Archive for the ‘River Report’ Category

Big Salmon at Finavon

Friday, April 24th, 2009

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

After a spate early in the month Finavon continued to produce good quality two-sea-winter salmon until last week, when water levels dropped back and the sun came out. Bright conditions, low river levels and crystal clear water enabled us to see, for the first time this year, how the winter spates had changed our pools. The River is in great order with lots of young salmon and sea trout, good fly and invertebrate life and fish in all the pools. The catch to date is seven salmon and one sea trout.

Yesterday David Parratt, Andrew Howard and I were lying on the top of the Haughs Aqueduct peering vertically down into about four and a half feet of clear water at the head of Haughs pool. We could see every stone on the bed of the river in the bright sunlight. We could also see three salmon lying quietly in a lie beside a large boulder immediately below us. We were not more than thirty feet away from these fish, so we were able to assess their size with some accuracy. and compare each other’s estimates. The smallest of the three salmon was about 14lbs, a really nice spring salmon anyone would be proud to catch and release. The fish lying next to it was much bigger, a longer, deeper fish with tremendous breadth to its shoulder and upper body. We thought this would weigh between 18 and 22 lbs.

About six feet below these two impressive salmon was a very large fish, which we all agreed was somewhere between 30 and 35lbs. With its huge, spade-like tail,  massive head and overall length of about four feet (48”) we took a long time to reach our conclusion, but because there was no refraction from our position directly above the fish, there was no distortion of its size. What we saw therefore was what the fish was. In all the 25 years of my ownership of the Finavon water I have never seen such a big salmon. And to see it at such close quarters and to note every detail on its body was a great experience.

Someone may catch this huge fish, but I hope not. I like to think this is a female that will go on to lay her eggs, probably in  November or December, in a high tributary of the South Esk to ensure that another generation of big fish return to our river.

Haughs Pool Downstream of the Aqueduct

Haughs Pool Downstream of the Aqueduct

The Excitement of Anticipation

Monday, March 9th, 2009

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

This has been an old-fashioned, cold winter. The hills of Angus are still mainly white and the corries, especially on the North slopes, are filled with snow and ice. If the thaw continues slowly we should see water levels holding up, and this should make it easy for the spring salmon to enter the river and move well up into the catchment.

Derek releasing a kelt

Derek releasing a kelt

It has been an outstanding year for kelt survival. Derek Strachan who you can see in the photograph unhooking a well mended kelt from Indies Pool, caught 13 kelt in one busy morning in late February. But, as I write this in the second week of March, there are still no reports of fresh salmon being caught upstream of Brechin.

Now is the time when ghillies and fishery managers are preparing for the coming season’s visiting anglers, who come to the South Esk from all over the World. Huts are being painted, riverside seats and rod rests repaired and oiled and the first shoots of giant hogweed dug up or treated with weed killer. Pools are inspected to see what winter floods damage has occurred, foliage trimmed back, flood debris and litter removed from the banks and the river.

I often think of the early weeks of the new season as a kind of phoney war while we await the arrival of the oyster catchers, coming inland to select their breeding sites, and in their wake the spring salmon. At first it is the occasional swirl or blue-black back and iridescent silver flank that you might be lucky to catch sight of, but usually these secretive early running salmon make their presence felt (literally!) by a long-drawn solid tug at the deeply fished fly. That moment has yet to arrive in 2009, but with the river in superb condition, the water clear, deep and lots of it, we expect the first spring fish of the new season to announce its arrival any day now.

Fishing for salmon is largely the excitement of anticipation. There is nothing to compare with the expectation of the first new-season salmon, and this bulletin will report the event as soon as the first salmon of 2009 is caught and released alive into the river to continue upstream to lay its precious cargo of eggs in a tributary far up in the glens of Angus.