LOCH-FISHING
LITTLE LOCH BEG
There is something mysterious in loch-fishing,
in the tastes and habits of the fish which inhabit
the innumerable lakes and tarns of Scotland. It
is not always easy to account either for their presence
or their absence, for their numbers or scarcity,
their eagerness to take or their "dourness."
For example, there is Loch Borlan, close to the
well-known little inn of Alt-na-geal-gach in Sutherland.
Unless that piece of water is greatly changed, it
is simply full of fish of about a quarter of a pound,
which will rise at almost any time to almost any
fly. There is not much pleasure in catching such
tiny and eager trout, but in the season complacent
anglers capture and boast of their many dozens.
On the other hand, a year or two ago, a beginner
took a four-pound trout there with the fly. If such
trout exist in Borlan, it is hard to explain the
presence of the innumerable fry. One would expect
the giants of the deep to keep down their population.
Not far off is another small lake, Loch Awe, which
has invisible advantages over Loch Borlan, yet there
the trout are, or were, "fat and fair of flesh,"
like Tamlane in the ballad. Wherefore are the trout
in Loch Tummell so big and strong, from one to five
pounds, and so scarce, while those in Loch Awe are
numerous and small? One occasionally sees examples
of how quickly trout will increase in weight, and
what curious habits they will adopt. In a county
of south-western Scotland there is a large village,
populated by a keenly devoted set of anglers, who
miss no opportunity. Within a quarter of a mile
of the village is a small tarn, very picturesquely
situated among low hills, and provided with the
very tiniest feeder and outflow. There is a sluice
at the outflow, and, for some reason, the farmer
used to let most of the water out, in the summer
of every year. In winter the tarn is used by the
curling club. It is not deep, has rather a marshy
bottom, and many ducks, snipe, and wild-fowl generally
dwell among the reeds and marish plants of its sides.
Nobody ever dreamed of fishing here, but one day
a rustic, "glowering" idly over the wall
of the adjacent road, saw fish rising. He mentioned
his discovery to an angler, who is said to have
caught some large trout, but tradition varies about
everything, except that the fish are very "dour."
One evening in August, a warm, still evening, I
happened to visit the tarn. As soon as the sun fell
below the hills, it was literally alive with large
trout rising. As far as one could estimate from
the brief view of heads and shoulders, they were
sometimes two or three pounds in weight. I got my
rod, of course, as did a rural friend. Mine was
a small cane rod, his a salmon-rod. I fished with
one Test-fly; he with three large loch-flies. The
fish were rising actually at our feet, but they
seemed to move about very much, never, or seldom,
rising twice exactly at the same place. The hypothesis
was started that there were but few of them, and
that they ran round and round, like a stage army,
to give an appearance of multitude. But this appears
improbable. What is certain was our utter inability
ever to get a rise from the provoking creatures.
The dry fly is difficult to use on a loch, as there
is no stream to move it, and however gently you
draw it it makes a "wake"--a trail behind
it. Wet or dry, or "twixt wet and dry,"
like the convivial person in the song, we could
none of us raise them. I did catch a small but beautifully
proportioned and pink- fleshed trout with the alder,
but everything else, silver sedge and all, everything
from midge to May-fly, in the late twilight, was
offered to them in vain. In windy or cloudy weather
it was just as useless; indeed, I never saw them
rise, except in a warm summer stillness, at and
after sunset. Probably they would have taken a small
red worm, pitched into the ripple of a rise; but
we did not try that. After a few evenings, they
seemed to give up rising altogether. I don't feel
certain that they had not been netted: yet no trout
seemed to be on sale in the village. Their presence
in the water may perhaps be accounted for thus:
they may have come into the loch from the river,
by way of the tiny feeder; but the river-trout are
both scarce and small. A new farmer had given up
letting the water off, and probably there must have
been very rich feeding, water-shrimps or snails,
which might partly account for the refusal to rise
at the artificial fly. Or they may have been ottered
by the villagers, though that would rather have
made them rise short than not rise at all.
There is another loch on an extremely
remote hillside, eight miles from the smallest town,
in a pastoral country. There are trout enough in
the loch, and of excellent size and flavour, but
you scarcely ever get them. They rise freely, but
they ALWAYS rise short. It is, I think, the most
provoking loch I ever fished. You raise them; they
come up freely, showing broad sides of a ruddy gold,
like the handsomest Test trout, but they almost
invariably miss the hook. You do not land one out
of twenty. The reason is, apparently, that people
from the nearest town use the otter in the summer
evenings, when these trout rise best. In a Sutherland
loch, Mr. Edward Moss tells us (in "A Season
in Sutherland"), that he once found an elegant
otter, a well-made engine of some unscrupulous tourist,
lying in the bottom of the water on a sunny day.
