Archive for the ‘Fishing Report’ Category

Arctic seas, feasting salmon & conditions now perfect for FCW sea trout.

Sunday, June 5th, 2011

I feel a bit of a fraud as I sit writing this blog in a room in the Arctic Hotel in Ilullissat, 250 miles north of the arctic circle on the west coast of Greenland! One reason why perhaps I can justify writing a bulletin about Finavon from this distance is that this is where our two-sea-winter salmon come to feed. The sea is a few yards away from where I am sitting, and the view is breathtaking with brilliant sunshine on massive icebergs exiting the great Jacobshavn Glacier. As far as I can see there are icebergs of different sizes, shapes and colours, ranging from ten-story tower blocks to the size of a mini, from shimmering white to deep blue. The sea is very calm in the blazing sun, and the coastline behind me a mixture of bare rock and snow patches. There are snow buntings and a team of twenty or so huskies lazing around on flat slabs of exposed rocks, chained up because they are not always of a friendly disposition. There is also a litter of husky pups causing general mayhem, all within a few yards of my window. Talk about panoramic! When I return I shall download some photos of this incredible seascape, huskies included, for this blog.

Below: Where our salmon feed at sea near the town of Ilulissat, 250 miles inside the arctic circle on the west coast of Greenland

Icebergs exiting the great Jacobshavn Glacier

Sunlight on icebergs in the sea off the Jacobshavn Glacier

Sleeping husky, chained-up because these working dogs are dangerous!

So this is where our two and (if we are lucky) our three-sea-winter salmon come to stuff themselves with capelin, squid, and anything else of the right size for them to eat. The salmon here are grossly fat and oily. Their flesh is soft and full of fat. We never see them like that because, by the time they get back to the South Esk, they have the physique of an athlete, after swimming the two thousand miles of the return journey. By the time they arrive with us all the fat has been worked off and they are fit and firm-fleshed, and much nicer to eat of course! I have never been in much doubt about the salmon’s status as a top-line predator, but seeing the way they feast here in the cold Greenland coastal waters, has confirmed that in my mind as a certainty. So, when you fish for salmon in Finavon’s pools maybe it’s a good idea to keep the fly moving, because they really do like to chase their prey. It seems rather odd that we are putting these top-of-the-food chain predators into cages and stuffing them with South American anchovies in order for us to eat them as farmed salmon. Rather like an African tribe deciding they like roast lion steaks, so they cage-up the lions, and feed them antelopes in order to fatten up the lions so they can eat them. I can’t think of any other predator we treat in this way. Wild salmon are very special animals and perhaps we need to rethink our relationship with them. 

Night fishing

The best sea trout fishing is at night

The other reason why I feel I can write a bulletin about FCW sea trout prospects from long range is because of what modern technology provides in terms of information. For example, the webcam tells me that the river has dropped nicely to a level where sea trout should be moving upriver steadily and, with any luck, be starting to shoal in the main pools. I would expect there to be some sea trout in all the pools, with some good shoals developing in Tyndals, Willows, Upper Boat (all Milton Beat), Red Brae, Kirkinn (Castle Beat), Haughs, Tollmuir and House Pool (Bogardo Beat), Melgund, Frank’s Stream and of course Indies (Indies Beat). If I were going fishing at midnight tonight (Sunday) I would put money on seeing and hearing sea trout splashing about in Indies and Willows. Following reports of significant numbers of sea trout going through, and some being caught, at Kinnaird, there are bound to be fish in those FCW pools I mentioned above. The warmer water after the superb weather on Friday and Saturday should encourage sea trout to run. The new FCW sea trout syndicates start this coming week. I wish them all every success – good warm summer nights with exciting trysts with sea trout and the occasional salmon, perhaps interspersed a convivial blether & dram in the Indies fishing hut.  Incidentally, well done, Ian Ingledew with that lovely 11 lbs fish from the tail of Haughs (Bogardo Beat) last week. That was a welcome surprise for a night sea trout fisherman! This is a magical time of year, so enjoy. The fog, snow and ice will be back far too soon, so, like the grass-hopper, party-on while the sun shines!

