board. So, well done!

This was a slightly below par season but, in the circumstances with a warm and rather uninspiring autumn, it really wasn’t too bad. Perhaps next year….

During the winter I will review historical catches at Finavon to demonstrate that our spring catches are holding up quite well , despite the big reduction in rod fishing effort in the last six or seven years.

TA

The 2011 season ends with a whimper, and the debate rumbles on….

Wednesday, November 2nd, 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

A peaty and warm river doesn’t do much for salmon fishing. And so it proved in the last days of the 2011 season. Comparing notes with Inshewan, Colin Gibb and I agreed that the 2011 season was good in parts and lacklustre in others – a curate’s egg of a season. Finavon ended up with 139 salmon and grilse and Inshewan with 153 with MSW salmon dominant and grilse in short supply (although, interestingly, I have seen a number of fresh grilse running in the last three days). The two fisheries each caught 101 sea trout, which is about one third of the totals we expected in the 1990s. We agreed that the Spring salmon fishing up to 31st May was as good as we can remember. We speculated that, had the Kinnaird Dyke been as it was in the 1970s, the Upper Kinnaird catch would have been in the hundreds in the spring. Fortunately, as a result of improvements to the dyke, salmon can now spread throughout the catchment, with a resulting exploitation rate of about 15% of what it was when fish were trapped in the pools immediately downstream of the Dyke.

The slow end to the season will not have been helped by alleged unauthorised digging out of peat channels in Glen Clova, which released huge quantities of peat in suspension that removed oxygen from the water and sickened the fish, making them reluctant to take a fly. In these days of Controlled Activities Regulations, and with SEPA the watchdog for breaches of the law, one can only hope that the person that may have authorised this hugely damaging work receives a whacking great fine. Farmers must obey the law, just as the rest of us have to. If farmers continue do do as they like in the catchment, we will have made no progress and our Board and Trust, if they fail to take action, will be conniving with an illegal act. There’s work to be done.

South Esk in Glen Clova

 This is the Upper South Esk catchment in Glen Clova where farmers have done untold damage in recent years. First the Rottal Burn’s lower reaches were dredged into a straight canal gravel flush, effectively wiping out juvenile habitat, and in the last few months more damage has been done by unauthorised digging out of peat drains. Every time an illegal excavation is done it sets back habitat conservation by years. Prosecutions must follow.

Reverberations continue from last week’s public meeting, following the Minister’s decision to consider a licence for mixed stocks netting in September. An injudicious press release issued by our Board served only to elicit a furious and humiliating reaction from George Pullar which emphasises the need for reconciliation and dialogue however unfair or illogical we may feel the Minster’s decision to be. We now have a once in a generation opportunity to work with the government for the benefit of the River and to set aside the negative aspects of our dysfunctional relationships within the District.

Glen Clova

These meanders of the River in Glen Clova are the places where the river spreads out and inundates the flood meadows in a spate. Farmers have traditionally dug out drains to dry out the land for grazing, but any intereference with natural water courses in this way is now illegal. Nevertheless, farmers still do it. Prosecutions and heavy fines are long overdue. If we fail to enforce the law (CARs) we may as well say goodbye to the benefits of the Water Framework Directive.

The priority within the Esk District must be to repair these relationships, re-establish goodwill and dialogue, and then move forward with an integrated plan for the river, including technical aspects of conservation and fishery management (the two should go hand-in-hand). In the list of priorities for management actions the really vital issue is to develop an effective and reliable methodology for counting the fish into and out of the River. I have said before in these blogs that management by speculation and guessing is not modern fishery management. With the massive commitments to the South Esk from the EU, SEPA, SNH, and the Scottish Government it would be very odd indeed if our own Board were not to come into line with these bodies and lend their support to a concerted action plan for the River. The Board needs to find about £250,000 of its own money (our money!) to invest in measuring stocks. This is not something that can be put on the backburner: it must be done soon, with the full cooperation of Marine Scotland. If we don’t do this now we will have missed a unique opportunity and our successors will not forgive us.

TA

Another 3′ spate, emaciated grilse & South Esk matters

Thursday, October 27th, 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

The weather has never relented. There was talk of an Indian Summer and that lasted for less than a week. Then came rain, gales, but no frosts. The leaves have been forcefully removed from the trees by the wind, as opposed to being nipped off by the frosts. Amongst all of this the autumn run of salmon has been poor with most of the fish seen being MSW ‘old stagers’, and some very big fish among them. The sea trout appear to have all moved upriver and in the last three days the occasional fresh grilse has arrived at FCW. My nephew Charlie caught a 1lb 4oz fresh grilse yesterday with the appearance more of a bootstrap than Salmo Salar. As I write this bulletin early in the morning on 27/10 I note that the season’s catch at FCW is 136 salmon and 101 sea trout. We may catch a few more fish in the last three days of the 2011 season, with the catches of both salmon and sea trout almost certainly slightly below average.

