Archive for the ‘River Report’ Category

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

The rain clouds gather

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010

Tyndals Pool at dusk

I spoke to the Times Weather reporter, Paul Simons, this morning to discuss the effect of this long dry spell on sea trout runs. He was particularly interested in whether the late sea trout run in Island of Mull rivers may be connected to low water. I said that I thought that low flows may contribute, but that there are other factors at play on the west coast, most notably the unknown impact of salmon farm generated sea lice on run timings of sea trout – and of course climate change and its effects on sea temperature.

On the east coast, and on the South Esk in particular, I note that our sea trout continue to run, albeit in relatively small numbers at present. There is certainly sufficient flow to bring small packets of fish upriver pool by pool, which accounts for the flashes of silver we see in the deep pools throughout these bright sunny days. People tell me that sea trout and grilse will run on wet blotting paper!

There are plenty of fish about, but they are nearly impossible to catch. High water temperature and very low water make life very difficult for the night sea trout fisher, despite the fact that we have more sea trout in our pools than for many years. Fish deep and slow in the darkest moments of these short nights.

Paul Simons (the Times Weather man) told me to expect substantial rain overnight on Thursday and well into Friday, with a good chance of continuing rain all next week. We won’t blame him if he is proved wrong but we do like his optimism!

Tight lines to all our fishers, especially Martin Busk and his guests next weeek who are fishing three beats all week.

I’m off to the Scone Game Fair. Come and see me on the AST stand.

TA

New tree-house fishing hut and wildlife pond in David’s Wood

Monday, June 7th, 2010
Foundations for tree-house fishing hut

Castle Beat Fishing Hut under construction

Our plans to transform David’s Wood on the north bank of Pheasantry into a place of tranquility for people and wildlife are now progressing quickly. Our master craftsman, Will Wells, has completed the foundations in preparation for the arrival of the frame of the hut itself and its Scottish larch roof shingles. When finished, the view from the veranda – with beech trees growing through its roof – will look down on the delightful streamy flow of Pheasantry Pool and across to the high Red Brae bank with the sharp edge of the old vitrified fort of Finavon Hill as the backdrop. This place is the heart of the Finavon Castle Water experience, but then so are the three other huts’ locations! (Red Brae south, Harry’s Bar south and Indies north). There is something very special about David’s Wood which I am sure will be appreciated by our visitors. History, privacy and tranquility, not to mention some good fishing when conditions are right, combine to make this a uniquely relaxing place to be.

Close by the tree-house hut is our new wildlife pond (see below). Already, after only a month, we have seen water beetles, boatmen and a profusion of other invertebrates. With the native lilies, reeds, flags and rushes all settling in well, and with a happy family of mallards already thinking about making the pond one of their regular residences, we have exceeded our own expectations by a considerable margin. We will try to keep the pool fish-free (there being more than enough in the river!) but the likelihood is that minnows, sticklebacks and eels, along with frogs, toads and newts, will soon colonise this most lovely woodland pool.

David's Wood Pond after one month

New pond for amphibians, invertebrates and ducks

Building the pond presented us with a challenge because the soil along the S Esk river banks is very porous, necessitating some sort of water-holding liner. We went for the very best on the market, in the form of Bentomat, which is a smart form of clay liner. The key ingredient is bentonite which is volcanic ash that fell into lakes (or the sea, but that’s a different chemical compound) and through millions of years formed a clay-based sedimentary rock which when mined (in Australia and other places) produces a fine white powder. When water is added to bentonite it expands massively and makes a gooey clay layer. the Bentomat product is simply bentonite sandwiched between two layers of very tough, synthetic, non-woven fabric. With a sprinkling of bentonite powder between each overlap and each 5m strip of bentomat laid to cover the prepared pond area (with the spoil providing hard standing for the new vehicle track all the way up the N bank to Pheasantry), we now have a stable pond that holds its water level extraordinarily well, and which has become an important focus for wildlife. It certainly adds a new dimension to the Castle Beat experience!

TA