Archive for the ‘Fishing Report’ Category

A pristine river and concerns about freshwater mussels

Thursday, May 19th, 2011

Yesterday in lowish water Moray had an 11 lbs salmon from Frank’s Stream, which is his favourite FCW pool. The fish took a size 10 Finavon Cascade variant tied by Pete at the point where the current, after deflecting away from the S bank, spreads out across the river. Whilst not detracting from Moray’s lovely fish, Frank’s Stream must be the easiest FCW pool to fish: indeed you could fish it in your carpet slippers, barely getting the uppers wet, so well trimmed is the grass along its bank!

Today the river is running at 4″ with a healthy ‘bulge’ around the sides of the Armchair (webcam) boulder. The water is clear and the colour of a very pale malt whisky. Conditions are perfect for dawn and dusk fishing. And there are fish in the pools!

Freshwater Mussels in the South Esk

There is concern in SNH and the Esk Trust about the wellbeing of South Esk Freshwater Mussels (Margaritifera margaritifera). The well-known mussel beds at the Sawmill Dam on Cortachy Castle water, where regeneration of the mollusc has been monitored over a number of years, are showing a decline. Noone knows why, although the ERFT view is that it may be because of excessive amounts of silt being washed down from Glen Clova. The SNH/SEPA view is that there may be an issue with pesticides, but their origin and precisely how they affect the mussel is unknown. Further down the river, as I mentioned in a previous blog, large numbers of mussel shells, of varying sizes, indicating a range of age groups, were washed out by the winter spates. Marshall Halliday, the Trust’s director, feels that the increasingly violent spate ‘events’, that did not occur in the past, may be causing damage to mussel beds. I think there may also be a connection with the loss of the dams on the river (only Kinnaird remains as an effective barrier and ‘holder back’ of a significant reservoir of water) because the quieter water and lades associated with these structures provided habitat for freshwater mussels. Disappearance of the dams (or ‘dykes’) has removed those ‘oases’ of suitable habitat.

You may be wondering why freshwater mussels are important, and indeed why I keep on banging on about them. My angle on the subject is based on awareness of the important SAC (Special Area of Conservation) status of the South Esk. This EU designation has provided the River with its priority status for habitat enhancement, and with that some really significant amounts of money. Margaritifera margaritifera is not just an interesting freshwater species, which it certainly is:  it is also a biological indicator that tells us a lot about the condition of the River – its habitat, flows and water quality. Most of all, because of a fascinating parasitic relationship with the salmon (and sea trout) it tells us a lot about where our salmon and sea trout are going within the catchment, and has undoubted indicator implications for the health of individual populations of both species of fish.  And all this because the larvae (Glochidium) of the mussel hitch a ride in the gills of our wild salmon and sea trout! How else could they get upriver you might ask?

* If you are interested in finding out more about the freshwater mussel I recommend Fred Woodward’s superb little book ‘The Scottish Pearl in its World Context”  Diehard 1994 ISBN 0-946230-27-7 or, on the law,  the Scottish Executive pamphlet “Scottish Conservation Priorities” – freshwater pearl mussels, pressures, conservation and enforcement of wildlife law.

Sunny May morning: Tyndals

Here’s a photo of Tyndals taken early this morning. The river rose a few inches overnight, but by 0900 was dropping back slowly.

TA

Post-spate clear water, salmon in the river and great news for our sea trout

Sunday, May 15th, 2011

With the water clean & clear – the pale sherry colour of a top Speyside malt – and the level holding well with top-ups from showers in the hills, the late spring salmon run continues. I was pleased to see that Cortachy and Downie Park had six fish yesterday (14/6), I suspect with a high level of expertise going into the catching of them. At Finavon Ian Maclean caught a fresh 8lbs fish in Melgund Pool (Indies Beat) and late in the evening I had a 2lbs sea trout from Upper Melgund Pool, fishing from the south bank. We saw a few travelling fish, and my guess is that from now on the upper river will do much better than so far this season.

Ian Maclean: 8lbs

Ian Maclean's salmon 8lbs

The upper river – Kirriemuir Angling Club up to Gella Bridge, Cortachy Castle and Downie Park from the Sawmill Dam to Shielhill Bridge, and Inshewan – is really the cream of the South Esk fishing. While the genuine middle beats – exemplified by Finavon, Careston and Kintrockat – offer the angler some good fishing, especially in the spring and autumn, and for sea trout, the ‘highland character’ of the South Esk is defined by those beautiful upper river beats: I often think of them as the essence of the South Esk, a true Highland river, whilst the middle and lower beats all the way down to Kinnaird and House of Dun, are more lowland in character, or, as someone said to me the other day, more like a West Country river.

This morning (16/5) I heard from Marshall Halliday, Clerk to the Esks Fishery Board, the excellent news that the nets at the mouth of the South Esk (the USAN  nets) will be releasing all sea trout back into the sea alive with immediate effect. 

This is marvellous news for the South Esk and should allow our beleaguered sea trout stocks to continue rebuilding. I must congratulate the Board for getting its priorities right and negotiating this matter to its logical conclusion. The South Esk’s economy is based on its sea trout as well as its salmon. This is truly a great start to the week, and the news comes in the nick of time to let all our early sea trout, as well as the main runs later in the summer, into the river.

TA

Rain, the weekend slap and prospects for May & June

Sunday, May 8th, 2011

If I were going to choose a time for there to be a spate in the spring, I would choose the second week of May, over a weekend.

Why?

1. Because the first sea trout shoals are already appearing off the coast, and the high water should bring them into the South Esk.

2. The Spring salmon run is far from over, and the spate should bring the later running spring fish into the river, thereby supplementing the considerable numbers of 2SW salmon already in the deeper pools of the middle and upper river

3. The nets are currently supposed to be ‘off’ (not operating), observing the statutory weekend slap (from 1800 on Friday to 0600 on Monday). The trouble is that these mandatory weekend closures by the nets are carried out for less than 40 percent of the total number of weekends of the fishing season (2010 figures) on the  grounds of “health & safety”. You don’t have to be a cynic to question the need for that.

First spring spate after the snow went

Castle Beat. This is the view looking across Pheasantry towards David’s Treehouse from the Finavon Hill side at 1100 on Sunday 8 May 2011

Back to my thesis: the second weekend of May and we have a roaring spate, with the rain still pelting down. Despite the problems, I still believe that this is the optimum time for stocking the South Esk with the last of the Spring run of salmon and the first, usually larger, sea trout of the summer runs which should continue well into July, peaking in a normal year in the last week of June.

People who read this Bulletin Blog will have noticed that we are of an optimistic mindset. That is perhaps true, but this time, with the river unobstructed & open to the sea (we hope), there are grounds for our optimism!

TA

Postscript added on 14 May. The good water level stayed with us all week as the South Esk gradually resumed normal spring service after an unseasonally violent spate. Yesterday (13/5) and today we caught a salmon each day, saw a few more, as well as the welcome sight of some fine sea trout. In the next few days we are expecting showers and cool temperatures, struggling at night to get much above freeezing. My guess is that the extended spring run, steady rather than prolific, will continue with most of these 2sw fish heading quickly for the hills. I am told by members of the Kirriemuir Angling Club that there are good numbers of salmon above Dunbog Farm and well up into Glen Clova, but they are difficult to catch in bright and chilly conditions – typical east coast May weather. There are some spare rods available for spring salmon fishing in the next fortnight. If you are interested please phone me 07748 634 658, or Moray Macfarlane 07835 717 150.