Archive for the ‘River Report’ Category

Hints of spring?

Friday, March 15th, 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

There are many millions of tons of snow on the hills and in the corries. At some point most of this huge reservoir of water has to come down the river. In a few minutes from now I am going to fish a size 8 Willie Gunn with a cone head through Franks and Indies Pools on Indies Beat. I could say that I have a hunch, but I think that might be over-egging the situation. Put it like this: I fancy a wade down Indies and a cast or two into that wonnderful pool’s tail, as always, with a touch of optimism.

Tyndals pool in late winter sunshine in March 2013. This pool is a favourite resting place for spring salmon on their way up to the upper reaches of the South Esk, where they spend the summer months hunkered down in a deep holding pool.

The dogs took me for a walk early this morning down Milton Beat, and I have to say that Tyndals Pool was looking great. There must be a fish in the centre section of the pool, but the water is still very cold. The news from the Marine Scotland tagging is that at least two salmon have been trapped and tagged at Upper Kinnaird, and another one or two caught in the Usan nets. Catching spring salmon in fresh water well into the river makes a lot of sense after the 2012 experience of tagged fish travelling far and wide. That is not to suggest that salmon tagged, even as far up the river as Upper Kinnaird, won’t change their minds and go back to sea. Salmon are capricious animals, which is why we all love them!

This evening is just a lull between two cold snaps, or that is what the weather forecasters are telling us. The temperature this evening is about 7 C so maybe, just maybe, there is a fresh spring salmon in one of FCW’s pools. Next week will be colder. Time to go fishing….

Ilullissat in the Greenland arctic circle

This is where some of those fish I was trying to catch today come from. The photo is the town of Ilullissat 250 miles inside the arctic circle in Greenland, where genetic analysis of samples has shown some of our MSW salmon go to feed. (uncannily like a Claude Lorrain painting!)

Later: It was a lovely evening with the bright light of the sunset belying the chill of the water, which is very clear with a touch of snow melt. I never saw nor felt a fish but, as I mentioned earlier, it was just good to be there fishing down Indies with a fly that was clearly too small and probably wasn’t deep enough anyway. But the dogs enjoyed the outing with Tally Labrador joining me in midstream for a greeting before getting bored and getting back to what dogs do on riverbanks. The wild garlic is greening up the woods now and the snowdrops are definitely past their first flush of youth.

Roe deer are in the woods in good numbers too. Which reminds me, thinking of visiting mammals, that today I had a call from someone who works for the Courier newspaper asking me what my views are on beavers, because there are quite a number in the Dean Water, which is a short walk across the watershed from the Lemno Burn. I told him that I think of them as food. After all they are herbivors, and eat no end of good things in our countryside, which is a lot more than can be said for some of the processed offal we buy in the shops. I have in mind, when it is legal of course, a couple of spit-roasted beavers, well basted and with spuds baked in the fire embers with salad and lots of wine. I am sure that our syndicate members would enjoy a beaver party. Catch your beaver first.

But, to be serious for a moment, I am not in favour of introducing European beavers to the South Esk catchment because their well-built dams will obstruct upstream and downstream migrations of salmon and trout. That will inhibit regeneration of freshwater mussels because they depend on upstream migration of both species for the mussel larva (glochidia) to hitch a ride in their gills as the only way they can get upriver to regenerate their stock. A beaver dam would stop that happening, or at the very least restrict the range of the mollusc within the catchment. That would I imagine cause a flurry of confusion in SNH corridors as their employees try to decide whether freshwater mussels are more important than beavers. The argument – beavers versus mussels – will probably be resolved by external authority as Brussels might tell them which has priority, because it is conservation of the mussel (Margaritifera margaritifera) that gives the South Esk its SAC status.  It’s a bit like the choice between buzzards and curlews or lapwings; someone in an office somewhere has to decide which species gets the thumbs down.

The other concern about beavers, which will tend to use the smaller, well forested, tributaries is that their dams inhibit downstream migrations of parr and pre smolts, making them vulnerable to predation when they collect in large numbers in the pool formed by the dam. One can imagine just about every riparian predator waiting for that concentration of fish to appear, courtesy of our Swedish beavers!

TA

New season: old issues

Wednesday, February 27th, 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

The South Esk is centre stage in Scottish salmon fishery politics – yet again. The decision of the Scottish Government to revoke the licence for Usan Fisheries to fish in September, increasing interest in the river (see paragraph below), the never-ending debate about mixed stocks coastal nets, the issue of keep-ins (nets fishing through the statutory weekend close times), and the prospect of netting interests exploiting Scottish salmon saved by the decision to end mixed stocks netting on the English NE coast, all amount to a level of attention on the South Esk that, at some future moment, will surely lead to changes in the current regime of wild salmon and sea trout management.

As the recipient of EU Life Funding, priority SEPA funding to deal with diffuse agricultural pollution, the SEPA Rottal Burn Restoration Project, Marine Scotland’s ‘model’ fishery management project and spring salmon tracking, as an SAC with the benefits of EU Habitat Directive protection and supported by a very successful catchment management partnership and plan, you would have thought we should all be basking in contentment, but sadly that isn’t the case.

“Why on earth not?” you may ask, “with all that support the Southie must be the most favoured of all Scottish rivers”. Well, in a way you would be right. The river is getting a level of attention, study and funding that any of our beleaguered west coast rivers would be glad to accept.