At Loch Skene, on the top of a hill, twenty miles
from any town, otters are occasionally found by
the keeper or the shepherds, concealed near the
shore. The practice of ottering can give little
pleasure to any but a depraved mind, and nothing
educates trout so rapidly into "rising short";
why they are not to be had when they are rising
most vehemently, "to themselves," is another
mystery. A few rises are encouraging, but when the
water is all splashing with rises, as a rule the
angler is only tantalised. A windy day, a day with
a large ripple, but without white waves breaking,
is, as a rule, best for a loch. In some lochs the
sea-trout prefer such a hurricane that a boat can
hardly be kept on the water. I have known a strong
north wind in autumn put down the sea-trout, whereas
the salmon rose, with unusual eagerness, just in
the shallows where the waves broke in foam on the
shore. The best day I ever had with sea-trout was
muggy and grey, and the fish were most eager when
the water was still, except for a tremendously heavy
shower of rain, "a singing shower," as
George Chapman has it. On that day two rods caught
thirty-nine sea-trout, weighing forty pounds. But
it is difficult to say beforehand what day will
do well, except that sunshine is bad, a north wind
worse, and no wind at all usually means an empty
basket. Even to this rule there are exceptions,
and one of these is in the case of a tarn which
I shall call, pleonastically, Little Loch Beg.
This is not the real name of the loch--quite
enough people know its real name already. Nor does
it seem necessary to mention the district where
the loch lies hidden; suffice it to say that a land
of more streams and scarcer trout you will hardly
find. We had tried all the rivers and burns to no
purpose, and the lochs are capricious and overfished.
One loch we had not tried, Loch Beg. You walk, or
drive, a few miles from any village, then you climb
a few hundred yards of hill, and from the ridge
you see, on one hand a great amphitheatre of green
and purple mountain-sides, in the west; on the east,
within a hundred yards under a slope, is Loch Beg.
It is not a mile in circumference, and all but some
eighty yards of shore is defended against the angler
by wide beds of water-lilies, with their pretty
white floating lamps, or by tall sedges and reeds.
Nor is the wading easy. Four steps you make with
safety, at the fifth your foremost leg sinks in
mud apparently bottomless. Most people fish only
the eastern side, whereof a few score yards are
open, with a rocky and gravelly bottom.
Now, all lochs have their humours.
In some trout like a big fly, in some a small one,
but almost all do best with a rough wind or rain.
I knew enough of Loch Beg to approach it at noon
on a blazing day of sunshine, when the surface was
like glass. It was like that when first I saw it,
and a shepherd warned us that we "would dae
naething"; we did little, indeed, but I rose
nearly every rising fish I cast over, losing them
all, too, and in some cases being broken, as I was
using very fine gut, and the fish were heavy. Another
trial seemed desirable, and the number of rising
trout was most tempting. All over it trout were
rising to the natural fly, with big circles like
those you see in the Test at twilight; while in
the centre, where no artificial fly can be cast
for want of a boat, a big fish would throw himself
out of the water in his eagerness. One such I saw
which could not have weighed under three pounds,
a short, thick, dark-yellow fish.
I was using a light two-handed rod,
and fancied that a single Test- fly on very fine
tackle would be the best lure. It certainly rose
the trout, if one threw into the circle they made;
but they never were hooked. One fish of about a
pound and a half threw himself out of the water
at it, hit it, and broke the fine tackle. So I went
on raising them, but never getting them. As long
as the sun blazed and no breeze ruffled the water,
they rose bravely, but a cloud or even a ripple
seemed to send them down.
At last I tried a big alder, and with
that I actually touched a few, and even landed several
on the shelving bank. Their average weight, as we
proved on several occasions, was exactly three-
quarters of a pound; but we never succeeded in landing
any of the really big ones.
A local angler told me he had caught
one of two pounds, and lost another "like a
young grilse," after he had drawn it on to
the bank. I can easily believe it, for in no loch,
but one, have I ever seen so many really big and
handsome fish feeding. Loch Beg is within a mile
of a larger and famous loch, but it is infinitely
better, though the other looks much more favourable
in all ways for sport. The only place where fishing
is easy, as I have said, is a mere strip of coast
under the hill, where there is some gravel, and
the mouth of a very tiny feeder, usually dry. Off
this place the trout rose freely, but not near so
freely as in a certain corner, quite out of reach
without a boat, where the leviathans lived and sported.
After the little expanse of open shore
had been fished over a few times, the trout there
seemed to grow more shy, and there was a certain
monotony in walking this tiny quarter-deck of space.
