|
Early
Spring Salmon Fishing.
For
a returning springer, I just could not think of a more beautiful
place to head for than the Solway and Eden valley. A game
river through and through the Eden begins life at a little
over two thousand feet above sea level, with a watershed of
some two thousand square kilometres from the North-west Yorkshire
Pennines and the fells of the Lake District, it takes a north
westerly direction to the remarkable Solway estuary (A.O.N.B.).
On the one hundred and forty kilometre journey through stunning
scenery, it takes on board quite a few (around sixty) major and minor tributaries,
the Eamont and Lowther where the majority of the spring run will eventually spawn, and the Irthing, Gelt and Caldew being just some of
them. Trout and Grayling dominate the upper reaches, but it
is not until the middle river around the Lazonby area that
the serious salmon fishing really starts given good water
and temperature conditions. Here there is still a steep gradient and so there are lots
of different and interesting short pools to explore.Pre UDN, mid sixties, opening day would see snow on the banks with twenty to thirty pound bars of silver laid upon it, I do not think we will see those days back again although the run is steadily improving with March being the optimum month.
I am often asked "what is a pool"? A term that is
frequently used in salmon fishing, most of them even have
names, Long pool, Bridge pool, Willow pool and so on. A pool
is one step down the gradient the river takes from its source
at altitude to sea level, a series of pools is a series of
steps; if they did not exist the river would soon empty. The
steeper the gradient the shorter the pools, then at the lower
end of the river where it spills out on to the flood plain
and the gradient less, the pools can be significantly longer.
Although each pool has its own characteristics, they more
or less have the same make up, that is a neck, (the run in)
the main belly and the tail, (the run out).
 |
|
The image people have in general of the river Eden is a small
babbling brook with overhanging trees, a lot of this probably
comes from various articles written by trout fishers like
Lawrence Catlow and Paul Proctor, who prefer to fish the upper
sections. This is true around the Kirkby Stephen area where
the river may only be ten to fifteen yards across, but as
it flows north of Penrith it picks up the Eamont, Lowther
and a few minor tributaries to become twenty to thirty yards
across and very deep in places where the banks narrow.
At Warwick Hall and through Carlisle, the Irthing, Caldew
and Petteril contribute and the Eden is then between thirty
to forty five yards wide while still being intimate and manageable.
A competent caster who can present a fly neatly at twenty
five yards with a spey-cast will have no problems what so
ever on this river.
Not
for the faint hearted, the salmon season begins on January
15, earlier than most rivers. Spring fishing is a bit of a
misnomer, at that time of year we are still in the throes
of deep winter not seeing any sign of spring until mid-March.
A very fascinating sight at that time of year is the return
of the large sea lampreys in the system, its apparently part
of the local history that a certain king, Edward I (a.k.a.
Longshanks) I think, ate a surfeit of Eden lamprey, and then
died.
Temperature is everything; it will dictate what we wear, how
deep and what speed we fish, what size fly to use and how
far the salmon will travel upstream. Temperature also has
a huge effect on the river conditions, for example; the river
may have been running at three or four feet above summer level
after heavy rain or snow melt, the ground already being saturated,
the water runs straight off the land. There is then a sharp
frost; this will literally lock up all the water into ice
coming off the ground. The tributaries stop feeding the system
and the levels can drop dramatically, the fish will then hold
station in the pools, you would then think it should be relatively
easy to pick one or two up. Yes, after three or four days
of the same conditions but not before, fish are cold blooded
and need time to adjust, we see this all the time while trout
and grayling fishing.
The
outfit
A double handed rod of around fifteen feet is the perfect
tool for the occasion, coupled with a large arbor reel, one
hundred and fifty yards of rot proof backing, a fast intermediate
and a wet cell two type of fly-line fitted with braided loops.
Fifteen to twenty pound breaking strain monofilament leaders
are the norm, of no more than four to five feet long. To that
the fly is tied with either a double turle, or my favourite
a single grinner, which after the knot has been tightened
the loop can be backed off to allow articulation of the chosen
fly.
