Archive for the ‘Fishing Report’ Category

First salmon of 2011

Sunday, March 6th, 2011

Yesterday (5 March 2011) we caught our first salmon of 2011 in Melgund Pool (Indies Beat). This fish was estimated to weigh about 11lbs, although it was difficult to be accurate because we were careful to keep the fish in the water before releasing it.

There have been quite a few kelts caught and a good number seen over the last three weeks. Water levels have been ideal to encourage fish to get over the Kinnaird Dyke downstream of Brechin, although water temperature has been on the low side, hovering at about 40.F.

Melgund is a tremendous pool for a spring salmon because of its depth and consistent current, particularly in the neck of the pool. These features make it an ideal lie for a spring salmon to conserve energy in cold water temperatures.

Fishing Finavon’s Pools

Saturday, January 15th, 2011

Some of our blog readers have asked me to write something about tactics and the most suitable tackle for fishing the 24 pools of Finavon Castle Water.

The first thing is to consider what kind of of river the South Esk is.  Understanding the nature of the river and its seasonal differences  provides the basis of how we fish. The South Esk is a good, medium-size salmon river with the prospect of catching a fresh run salmon from early April to the last day of October. The grilse run should be much better than it is, and it is obvious from the river’s catch statistics that the reason for poor grilse returns is the nets operating to the south of Montrose. 

The River also has a great reputation as a sea trout river and there are signs, fragile perhaps but certainly present, that sea trout runs are returning to their former abundance. If that happens we could be seeing annual sea trout catches at FCW of 200 to 300. While not exactly a spate river in the way that some Scottish west coast rivers are, the South Esk does depend on a good flow of water to optimise the chances of salmon being caught. Normally the water is clear, running over fine gravel at Finavon and in low water is absolutely gin-clear. But in a spate the river can get very dirty and takes at least two days to clear. For a few days afterwards the water stays peat stained, gradually clearing from bovril to dark sherry to Speyside malt and back to gin again. Fishermen need to adapt to these changing conditions.

This 15lbs salmon was caught (& returned) in Indies Pool in April 2010. This method of dealing with & photographing fish, that are then returned, is not good practice. Ideally fish should be photographed in the net and, if possible, without being lifted out of the water. If we are going to maximise the chances of these valuable, genetically distinct, spring salmon getting into the upper river to lay their eggs in the winter, we need to treat them much better than we are at present. This salmon should never have been taken out of the water, and certainly not laid on the bank for the photograph. Any abrasion or contact with clothing, sand or grass out of the water will damage the slime envelope and open the fish to the risk of disease. Handling fish reduces their chances of survival.

Spring salmon fishing. In April and May – we usually (but not always; e.g. May 2010) have good water levels which allow the spring salmon to disperse throughout the system quickly. Now that all the major obstructing dykes have been removed, fish can swim freely upriver. The only exception is Kinnaird Dyke just downstream of Brechin, which still holds fish back in very cold water conditions. But even Kinnaird is much improved, thanks to a brilliant adjustment made by civil engineer, Colin Carnie, with the result that for most of the season the dyke poses no problems for ascending fish. Once the first salmon arrive in FCW pools we start to see the occasional splash of a head & tailing fish, or a flash of a silver flank beneath the surface of a deeeper pool, and sometimes we see or hear the flip of a tail as a running fish briefly advertises its presence as it runs through a stream at the head of a pool.

These beautiful salmon (see photo above) are a bit easier to catch than salmon that run later in the year. Easier they may be, but not as easy as some fisheries managers claim when they say that angling in the spring can account for upwards of 25% of the salmon in the river. After living on and fishing the South Esk for many years, and judging by the numbers of fish seen in FCW pools, my assessment is that the proportion is more like 5%. In very cold heavy river conditions it is sometimes best to fish with a minnow or rapala, with barbless double, not treble, hooks. A 2.5″ brown and gold devon is ideal.

My own preference is to fish with fly in all but the most demanding conditions. For these early fish the fly needs to be a few inches beneath the surface, fished steadily and searchingly in the cheeks and jowls of the streams and cast ‘square’ with a belly in line line in the pools and tails. Salmon are top-line predators and can be attracted by the fly moving quite quickly. In slower water, by casting across the river at right angles and letting a line belly develop, the fly moves atttractively and at speed across the quieter water in a similar way to the backing-up method used on rivers like the Helmsdale and Thurso. Very often, in the tail of Milton Beat’s Lower Boat Pool for example, a fish will be drawn across from the gap under the ash tree on the north bank to take the fly midstream just above the cauld (which at FCW we call ‘RPJs’ – Riffle Pool Join!). It is very unusual for a spring salmon caught in this way to be badly hooked: the hook is usually embedded in the ‘scissors’.

