A flick through this month's T&S has brought back into focus a nagging doubt I have about the validity of catch and release as an atlantic salmon conservation tool.
I used to do a bit of sight fishing for back end grilse on the upper Lune and for a while made a habit of returning to the river in November to look through and see how stocks of pairing up fish were looking. On more than one occasion, a fish I had caught off a certain lie a few weeks before was still in residence in exactly the same spot - despite there having been adequate running water in the interim period. I began to wonder if the energy the fish expended in the fight (which of course cannot be recovered by a fish which takes on no nutrition in fresh water), had contributed to its reluctance - inability? - to move up into the spawning beds....especially considering the river thereabouts is punctuated by chutes of white water and stepped cascades.
Now I read of one angler's account of catching 23 fish in one day on the Tweed - the majority from one repeatedy fished pool. All returned to 'contribute to the procreation of the species'.
Then I read of a huge fish found dead on the Kirkaig - estimated 40lb+ - which was lost by an angler after a 40 minute battle the day previous. An otter is feasting on its milt sacs, approx 1 mile downstream of the place it was hooked on this fierce, white water river.
I find it hard to square this. I gave up salmon fishing long ago, but as a practitioner of catch and release when trout fishing, I have to concede that it is this aspect - so clothed in virtue as it is - which I think undermines the ethics of our sport most damagingly.
What do you lot think? Give me some counter arguments I can use if I ever get accosted by a bearded Liberal apologist.
ATB,
M
I used to do a bit of sight fishing for back end grilse on the upper Lune and for a while made a habit of returning to the river in November to look through and see how stocks of pairing up fish were looking. On more than one occasion, a fish I had caught off a certain lie a few weeks before was still in residence in exactly the same spot - despite there having been adequate running water in the interim period. I began to wonder if the energy the fish expended in the fight (which of course cannot be recovered by a fish which takes on no nutrition in fresh water), had contributed to its reluctance - inability? - to move up into the spawning beds....especially considering the river thereabouts is punctuated by chutes of white water and stepped cascades.
Now I read of one angler's account of catching 23 fish in one day on the Tweed - the majority from one repeatedy fished pool. All returned to 'contribute to the procreation of the species'.
Then I read of a huge fish found dead on the Kirkaig - estimated 40lb+ - which was lost by an angler after a 40 minute battle the day previous. An otter is feasting on its milt sacs, approx 1 mile downstream of the place it was hooked on this fierce, white water river.
I find it hard to square this. I gave up salmon fishing long ago, but as a practitioner of catch and release when trout fishing, I have to concede that it is this aspect - so clothed in virtue as it is - which I think undermines the ethics of our sport most damagingly.
What do you lot think? Give me some counter arguments I can use if I ever get accosted by a bearded Liberal apologist.
ATB,
M