Tip
I prefer the large arbor type of reel for a couple of reasons,
even with all the line out you can guarantee that where the
original drag was set it wont be far off that because of the
constant diameter of the arbor. I always set the drag on
the reel so when I give the fly-line a sharp tug it does not
over-run, any additional pressure can be enforced by palming
the exposed rim of the rotating spool like a brake shoe and
letting the fly-line run through a couple of fingers of the
rod hand. This drag setting is absolutely vital when the fish
is about to be landed, it sees the net or angler and makes
a sudden lunge, this shock will part a tippet of fifteen pounds
or more in the blink of an eye, a light drag setting eliminates
this completely. Reel memory on quality fly-lines is all but
a thing in the past, although the fly-line should be stretched
at yard intervals before starting to reset the multi filament
core. This concept of reel has been around for over a century,
there are not a lot of new ideas in fishing, just the materials
and techniques that have changed.
What
to wear.
The most important piece of equipment you will need for fly-
fishing is some form of eye protection, sun glasses (the wrap
around type are ideal), you only have one set of eyes. Its
not just through casting accidents that you can get a fly
in the face, sometimes when the fish is about to be landed,
with the leader under a lot of pressure, the hook hold releases
and the fly comes back at you like a bullet. Also of course
not to be forgotten, the obligatory hat in its various styles.
Five mm neoprene waders are the order of the day with the
appropriate soles, felts are useless on wet clay, grass or
snow, go for a cleated version with studs. A windproof fleece
and a waterproof breathable jacket is advisable, even on a
dry day if the jacket is not breathable you will end up with
wet sleeves (very unpleasant). Neoprene gloves with exposed
finger and thumb.
A wading staff connected by a lanyard to your downstream side,
and a life jacket with toggle exposed worn on outside of the
wading jacket are essential.
Flies
As a general guide the size, pattern and colour of fly is
dictated by a number of factors, the speed of the flow, the
depth, the colour or clarity of the water, the light and of
course the temperature.
Dealing
first with the speed of the current, the fly has to be of
the right size to look as if it could swim against the flow,
faster flows require bigger flies.
Depth
is probably the one that catches many out, the thinking being,
put on a heavy fly like a brass tube and down it goes, and
yes it does, but usually when it's down there it is totally
inanimate. Okay in a fast flow it will work, but not in a
deep, medium pace of water, so you have to retrieve line to
kick the fly into life. By doing that the fly is now moving
too fast, and in cold water salmon will rarely chase. I find
it is a lot more effective to use a light fly like an aluminum
tube on a faster sinking fly-line, thus the fly gets down
and is very mobile.
Colour of the water can vary; it depends where in the catchment
the rain has fallen and for how long. The sediment carried
from each tributary into the main stem may come off clay or
peaty land, a tinge of light sand colour to a very deep brown,
or that greyish tinge from snow melt and road washings. Sometimes
after a prolonged hard frost it can be crystal clear.
Orange and yellow, green and yellow and black and yellow with
gold/silver bodies work well, with yellow being dominate in
the dressing when there is colour in the water. As the clarity
improves, smaller flies with less impact are called for.
I like to take light into consideration all through the season,
especially in clear water, in the spring the sun stays relatively
low in the sky, but we can get some pretty bright days, short
as they are even at this time of year. Fishing on these sort
of days when the sun is shinning across or down a pool, depending
on which bank you are on, or the angle the fly traverses across
the current can mean the difference between success and failure.
For me clear water and clear skies at any time of the year
I like to go small and black.
Temperature being the last consideration for fly choice has
got to be, the cooler the water temperature the slower the
fly needs to work while still remaining attractive, and as
near to the bottom as possible without snagging. A very fast
sinking line with something like a Temple Dog with its very
mobile wing dressed on a plastic tube would be fine for the
slower flows, and the size and colour of the fly would be
determined by the other factors, speed of flow, depth and
colour.
The
approach
Having arrived at the chosen pool on the lower river, the
water is at a foot and a half above summer level, there has
been no rain for a couple of days now. There is still a slight
tinge of colour; the air temperature is eight degrees, mild
for January and the water is at six, ideal. Making a start
at around eleven we are going to fish into the warmest part
of the day around two, it will be dark by four thirty.
First things first, put a stick at water level into the bank,
from this we can see through the day if the river is dropping
or rising, although the weather seems stable there might be
some snow melt going on upstream.