The fly. My preference is the ‘Finavon Whisp’ (see photo below) which I have developed over the years as a general purpose fly for fishing Finavon’s pools in all conditions. In the spring months I use the Finavon Whisp in sixes 6 & 8 and dress them a bit more heavily than the one in the photograph. I also vary the colouring, ranging from very bright orange or yellow hair in the spring to darker colours – even black – on smaller hooks in the low water of summer. Ideally, fishing in April and May in good spring water levels, as we should get in 2011, a 13′ rod with intermediate line and slow sinking leader and a size 6 or 8 Finavon Whisp is all you need to fish for our spring salmon. Don’t expect the pools to be brimfull of fish,but you can expect to see fish and perhaps connect with one or two. In May 2008 I was on the river when a run came through and I caught four in the day using exactly the fly and method I have described. In fact, if the fish are in the mood, I think they will take any fly within reason. The most important factors in attracting a spring salmon on the South Esk are the depth, speed and angle of presentation of the fly, but above all the persistence of the angler. The moral is ‘Keep fishing’ and think laterally!

The Finavon Whisp. I think of this fly as an impression rather than a statement. When developing it I designed it with the clear water of the South Esk in mind. There are doubtless more beautiful, well-made flies on the counters of tackle shops throughout the land, but I doubt that there is a fly that has been designed with just one little river in mind, as the Finavon Whisp has for the South Esk. The main features of the fly are the relatively sparse squirrel hair tail, the jungle cock cheeks and the silver hook. Those three features, combined with the overall shape of the fly, with the strands of dyed hair extending well beyond the hook bend, are intended to give the fish a fleeting reminder of things it may have eaten in the marine phase of its life  (the ‘Gallery of marvels’). Taking the aggressive and territorial nature of the salmon into account, the Finavon Whisp also has the intrusive quality of something strange and yet familiar entering the space of the fish. The fly is designed to induce a visceral response or, fished delicately just below the surface on a summer’s evening, invite the fish to see it as a memory of food. I really don’t think that the colour of the fly matters much, but the weight (of the hook) and the shape are all-important. As the individual strands of hair flicker against the resistance of the water and the jungle cock adds to the impression of life, it is important that the fly is fished at speed. Above all else the Finavon Whisp is an attractor, inviting aggression, curiosity and a visceral reaction all at the same time. It is a fly of ambiguity, inviting confusion and response. It is a fly for clear water and can be tied on single or double hooks. It is not patented, nor am I jealous of anyone improving on my crude design, but I do invite my guests and visitors to try it out. Tight lines!

 

 

This is a 6lbs cock grilse caught on a Finavon Whisp in low water at dusk in Willows; for me the essence of fly fishing for salmon. Compare this experience with harling for salmon in a Tay dub in March (with the ghillie doing all the work!). They both qualify as fly fishing for salmon. Chacun a son gout!

Summer salmon and grilse. In high autumn water levels a similar method to spring fishing can be successful. In a big summer spates I like to fish the tails of the pools, which is often where all the action is. In August 2007 we had 19 salmon in a day, mainly from the tail of the Boat Pool. Indies, Haughs, Red Brae and House Pool can all be productive in such conditions. The really challenging fishing in the warmer months is when the water is lowish. This is the time when good fieldcraft comes into play. The fisherman who uses very small flies – again a lightly tied Finavon Whisp on a size 10 or 12 silver hook – and fishes with precision and delicacy, is in with a good chance of success. In low water the streams come into play, and favourite places are Bridge Pool, Tyndals, the Flats, Craigo and Red Brae Streams, Beeches, Indies, Tollmuir and House Pool, all of which hold fish throughout the summer months. As the light fades the chances of a grilse or sea trout increase, but more about sea trout in another blog.

Autumn salmon. In September and October there are usually good numbers of salmon in all FCW pools. The method of catching them isn’t very different from the spring except that the induced take becomes even more important. Therefore, moving the fly – and keeping it moving – is absolutely essential. The ‘flickering’, illusive quality of the Finavon Whisp, modified in terms of size, weight and colour, and perhaps dressed a bit more extravagantly, comes into its own and I suspect often encourages a salmon to react that might have had its fishy mind on other things!

Do e-mail me Colonsay@hotmail.com  if you have any questions or thoughts about fishing the fly at Finavon. One of the methods I have not mentioned is nymphing for salmon and grilse in dead-low summer conditions, but I can do that when I write about fishing for sea trout in a later blog.

TA

Mid Winter at Finavon

Friday, December 24th, 2010

The winter solstice has come and gone and the days, while not yet getting noticeably longer, are not getting any shorter. The full moon is now waning after a full eclipse early in the morning on Tuesday and the winter skies are clear and provide no protection during the cold nights. With temperatures down to minus 15C at night, and not going above minus 5C for the last week, the river is frozen over at Tyndals and the Boat Pool, with black looking streams appearing through the ice in places and then disappearing beneath it a few yards downstream.