Postscript: Moray had a 2 lbs sea trout at 0400 today from Frank’s Stream (Indies Beat), but that is all for an early season night. From here on things should improve.

TA

The River fines down as the first sea trout arrive

Tuesday, May 31st, 2011

As the run off from the last spate fines down and the water becomes ever clearer we are starting to see salmon and sea trout in the pools. If it wasn’t for the wind ruffling the surface of Willows (Milton Beat) earlier today Michael Dawnay, one of our syndicate rods, and I might have seen a shoal of sea trout at the head of Upper Boast Pool. I am sure they are there, but not yet in big numbers. I can say however that there are some big sea trout in the pools, notably Tollmuir and Indies, and that the late spring run of salmon continues.

Salmon 7lbs from Red Brae

Salmon 7lbs from Red Brae

Derek had a very nice plump little 7lbs salmon from Red Brae (Castle Beat) on 30/5, which followed one of 6lbs he had from the same pool earlier. He finished the day with another split-fresh 8lbs salmon from the stream into Pheasantry (Castle Beat). All these fish were caught on a size 12 cascade. In less than a day therefore the season’s tally for Castle Beat has more than doubled. Well done Derek!

With the grass freshly cut on the N bank of Indies (Indies Beat) and all the way downstream to Tollmuir Pool (Bogardo Beat) the river and its surroundings are looking great.

TA

More water and a week of seven salmon

Sunday, May 29th, 2011

The last week has been strange weatherwise, explained by meteorologists as caused by the jet stream overhead and resulting pressure-induced high winds with some rain. Trees have been brought down, branches broken and an unseasonal flurry of autumn-like leaves scattered into the river by huge gusts, with their catspaws ruffling the surface of the pools. With water levels at a generous late spring level, and the water clean after the last two weeks of rain leaching of the topsoil, the river has been in perfect condition. Not many fish have been seen, but we caught seven up to 12 lbs, with Frank’s Stream on Indies Beat and Tyndals Pool on Milton Beat doing well. Late flurries of activity from small shoals running through the beats have been seen late in the day in the evening light, especially in the Red Brae. Salmon have been hooked and lost in Tyndals, Indies and Tollmuir Pools and quite a few, more than anywhere else, seen in Marcus House Pool.

View down the Flats

This is the view from the head of the Flats (Milton Beat) downstream towards Castle Stream footbridge and Red Brae (Castle Beat) beyond.

Seven fish isn’t bad for a late May week at Finavon, but in the context of this year’s much improved spring run, it was mildly disappointing. We should I believe have caught a dozen salmon and a few more sea trout. Ken Dickinson reported some big sea trout in Tollmuir Pool, including a really big fish well into double figures. On the same occasion Bill Cook hooked a nice spring salmon off the big boulder in the same Pool, but the fish decided it would return to Montrose Basin and left Bill bereft in the process.

Bogardo Hut

Inside the Bogardo Beat hut which is located on the South bank of the tail of Haughs Pool (Bogardo Beat).

As I write this bulletin on Sunday evening the wind is still breaking branches and the river is fining down, but still very fishable. If the weather warms up a bit we should start to catch sea trout in the dusk and, later in the month of June, at night. I expect Inshewan, Cortachy & Downie Park to strat reporting good sea trout catches in the next few days. Meanwhile, the four FCW sea trout syndicates who will be fishing all the pools downstream of the Haughs Aqueduct, start their season on the 6th of June and, ever optimistic, I am predicting a better sea trout season here than any in the last five.

I am off to Greenland to attend the NASCO conference for a week on Thursday. Depending on whether there is something to report, I may slip in one more blog before I go; otherwise, it will be after the 10th of June when the next bulletin arrives. In the meantime, to all our rods at Finavon, and elsewhere on the South Esk, tight lines!

TA