The faster water at the neck of the pool doesn't seem to be
productive at this time of year, so I like to concentrate
my efforts on the main belly and the tail out; the belly is
around seven to eight foot deep then shallows down toward
the tail. There is a good pace to the water in the middle
and a little slacker near the bank, a wet cell two type fly-line
will do nicely.
Tip
After putting the rod together and taping the joints, leaving
a little tag (by folding a corner of the tape over) so we
can get the tape off easy when we finish, we attach the reel
and screw it up tight, give the reel a wiggle and tighten
the screw once more. Pull off enough fly-line to go through
the rings and back down again, then folding the fly-line two
feet from the end back double, you thread that doubled loop
through the rings. This will save you a lot of frustration
trying to thread the nylon through the eyes when your hands
are freezing, getting near the top and dropping the line to
watch it all slide back down onto the ground, with the doubled
loop it will jamb on the next ring down.
The fly of choice is going to be a two inch aluminum tube,
a yellow with a dash of orange, the hook is a double with
the barbs flattened, (catch and release) to that a four foot
leader with a surgeons loop to join it to the braided loop
on the fly-line.
Fishing to the tide times is not as crucial this early in
the season, the salmon are in no hurry at all, preferring
to loiter in the lower river pools until the water warms slightly
into March.
Tip
Wading stealthily not far from the bank into the water of
the main belly, pull off around fifteen yards of fly-line
and flick the first few yards out into the flow away from
bank-side obstacles. As the current gets a grip on the line
begin waving the rod tip back and forth letting line slip
out through the rings, (we don't want to disturb the pool
with unnecessary false casting) when the slack line is all
out, bring the rod back into the roll-cast position slowly,
facing downstream. Do a roll-cast directly in line with the
bank to get the fly-line back onto the surface, the moment
it touches down, face the intended target and go into either
the single Spey if there's an upstream wind, or double Spey
if the wind is coming from a downstream direction.
Immediately
as the cast lands throw a big upstream mend, this action gives
the line time to sink before the current takes hold, from
now on there is little you can do mending wise. Holding the
tip of the rod out towards the stream pick up the tension
on the fly-line and follow it round very slowly, being very
conscious about keeping the tension on the rod tip. Should
the line go slack ay any point, the fly will not be swimming
effectively, it is surprising just how many fish will follow
a fly only to turn away at the last minute when the fly looses
its action. If you do feel slack pick it up with a slow figure
of eight to regain contact.
 |
It
is important for your own confidence that you look at
the fly swimming before fishing begins, they do not
always swim on an even keel.
|
Pull off some more line so you now can cover at least half
of the pool, and begin working your way down stream a cast
a pace. As the line comes round into the slacker area near
the bank, start to slowly retrieve keeping the movement of
the fly going. Without a pause then slowly back into the roll-cast
position and cast parallel to the bank, then the appropriate
spey-cast out toward the stream.
| Fishing
the fly right into the dangle, then making a retrieve
is so important. |
|
Right out of the blue, the line suddenly tightens, you might
think that you have caught the bottom, as the rod is lifted
the tip begins to rapidly bounce with the weight of a fish.
This is not a springer, but a Kelt that has taken the fly;
we know that straight away because that's what Kelt's do, they
shake their heads. The fish is played to a rapid conclusion;
they haven't a lot of fight left in them after the rigors
of being in the river so long, and then going through the
spawning process.
 |
Keep
the rod up at 45-degrees.
|
|
Be
quite firm and begin backing out.
|
|
 |

Gill
parasites, Salmincola salmonea (a.k.a. gill maggots).
|
To the newcomer of spring fishing for salmon, this is all
very exiting stuff, and before the E. A brought catch and release
until June 16th in five years ago, a few were knocked on the
head mistaking them for a salmon. After a mild winter the
Kelt's seem to recover very well and have a lovely bright silver
coat and well mended fins, looking closely at them you will
see that the body is almost parallel, and the head looks too
big for the body. Other signs are maggot like creatures in
the gills, sometimes ragged fins and an extended vent, be
careful returning these fish, many will come back for a second
spawning, a lot bigger than the one you have here.
