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(Last Updated: Tuesday 23 April)

Fishing report for w/c 15th April 2024

Here we are in week 12 of the season already and we are starting to see more springers on the beats this week, with a total of 37 spring salmon reported to FishPal. The first salmon of the season was caught at the new beat of Tilquhillie just below Banchory and news came in as I was typing the report of a fish at the Banchory beat, let’s hope this is positive news as we move towards the end of April.

Around the beats

A cracking 8lb springer for Dave Roberts who was fishing at Tilquhillie from Monday to Wednesday last week.  Dave has been returning to Dee in search of an elusive spring salmon for six years now. Congratulations to him  - the perseverance has finally paid off!

Brian at Cairnton & Middle Blackhall  reported that that Stefan Johansson, part of Pontus Gunlycke’s fishing party from Sweden, managed to land a lovely 8lb er in the Malt Steep on Tuesday on a Black & Orange tube and on Wednesday Colin Craik (who many of you will know from Somers Fishing Tackle) managed his first salmon of the season, a lovely liced 9lb er in the Malt Steep on a Garry Dog variant. Well done to Stefan and Colin.

2 fish for Sluie last week.  Dee regulars Murdo and Roddy Crosbie landed one salmon each.  On Thursday Murdo broke his Sluie duck with a sea liced 8 pounder from Kelpie on a Willie Gunn and then on Friday Roddy landed a 9 pounder from the Lower Jetty with a Sunray - also sea liced.  A few more fish were seen at the end of the week on the beat, but they seemed to be running hard to the upper river.

 

The Ballogie beats, including Carlogie and Commonty had 5 fish to the rods this week, if you fish these beats then please do get in touch with me directly to let me know about any your trip, and I am happy to add details to the weekly report.

At the Dess beat Ali McEwan reported a  great week for Jerry Glover and his party of 4 rods.

Starting the week off on Monday was Steve Dart who caught a springer. Ali added a fish himself on Wednesday evening, before Jerry landed a lovely silver beauty on Thursday morning. The weeked was capped off with a brace for angler Tim Western. Well done to all of them, and some great Dee memories made on the Dess beat.

 

Gus Findlay dropped me a note to say he was fishing at Birse on Wednesday, he got a lovely bar of silver measuring 25" which equates to about 7lb, caught in the Red Brae pool, just after a hail shower in the morning, he said the fish never left the water. The fly was a yellow nosed, silver body monkey fly. The yellow nose being a Frodin turbo disk. Gus mentioned it was the same type of fly that he caught the salmon at Waterside and Ferrar on the 10th of April on , with an orange variant. Well done Gus.

 

Regular visitors to the Dee, the Richardson party were fishing Aboyne Castle, Waterside and Ferrar as well as 2 rods on Cambus O’May beat  and they caught fish on all 3 of those beats, so an enjoyable week all round. A few more details are in the individual beat sections below.

 

At Aboyne Castle Lewis Smith and Norman Proudfoot from Lincolnshire and were staying on Glen Tanar Estate for the week,  both caught a 8lb fish from Symmons Pool . Their wives Bev and Claire attended the Ladies Day at Banchory on Friday and really enjoyed their introduction to salmon fishing, so they might have a bit if competition now! Another 8lber was caught from the same pool by Neil Boyd who was part of the larger Richardson party.

 

Next beat upstream Waterside and Ferrar produced a cracking 8lbs spring fish for Sian Richardson out of the Kirks pool, congratulations Sian, and I know I have featured her on previous fishing reports, so it is good to hear of her success on the Dee again.

 

Gordon Macdermid reported Dinnet and Deecastle had a 11 fish for the week. Johan Axtelius from Sweden had a good week landing 5 fish to 12lbs from 29, Pol Baw and Lucky Hole and his fishing partner Roger Alfors had the biggest on the Dee this week, a 14lber from the Boat Pool. Nigel Lammas had 3 fish to 11lbs from Red Brae and 29. Andrew Markland had a brace to 8lbs from Pol Slachd and Red Brae. Congratulations to all of them.

Craig the ghillie at Cambus O’May told me the news that John Mcallum who was visiting from Islay  got them up and running with lovely fish about 9lbs , he said it was very fresh and can been seen as a bright silver in the photos. Brian Richardson had a good morning on Friday with 2 fish, one from Fergie’s and one from Lower Bellhole. James Madden finished the week off with a nice fish about 7lb from Fergie’s, well done to them all.