This is the Red Brae looking downstream through Kirkinn to Pheasantry. The Red Brae and Kirkinn are really one pool and offer the salmon fisherman at least an hour and a half of great fishing, especially when the water level is lipping the lowest point in the Red Brae Wall.

SOUTH ESK MEETING ON 27th OCTOBER. Tonight there will be a public meeting in Brechin to discuss the Minister’s response to the Esk Board’s request to compel the nets to refrain from fishing in May. I hope this event will be a measured debate with the benefits to the salmon of the South Esk in mind, rather than a polarised and unstructured rant against the government and the netsmen. I have reflected in a previous bulletin on the Minister’s decision, and concluded that there appears to be a commitment by Government to establishing the South Esk as a model of good management for all Scottish salmon rivers. With the South Esk’s proximity to the Montrose office of Marine Scotland Science, and the availability of scientists to work on the river whose estuary is yards away from where they work, we have an opportunity to progress the much needed research on the composition of the South Esk’s salmon stock.

That plan makes a lot of sense, especially with the initial project of establishing where S Esk early running salmon go, which involves a £150,000 radio tracking project (in Year one: to be repeated in Year two) to insert radio tags into salmon caught in the nets at Usan, which will be specially deployed for the purpose. These salmon will be tracked by radio receivers at strategic points on the river from the estuary to the glens. Once we know where these spring salmon go we can assess the quality of the spawning and juvenile habitat to see if we have problems in the catchment. If they are issues we can then take action. However it is important that everyone understands that there will be no killing of fish for commercial purposes between 16 February and 30 April. The possibility of a licence being issued for the Usan nets to fish in September is only to ensure that the Usan nets are open to MSS scientists throughout the whole season. The licence can be revoked at any time and is not a permanent feature of the season as it could be if there were a regulation in place.

I hope there may be some kindred spirits in the audience with similar views to mine – that we now need to get on with the job of understanding the South Esk’s migratory fish populations. The scientists of Marine Scotland have my full support.

LATER. Well, we had the meeting and the hawks had their say, as did the voices of reason. Fortunately, the prospect of confrontation with the government and netsmen seems to have receded with the option of a judicial review of the Minister’s decision kicked into the long grass and, despite the threat of “going to Brussels” being voiced, I had the feeling that good sense would ultimately prevail. “Going to Brussels” is an empty threat and serves only to irritate officials and politicians at a time when co-operation is desperately needed and in the best interests of the river. No government minister would make such a decision in today’s EU without doing his homework first.

In fact there was a good debate, well chaired by Hughie C-A, and the more extreme views became marginalised as David Laird, doyen of fifty years of board meetings, gave his measured view of the situation. If everybody can keep calm and the issue of the September netting licence revisited and serious offers made (ie cash) to remove that particular item from the Minister’s letter, we could be looking at a sensible way forward.There are some real positives from the meeting, and a big opportunity to get the South Esk onto a science-based management footing. These are a) No netting between 16 February and 30 April. b) South Esk established as a national “demonstration project” c) Radio tagging of spring salmon starting after 16 February 2012 d) Serious public money being invested in the South Esk project (£150,000 per year from 2012 for 3 years).

The downside is the Minister’s irrational decision to allow a licenced commercial net fishery in the first fifteen days of September. That is illogical and, to the objective observer, might even be seen as vindictive. At the very least, the Minister should explain why he made the decision to allow this licenced fishery to take place, and what its purpose and desired outputs  are. On the Board’s side, an offer of a sum of money to buy out the licence might be a useful next step. During the meeting I asked the Chairman what the estimated value of the fish caught in the September nets might be. His reply indicated that he didn’t understand that the question was based on declared September rod catch averages, from which an estimate of net catches of salmon  for the September period could be estimated on the basis of a reciprocal of (eg) August net/rod returns. I didn’t pursue the point in the meeting, but, in the cold light of day the board might choose to do that simple calculation.

My last point is that there appears to have been virtually no discussion with the board or Trust before the Minister’s decision was announced. Damage was undoubtedly done by the Government failing to consult beforehand. Let’s hope we don’t suffer any more such poor processes of consultation, and that we can now start working together cooperatively for the benefit of the S Esk and its migratory fish.

TA