Salmon are cold blooded animals, and the effect of low temperatures is to slow down their metabolism and give them an energy-saving lethargy as they lie in deep water below the ice. Unlike humans, who would soon die of hyperthermia if they were subjected naked to such conditions, salmon can survive for a long time in near zero temperatures. In Russia for example, they have ice-fish. These are salmon that run rivers like the Varzina and Ponoi in the late autumn, spend the winter under the ice and become available – as silver fish – to the angler arriving at the beginning of June as the ice melts. These ice-fish then go on to spawn in the autumn of that year, after spending more than a year in fresh water. We don’t have ice-fish on the South Esk because the river only freezes over on average one winter in five. But we do have distinct populations of salmon, probably genetically differentiated after developing particular characteristics since the last ice age, that run the river in nearly every month of the year.

Salmon spawning this autumn (below)

Spawning salmon

Here (below) is a picture of one of our October tenants, Mike Eliot, with a red cock fish which he carefully returned to the River. I wonder where that fish is now? Has it hunkered down in some deep pool awaiting the moment to move onto the redd with its mate? Or has the deed been done, the eggs fertilised and the fish – now a kelt – awaits the near inevitability of death? Whatever happened to it, unless it was taken by an otter or unseasonal poacher, I imagine it still alive, living out its last days in the cold river. Winter may appear to be cruel, but it is also the source of next spring’s regeneration.

Mike Eliot returning a cock salmon

Mike Eliot returning a cock salmon

Winter pictures taken over the last few days show Finavon in the grip of this unusually cold weather.

Autumn & Winter 2010

 

This is the view on the 24th December 2010 of the hills behind the rooftops of Finavon Village. The snow in the high Corries will be tens of feet deep, drifted by the wind. The blocks of frozen snow and ice packed into the corries will become the reservoir to give the spring salmon sufficient water to swim well up into the South Esk system. Were all winters as generous to the most valuable salmon of all – the early running or ‘spring’ fish!  If the last few years had not produced such mild winters, who knows whether our spring salmon populations wouldn’t now be more abundant than they appear to be? I like cold winters: they are good for the river and produce better feeding at sea and along the coast for salmon and sea trout!

View upstream from RB Hut

This is the view from the Red Brae Hut looking upstream towards the footbridge with Castle Stream and the Flats beyond. These two streamy pools provide top quality habitat for feeding salmon and sea trout parr in the spring and summer months, but in the winter these little fish bury themselves at times in the loose gravel (from where they emerged as alevins) where they are safe from predators and the disruption caused by winter floods. When we electro-fished the Flats we discovered that the density of parr in that shallow pool was as high as anywhere on the river.

Red Brae in November snow

Red Brae is a great holding pool. I often think that there must be at least one salmon in it in every month of the year, and I’m not including kelts! The thing about the Red Brae is that it has a great stream in at the head of the pool, down to the confluence with the Lemno Burn. And then there’s the wall which runs beneath the red brae itself where the current erodes into the hillside a bit more every year. Salmon lie right up against and below the wall, sometimes with their heads tucked under it, often preventing them from seeing a fly. Nevertheless, this section of the pool provides depth and security and holds good numbers of fish throughout the season. Last, but not least, is the tail of the pool which is the section from the end of the Wall (a great taking place!) into Kirkinn. In these winter conditions (see photo above) I think of those soft July evenings with the sea trout swirling in the tail of the pool, and grilse and salmon head & tailing in the head stream and at the end of the Wall. It is only three years ago that I caught three salmon in an August spate – all over 12lbs – at the end of the Wall without moving my feet. This happened because at the right river level there is a lie at the point where the current deflects away from the broken wall. There was a pod of fresh fish there, all of which were keen on taking the fly. Memories!

Upper Boat iced

This is Upper Boat Pool just downstream of Willows. The pool has been frozen over for ten days and heavy snow fell onto the ice last week. The current is slow here and the river quite deep, with the result that the river freezes right across and then acts as a dam to catch all the ice flows coming down the river. The effect of this is a corrugated surface of the ice upstream of the smooth frozen-over Boat Pool. In the photograph below you will see how this corrugation affects Willows – our most productive pool at Finavon, but certainly not in these conditions!

Willows iced

Note the corrugated surface of the pool, which is the result of ice flows trapped by the dam of ice in the Boat Pool. Willows is the most productive pool on all four beats of Finavon Castle Water. The pool offers superb high water fishing for salmon in the spring and autumn but, best of all, it is a great place to catch sea trout. The secrets of success for this pool are the deep water in Boat Pool which provides a reliable stock of salmon and sea trout to filter up into the shallower water (about 4′ 0″ deep) at the head. It is this shallower water with the bank of willows along the north bank to provide shade and security for fish that makes this pool so productive. But Willows is not easy to fish in low water. Genuine fieldcraft is required, as well as the night fishing angler taking great care to wade as quietly as possible. Once ensconced in the pool, moving very quietly down, step by step, you soon become as one with the natural surroundings – to the extent that you may find otters surfacing and exhaling breath noisily within a rod’s length of where you are standing! That can be quite scary if you are not ready for it. Sea trout shoals in the Boat Pool can number 300 or more, and many of these fish will at some time during the short summer nights become available to the careful angler. Images of the summer again, in sharp contrast to the wintry scene above!

Dawn over Finavon Hill Dec 2010

Sunrise over Finavon Hill on Christmas Day 2010

TA