So I went round to the west side, where the water-lilies
are. Fish were rising about three yards beyond the
weedy beds, and I foolishly thought I would try
for them. Now, you cannot overestimate the difficulty
of casting a fly across yards of water-lilies. You
catch in the weeds as you lift your line for a fresh
cast, and then you have to extricate it laboriously,
shortening line, and then to let it out again, and
probably come to grief once more.
I saw a trout rise, with a huge sullen
circle dimpling round him, cast over him, raised
him, and missed him. The water was perfectly still,
and the "plop" made by these fish was
very exciting and tantalising. The next that rose
took the alder, and, of course, ran right into the
broad band of lilies. I tried all the dodges I could
think of, and all that Mr. Halford suggests. I dragged
at him hard. I gave him line. I sat down and endeavoured
to disengage my thoughts, but I never got a glimpse
of him, and finally had to wade as far in as I dared,
and save as much of the casting line as I could;
it was very little.
There was one thing to be said for
the trout on this side: they meant business. They
did not rise shyly, like the others, but went for
the fly if it came at all near them, and then, down
they rushed, and bolted into the lily-roots.
A new plan occurred to me. I put on
about eighteen inches of the stoutest gut I had,
to the end I knotted the biggest sea-trout fly I
possessed, and, hooking the next fish that rose,
I turned my back on the loch and ran uphill with
the rod. Looking back I saw a trout well over a
pound flying across the lilies; but alas! the hold
was not strong enough, and he fell back. Again and
again I tried this method, invariably hooking the
trout, though the heavy short casting-line and the
big fly fell very awkwardly in the dead stillness
of the water. I had some exciting runs with them,
for they came eagerly to the big fly, and did not
miss it, as they had missed the Red Quill, or Whitchurch
Dun, with which at first I tried to beguile them.
One, of only the average weight, I did drag out
over the lilies; the others fell off in mid-journey,
but they never broke the uncompromising stout tackle.
With the first chill of evening they
ceased rising, and I left them, not ungrateful for
their very peculiar manners and customs. The chances
are that the trout beyond the band of weeds never
see an artificial fly, and they are, therefore,
the more guileless--at least, late in the season.
In spring, I believe, the lilies are less in the
way, and I fear some one has put a Berthon boat
on the loch in April. But it is not so much what
one catches in Loch Beg, as the monsters which one
might catch that make the tarn so desirable.
The loch seems to prove that any hill-tarn
might be made a good place for sport, if trout were
introduced where they do not exist already. But
the size of these in Loch Beg puzzles me, nor can
one see how they breed, as breed they do: for twice
or thrice I caught a fingerling, and threw him in
again. No burn runs out of the loch, and, even in
a flood, the feeder is so small, and its course
so extremely steep, that one cannot imagine where
the fish manage to spawn. The only loch known to
me where the common trout are of equal size, is
on the Border. It is extremely deep, with very clear
water, and with scarce any spawning ground. On a
summer evening the trout are occasionally caught;
three weighing seven pounds were taken one night,
a year or two ago. I have not tried the evening
fishing, but at all other times of day have found
them the "dourest" of trout, and they
grow dourer. But one is always lured on by the spectacle
of the monsters which throw themselves out of water,
with a splash that echoes through all the circuit
of the low green hills. They probably reach at least
four or five pounds, but it is unlikely that the
biggest take the fly, and one may doubt whether
they propagate their species, as small trout are
never seen there.
There are two ways of enlarging the
size of trout which should be carefully avoided.
Pike are supposed to keep down the population and
leave more food for the survivors, minnows are supposed
to be nourishing food. Both of these novelties are
dangerous. Pike have been introduced in that long
lovely sheet of water, Loch Ken, and I have never
once seen the rise of a trout break that surface,
so "hideously serene." Trout, in lochs
which have become accustomed to feeding on minnows,
are apt to disdain fly altogether. Of course there
are lochs in which good trout coexist with minnows
and with pike, but these inmates are too dangerous
to be introduced. The introduction, too, of Loch
Leven trout is often disappointing. Sometimes they
escape down the burn into the river in floods; sometimes,
perhaps for lack of proper food and sufficient,
they dwindle terribly in size, and become no better
than "brownies." In St. Mary's Loch, in
Selkirkshire, some Canadian trout were introduced.
Little or nothing has been seen of them, unless
some small creatures of a quarter of a pound, extraordinarily
silvery, and more often in the air than in the water
when hooked, are these children of the remote West.
If they grew up, and retained their beauty and sprightliness,
they would be excellent substitutes for sea-trout.
Almost all experiments in stocking lochs have their
perils, except the simple experiment of putting
trout where there were no trout before. This can
do no harm, and they may increase in weight, let
us hope not in wisdom, like the curiously heavy
and shy fish mentioned in the beginning of this
paper.
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