The South Esk – A Sea Trout River First and Salmon River Second

December 5th, 2009

The South Esk has a long and deserved reputation as one of Scotland’s great sea trout rivers. In the 1960s it was not unusual for the total catch of sea trout and finnock in the S. Esk District to exceed 20,000. In 1967 the catch was 37,000. Only the Ythan, Deveron and Spey came anywhere close to matching these catches. As far as we know, the South Esk continues to produce good numbers of sea trout smolts, although recent years have seen a decline – possibly from competition for redds and juvenile habitat with salmon. Whether it is this, or marine mortality, which seems more likely, the last five years have seen a severe, but not unprecedented decline in numbers of returning adult fish. Nevertheless, the South Esk remains a top sea trout river.

Tail of Indies Pool at Finavon on the South Esk

I have often been asked why the South Esk is so much more productive as a sea trout river than its close neighbour the North Esk. As always with sea trout, there is no easy answer. The river has all the habitat requirements of the sea-going version of Salmo trutta L. – the brown trout, from gravelly upper tributaries to the deep pools and dubs with their quiet, alder-overhung tails. I have seen shoals of 200 – 300 sea trout averaging two and a half pounds in the Dam Pool at Kintrockat, similar numbers in the Boat Pool at Finavon. But the most impressive show of sea trout that I have seen anywhere is in the Garden Pool at Inshewan. Less than a decade ago this single pool produced over 350 sea trout to night-fishing rods.

Unlike the great sea trout systems of the Western Highlands – Stack, Maree, Shiel, Eilt and Na Shealagh, there are few big sea trout caught on the South Esk. The century average is just over two and a quarter pounds and the biggest I have ever heard of was a twelve pound fish caught at Inshewan. Sea trout of 5lbs and heavier have never been common.

Until recently the coastal nets South of Montrose continue to take a heavy toll of the South Esk’s sea trout stocks, in May June and July each year killing 2,000 to 3,000 fish, in addition to 6,000 salmon and grilse. But now the netsmen have agreed to return their catch of sea trout alive to the sea and none will be sold. We should see more fish in the river as a result. For anglers visiting the South Esk in June or July to fish for its sea trout, there is a culture of night fishing. There is a group of 50 to 60 anglers who home in on this little river to fish for sea trout through the short summer nights, and witness the heavy splashes and spreading ripples made by these mysterious fish against a sliver of light in the night sky.

The South Esk is defined by its sea trout. The essence of this little river is the experience of waiting beside a tree-lined pool at dusk for the colour to drain from the landscape and for the bats to start their incessant search above the water for flying insects. The lines of alders against the sky with the dark pools at their roots, and the slow, sometimes imperceptible, draw as a sea trout takes the fly, represent aspects of an angling culture that very few rivers can sustain, and the South Esk is one of these.

The Last Hurrah for the South Esk 2009 Season

October 23rd, 2009

The drought lasted until earlier this week, when the heavens opened and the South Esk rose more than five feet at Gella Bridge to bring down a chocolate spate. The water cleared quickly, but the rain kept coming and the river today is huge with only Lower Boat Pool and Indies Pool fishable. Nevertheless we have an intrepid party of keen fly fishermen working hard to catch autumn salmon.

As I write this on Friday 23 October, with just 8 days of the 2009 season left, Finavon castle Water catches remain at 99 salmon and 113 sea trout. Hopes are high that the next few days will bring good numbers of fish into the FCW beats and improve our catches.

There have been plenty of fish in the river throughout the dry six weeks of September and October, and all our visitors have seen them – some big fish amongst them – getting staler and more coloured by the day as the drought wore on. But this flood will have changed all that, with a big influx of new fish from the sea and the departure of many old residents up the Glen to the high tributaries and spawning redds.

Leaves are always a bit of a problem at this time of year. A big sycamore leaf, carried in a strong current, can seem very similar to the gentle take of a large autumn salmon. And the South Esk is a genuine ‘big fish river’, especially in the back end when fish over 20lbs are regularly caught, and sometimes much heavier than that. I expect to see fish of over 15lbs showing in all the main FCW pools in the next few days.

Whatever happens, and however many fish we catch, I always feel ready to come to the end of the season at this time of year. The fish are getting ready to spawn, the geese are flying over Finavon in huge skeins and the colours of winter are nearly on us. This really is the last hurrah for the South Esk 2009 season, and it can be the most productive time of the whole year. Everything depends on reasonable water levels and the presence of good numbers of salmon. The next 48 hours will show us what to expect next week.

Lunch in Indies Hut

Lunch in Indies Hut

The Second Largest Sea Trout from Finavon in Nearly 140 Years

August 30th, 2009

Stop Press – An 8lbs hen sea trout in excellent condition was caught on Saturday 29/8 in the tail of Indies Pool. This beautiful fish is the second largest sea trout from Finavon in nearly 140 years of records.

If fish are able to live long enough to grow to this size, and during their lives return many times to the river to spawn, there must be something going right in the environment! The important thing about this fish is its condition: I have not seen a better fish than this one, and it fought as well as a salmon of double its weight.

We normally would not kill a sea trout of this size (the best sze for eating is 2lbs to 3lbs) but it was badly hooked in tghe gills and was bleeding profusely, giving it no chance of survival. Reluctantly therefore I despatched the fish.

TA

The 8lb Sea Trout from Indies Pool

The 8lb Sea Trout from Indies Pool