Crathie beat also reported a spring fish this week to their rods.

Ladies Day was a really good day in many respects, with 14 ladies , a great group of volunteers and the team from TwinPeakes, we manged to split into 3 groups at both side of the Banchory beat and also at Invery, the feedback has been very positive, and we look forward to seeing the ladies coming back to the river with the River Dee Damsels over the course of the season. Incidentally this year marks 10 years since Shona Mutch and Tara Spiers started these events, and they have encouraged and continue to support many ladies to take up fly-fishing, so a special thank you should go to them. Each year we raise money for a charity at this event, the one chosen this year was Haemochromatosis U.K. in memory of Miranda McHardy from Woodend on the Dee and more than £500 was raised.

May was a good month on the Dee last year, so why not book some fishing soon.

Tight lines!

Tight lines!

DC

Debbie Cooper

07979 878971

[email protected]

 

Mark Elder at Cairnton

Fish at Upper Blackhall to the rod of Hans Edman

Stig Jerry Ørneberg at Dess

Andrew McKimm at Aboyne Castle

Fish to the rod of Gordon Thomson with Malcolm Carr

Sandy Bremner at Deecastle

Takin’ a breather!

 

 

Helpful Information 

Tackle Shops and Outfitters on Deesside

Guides and Instructions on the River Dee 

Where To Stay on Dee and the surrounding countryside. 

Where To Eat on the river Dee.

Fishing Permits for the River Dee.

 

Get In touch:

Thanks so much for sending me your photos and your stories, as they say around these parts “ Haste ye back to the silvery Dee”
 

Fish Handling

Salmon mortality from catch and release fishing is low, and this is a valuable tool in salmon management. However, catching a fish has many consequences which can have lethal and sub-lethal effects. The key to minimising these effects is to practice good fish handling measures.

The combination of equipment choice, hooking duration, air exposure, and handling time all result in capture stress. The aim of this guidance is to minimise stress.

Handling effects

The direct consequences of taking a fish from water include:

  • Gill collapse – Resulting in less oxygen entering the bloodstream which will ultimately end in suffocation.
  • Eye strain – Salmon and trout do not have eyelids and so raising them out of water can damage the eye and is also highly stressful.
  • Gravity effects – When out of water, the fish’s body and internal organs are no longer supported. Take care to hold the fish horizontally and support the fish so that it doesn’t damage the spine, bones or internal organs. If the fish kicks out of your hands it may be damaged and will certainly be a stressful experience.
  • Skin damage – Damage or scale and mucus loss from nets, dry hands, dropping or placing the fish on the bankside could result in an infection and can stop the fish from reproducing.
  • Temperature change – There can be a big difference between water and air/skin temperature and a rapid change temperature will cause stress.

Anglers can have an impact on salmon offspring too, as a fish that exhibits high amounts of stress – from handling and/or temperature – may then produce fewer or smaller offspring or have lower egg survival and disease tolerance.

In short, how a fish is caught and handled has a direct effect on its survival and also the next generation. Minimising stress by following best practice will have a real impact on the number and quality of fish emerging the following spring.

Best practice

Minimising the time fish are removed from their natural environment must be the goal, and there are numerous studies that suggest air-exposure should ideally be limited to under 10 seconds during the whole catch and release procedure.

Do:

  • Use barbless, circle hooks and a line weight heavy enough to bring the fish in quickly.
  • Minimise time played and bring the fish in quickly.
  • Use a suitable, knotless net to avoid skin damage.
  • Handle the fish as little as possible and only with wet hands.
  • Keep the fish in the water as much as possible – Total air exposure during the whole process should be under 10 seconds.
  • Photograph fish in the water or lift just for just a few seconds – holding correctly (below the pectoral fins and on the tail wrist).
  • Keep the fish in the water facing upstream to help it recover – don’t pump the fish.
  • Allow the fish to recover fully before releasing – the fish should be able to maintain an upright position and respond gently touching at the tail.

Don’t:

  • Play the fish unnecessarily.
  • Place the fish on the bank.
  • Take the fish out of the water longer than completely necessary.
  • Lift the fish far from the ground (in case you drop it)
  • Treat it rough (bear hug, by the gills, by the tail etc.)

Fishing at 18°C and above

The stress effects from handling can be further compounded with increasing temperature. As water temperature increases so too does the fish’s oxygen demand and energy consumption.

Fishing in water temperatures exceeding around 18°C becomes increasingly stressful to the fish and is linked to decreased immune function and increased susceptibility to fungal infections.