Unfortunately the South Esk is the crucible of the worst case of mixed stocks coastal netting of wild Atlantic salmon and sea trout anywhere in the North Atlantic region. The only possible exception is the unsustainable Finnmark fishery where Norwegian netsmen are ‘stealing’  salmon bound for Russian rivers, and inciting a diplomatic row by continuing to exist. Diplomatic stand-offs with Russia usually end in a Russian victory, so I wouldn’t be placing any bets on the future of the Finnmark fishery!

Even the English coastal nets exploiting mixed stocks now have a limited lifespan. Salmon saved by the end of coastal netting south of the border are largely of Scottish origin. Fish saved by that uncharacteristic decision of the Westminster Government to practise genuine conservation will find themselves enmeshed, killed and sent to market by a small group of people continuing the outdated practice of mixed stocks coastal netting on Scotland’s east coast. There are lots of ways to get to Billingsgate, but via Montrose seems to be the only one for dead salmon.

Unless; Yes, unless the Scottish Government takes action after recognising that killing salmon belonging to the Dee, Don, North Esk, South Esk and Tay (and who knows how many other rivers – ‘the rivers in between’?) is causing serious damage to the economies in the river catchments of east Scotland. Rural communities from Strathdon to Blair Atholl, in Grampian and Tayside are losing out on an income which rightfully should be theirs. I doubt if a single fishery owner is making a profit from letting fishing, but local businesses, especially hotels, B&Bs, cafes, restaurants, tourist hubs, clothing and tackle shops should all be receiving a boost to their income from angling tourism. A regime of exploitation that preserves traditional, artisanal netting interests at the expense of the livelihhods of many hundreds of ordinary people, some in remote villages in the catchments of Scotland’s east coast salmon rivers, is surely as dead as a Monty Python parrot! I have deliberately avoided mentioning catch and release, which in conservation terms puts the case for closure of mixed stocks coastal nets beyond debate.

We know that the River Dee earns Deeside about £22 million a year from salmon angling. The estimated 320 salmon killed at Usan in May 2011 would have therefore very likely been a real ‘hit’ on the Deeside economy. If each salmon caught by an angler fishing the Dee is worth about £2,750 to the local economy, and if the exploitation rate of May salmon is about 20%, the ‘hit’ on the Deeside economy by the Usan nets in May 2011 was about 64 x £2,750 = £176,000. Just that one month! And what about the two Esks? By the same calculation the ‘hit’ on the North Esk was about 144 x £2,750 = £396,000 and on the South Esk about 136 x £2,750 = £374,000. Add in the Tay and Don and you start to get a picture of the level of economic and social damage done by one very effective killing machine – during one month in the season! And I haven’t even mentioned the words ‘conservation’ or ‘management’.

If you factor in the probable damage to fragile populations of salmon and sea trout from all affected river catchments, surely the case for regime change is obvious? Or am I missing something? I think not, although I have my suspicions that some old fashioned ideology or prejudice may be driving the agenda: certainly not evidence-based logic, or a recognition that rural communities in the east of Scotland are profoundly impacted by this outdated regime of uncontrolled exploitation of one of Scotland’s most iconic and valuable natural resources.

I am all too aware that these arguments have been put forward by many people – from Lord Hunter in the 1960s, to Lord Nickson’s Salmon Task Force in the 1990s, to the Mixed Stocks Fishing Working Group of 2009. The arguments stand repetition: they need dusting down and re-presenting to remind everyone involved in salmon fishery management that Scotland stands alone as the only country continuing this outdated practice, that in conservation terms mixed stocks coastal netting is simply unsustainable, and that the damage to rural communities is very significant. In my view these arguments cannot be aired too often.

It is just possible that good management, common sense and simple justice will prevail. The question is “when?”

TA

 

Opening Day 2013

Tuesday, February 19th, 2013

Five of us met for a couple of drams, a picnic lunch in David’s Treehouse, and about 3 hours of opening day (which means not very serious/glad-to-be-on-the-river) fishing. The result was four kelts! My guess – and I have no grounds for making this statement except for a sensation in my waters – is that there aren’t any fresh fish at Finavon. For mid February that is the norm, although over the last 130 years there have been a few instances of fresh fish caught on the opening day. I caught one myself, in 1990 as I remember.

David Ramsay fishing Haughs

David Ramsay fishing through the Haughs Pool (Bogardo Beat) which is one of Finavon’s best spring pools. On the 16th of February the pool produced two well mended kelts.

The river was at a perfect height but on the cold side with the water temperature at about 36 F. No fish were seen, but a convivial day in perfect late winter surroundings was enjoyed by all.

Michael Dawnay with Tally Labrador 

Michael Dawnay with Tally Labrador on the bank of the Haughs Pool 16/2/2013

Ryan Balcombe fishing Red Brae

This is Ryan Balcombe of Gow’s Fishing Tackle & Guns in Dundee fishing through the Red Brae. The pool looked terrific, with clear, light amber coloured water flowing over clean cobbles and gravel. If there was a fish in the pool it gave no sign of its presence!

Ryan Balcombe & Michael Dawnay at the Treehouse

Michael and Ryan discuss the conditions on the veranda of David’s Treehouse, the Castle Beat fishing hut.

 The day ended early after some desultory afternoon fishing and a discussion about bank maintenance over lunch in DTH.

Another season underway!

TA