Kelt, distended vent, thin bodied and ragged fins |
A solid full bodied springer (note the short head) |
Another
mistake I have seen at this time of the year, and I speak
from personal experience, is the line tightens, (and I always
lift straight away when using sinking lines), it goes solid,
the fish then moves off very determinedly and you find yourself
playing a salmon. The fight last as usual, about a minute
a pound, and it is landed. Everything seems fine, there is
a full looking fish, silver coat, a cobalt blue slash just
around the lateral line with a touch of lilac, and the fish
it seems firm enough. Take a look at the belly of the salmon
and you will see that it is slightly rounded, a bit like the
hull of a tanker as opposed to the hull of a speed boat which
a Springer will have. This is a baggot or in Scotland it is
sometimes called a rawner, in some regions a rawner is an unspent cock fish, a baggot is a salmon that has not deposited her
eggs for whatever reason, and that's why the belly is rounded,
also classed as an unclean fish (the same as a Kelt), it to
has to be returned carefully.
|
A
cock salmon/rawner (long head, kype, soft and full belly) |
A
kelt. Colouration can be deceptive (smolted)
|
As
progress is made down the pool, you notice that a few Kelt's
begin splashing about; it is now two in the afternoon and
you have seen no sign of activity up to now, what is making
them do this?. Look very carefully at the water, one of those
"Kelt's" has head and tailed, porpoised, no Kelt,
it's a fresh fish that's just moved into the pool from below.
In my experience salmon that do this are ready takers, these
newcomers to the pool have upset the residents and that is
why they are disturbed and splashing about.
Putting
a cast upstream of mark the fish left, as the tension is picked
up, almost immediately the fly-line slides irresistibly through
your fingers and pulls line off the reel before you realise
what's going on, the fish tears off across the width of the
river. Who said salmon only move slowly in cold water? Now
is not the time to think about "should I have changed
that leader with the wind knot in it, or done a better join
of the backing to the fly-line"? Get out of the water
and on to the bank! We may need to follow.
The fish moves down stream at a rate of knots, its panic time,
thankfully it slows, all the time you are following trying
to regain line, the salmon has now stopped and you're not
in the ideal place to bring things to an end with all the
obstructions around. Lifting the rod tip high and gripping
the line against the butt, start walking slowly back up to
where you intend to land the fish, this must be under a very
steady pressure, any jerkiness in this procedure and the fish
will take off again downstream. Unbelievably the salmon starts
to follow, as you approach the place you need to be stop,
keeping the rod high, the fish will keep going straight past.
As it does you can now deliver the pressure from below and
with a bit of side, the fish now has to fight not only you,
but the current also while being pulled off balance, walking
a fish upstream really does take the steam out of them.
The fight is brought swiftly to an end; it has been carefully
landed and left in the water, the double hook with the flattened
barbs slide out easily. Look at the fish, a bonnier sight
you will never see, its solid flanks, black back, pearly covering
over a vibrant silver body, sea-lice (Lepeophtheirus salmonis)
near the massive and powerful tail and the streamlined fluorescent
white belly. There is no mistaking this one, a different looking
animal from the back- end fish the season before, holding
the wrist of the tail and supporting the weight of the belly,
hold it into the current until such time it kicks and swims
off determinedly.
I know this salmon will make it to the place of spawning,
probably the Eamont/Lowther, because of the radio tracking
program the Environmental Agency did over three years recently.
The survival rate was tremendous, with some very interesting
results of fish movements over the months the salmon were
in the river.
I now sit back on the bank and have the "after sex"
cigarette, (but don't tell the wife as I have supposed to
have given up).

This
is the ultimate prize in fly-fishing, right off the tide, bright silver, full
of energy and solid.
Talking
to some of the more senior anglers on the river, it is fascinating
to find out that up to the mid sixties before the arrival
of UDN, and the discovery of the migratory paths that salmon
take, the Eden was purely a spring run river. By the end of
May the run had all but finished, but what a run there was.
On opening day, to see numerous fish on the bank lying on
the snow, some well over twenty pounds was nothing to write
home about, it just happened every year. After the devastation,
the Eden was then restocked with fish from different rivers,
most of them back-end and summer run salmon. The Eden has
experienced in 2004 the best spring run that I can remember
for many years, (as have other rivers). Whether this is due
to the catch and release program the EA instigated in 99,
the work various bodies like the Eden Rivers Trust have done
improving habitat or the net buy-outs remains to be seen over
the next couple of seasons. I for one will be there to find
out.
Glyn Freeman 05.
|