Adult Atlantic salmon have increased risk of mortality at around 20°C. When temperature remains above 20°C for 24 hours fish are unable to repair the damage caused by thermal stress and at this point catching has a noticeable negative impact on survival.

Anglers have a direct impact on whether salmon survive thermal stress. If fishing in warm water (18°C or more), risk of mortality from poor handling is much greater.

Make sure:

  • Fishing site is appropriate – aerated riffles, rapids.
  • Play the fish firmly and avoid a long fight.
  • Fish early in the day.
  • Do not lift fish out of water at all – choose fishing site so that this is possible.

Biosecurity

Keeping the Dee safe from disease, parasites and non-native invasive species is vital for the wellbeing of the river, the fish populations and other wildlife it supports. One of the key tools with which the Board protects the river and its stock of Atlantic salmon and sea trout is the control and management of Biosecurity.

What is Biosecurity?

Biosecurity is most commonly considered to be a series of measures aimed at preventing the introduction and or spread of animals, plants, pests and diseases and parasites, including non-native species.

Inadvertent introductions of animals, plants, pests and diseases and parasites can go unnoticed until the point that treatment is no longer an option. Therefore, the prevention of introduction is the most effective way to protect our river.

Simple techniques which anyone can employ, such as checking equipment for any plant materials or animals, cleaning or disinfecting equipment and clothing, and simply allowing clothing and equipment to dry out can all be considered biosecurity measures.

What’s at risk?

The River Dee is renowned as being one of the best fishing destinations in the world and we want to protect our river and fish stocks. It is vital that our biosecurity measures are consistent with the rapidly evolving environment within which we live, to reduce the risk to the Dee and its fish stocks.

We need biosecurity to become a routine part of the Dee experience and we need your support to do this. Anglers and ‘other river users’ on the River Dee must consider biosecurity the next time they are using equipment or clothing that has been used elsewhere other than the Dee and not been cleaned, disinfected or dried.

What can you do?

The best information how to practice biosecurity measures will come from your ghillie, if that doesn’t apply then please follow the Check Clean Dry Campaign and Stop the Spread.

You can also get your kit disinfected at one of two biosecurity stations on the Dee. Use these links for Google Maps directions:

TwinPeakes Flyfishing at Milton of Crathes

The River Office, Mill of Dinnet

We also have facilities at the River Office to clean other river users’ equipment such as canoes and paddleboards.

Thank you in advance for helping to protect the Dee and our fish stocks.

For more information please e mail [email protected] or contact the river office.

 

Beat catches reported

(Last week)

Beat Catches
Tilquhillie Fishing Salmon - 1, Sea trout - 0
Cairnton and Mid Blackhall Salmon - 2, Sea trout - 0
Commonty Salmon - 2, Sea trout - 0
Sluie Salmon - 2, Sea trout - 0
Ballogie Salmon - 1, Sea trout - 0
Carlogie Salmon - 2, Sea trout - 0
Dess Salmon - 5, Sea trout - 0
Birse Salmon - 2, Sea trout - 0
Aboyne Castle Salmon - 3, Sea trout - 0
Waterside and Ferrar Salmon - 1, Sea trout - 0
Dinnet Salmon - 3, Sea trout - 0
Deecastle Salmon - 8, Sea trout - 0
Headinch and Cambus O'May Salmon - 4, Sea trout - 0
Crathie Salmon - 1, Sea trout - 0

Fish to the rod of Dave Roberts at Tilquhillie in April 2024

Fish to the rod of Dave Roberts at Tilquhillie in April 2024

Colin Craik at Cairnton & MB in April 2024

Colin Craik at Cairnton & MB in April 2024

Tim with his 2nd of the day at Dess in April 2024

Tim with his 2nd of the day at Dess in April 2024

Jerry Glover with his fish at Dess in April 2024

Jerry Glover with his fish at Dess in April 2024

Fish to the rod of Gus Findlay at Birse in April 2024

Fish to the rod of Gus Findlay at Birse in April 2024

Fish to the rod of Norman Proudfoot at Aboyne Castle in April 2024

Fish to the rod of Norman Proudfoot at Aboyne Castle in April 2024

Brian Richardson at Cambus in April 2024

Brian Richardson at Cambus in April 2024

Bright silver springer to the rod of John Mcallum in April at Cambus

Bright silver springer to the rod of John Mcallum in April at Cambus

 

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