Atlantic Salmon A life on the edge Upscale

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  • čas přidán 25. 09. 2021
  • This was completed in 2003 when only SD video was available. Ged, who coproduced it has access to complex upscaling software and has done so with this now. There are still some issues with skyline burnout that cameras of the day had issues with but it is overall much better in HD.. Filmed predominantly on the Fhorsa on the Isle of Lewis, Scotland. It follows the journey of the salmon and those who fish for them.

Komentáře • 32

  • @thedoggedangler7965
    @thedoggedangler7965 Před měsícem +1

    A truly remarkable production that really highlights the amazing lifecycle and the increasing threats to our iconic Atlantic Salmon. As a passionate salmon angler and conservationist thank you for producing, enhancing and sharing this lovely informative film.

  • @davids9549
    @davids9549 Před rokem +4

    God I enjoyed this. My favourite fish in my favourite landscape. Too bad that salmon numbers in the region are now so reduced (and fishing for them so expensive!), so I now spend my hard-earned fishing for Pacific salmon in British Columbia, Canada, where the runs are still plentiful and the cost reasonable.
    Even so, last year I 'stalked' Scotland's River Oykel, and a patient wait by what I suspected to be a good lie was rewarded by the sight of a large salmon leaping vertically from the river, my first ever view of a wild Atlantic salmon in British waters - simply awesome!
    Many many thanks for posting this Richard.

    • @Allaboutsalmon
      @Allaboutsalmon  Před rokem +1

      Thanks and glad you enjoyed it. Number have improved in the last three seasons. Not quite sure why but some fisheries had their best catches for fifteen years. Oykel is beautiful. I often stop there and film salmon at the falls near Oykel Bridge Hotel. Would love to go to Canada one day 🙂

  • @shaunpreston3212
    @shaunpreston3212 Před rokem +2

    The greatest fish off all! And iv been lucky enough too off caught a fair few! Great fighters!👍🏴‍☠️

  • @newenglandoutdoorlore
    @newenglandoutdoorlore Před 7 měsíci

    Excellent program! The salmon's journey in the rivers then out to sea and back again and the fisherman who catch them.

  • @davidgray3321
    @davidgray3321 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Great footage, I hope we will have fish in the future and not only ,memories.

    • @Allaboutsalmon
      @Allaboutsalmon  Před 6 měsíci

      Ultimately the salmon will change their habitat range if things continue to warm and we continue to pollute and misuse the rivers but the Hebrides is likely to be one of the last UK places for them seeing as we get a lot of rain and cooler summers. Ocean survival, as Bob said towards the end of this (20 years ago!) is the biggest issue now along with warming and drying upper catchments.

    • @davidgray3321
      @davidgray3321 Před 6 měsíci

      @@Allaboutsalmon what a sad change there has been I fist saw a salmon caught in three 1979s, but there were many mistakes over cropping by Commercial and even by the rods was part of it. And many other things.

  • @bumptybump
    @bumptybump Před rokem +3

    Lovely film Richard that almost seems from a lifetime ago. How quickly this remarkable species has come to the very brink of collapse and while there may be plenty left in some rivers, others suffer extremely variable runs from year to year. As you say in your previous comments, it's not angling that has brought us to the current state of affairs but many other factors that affect marine survival. There are many potential issues and while one may be aquaculture, it is just one of many. The days when we could harvest fish after fish with virtually no impact on stocks are gone for now but as Paul Young states in your film, this situation could again change to favour salmon survival and in years to come, there would be nothing wrong with taking a sustainable harvest but at present we appear to be a long way from this on most Scottish rivers.

    • @Allaboutsalmon
      @Allaboutsalmon  Před rokem

      It's almost exactly the same here and indeed, Grimersta catches are higher. There's no doubt it is human economic activity that is the driver of declines for all species. The one thing I would say is the returns of adults varies a lot more now than twenty years ago. It was more predictable back then. That's the ocean entirely in our case because land use is zero around the river we did most of the filming on.

    • @Allaboutsalmon
      @Allaboutsalmon  Před rokem

      I also love how technology has made shots so much better now and some of the footage much easier to get! It was really tough back then. UW shots with a plastic bag over a camera! 🙂

  • @fishing4claimers0622
    @fishing4claimers0622 Před 9 měsíci +1

    very interesting..ty

  • @jeromeveyret2184
    @jeromeveyret2184 Před rokem +1

    Great video with incredible salmon sight fishing sessions, congrats

    • @Allaboutsalmon
      @Allaboutsalmon  Před rokem

      Thanks Jerome, it was difficult back then but technology is so much getter now for better shots. I am slowly collecting the best and will, one day do something special!

  • @charlesleblanc6638
    @charlesleblanc6638 Před rokem +2

    Exceptional video on the silver fish. Hard to believe with all the fisherman out there that not more commented ? I personally believe that they do feed in fresh water, having witnessed some convincing examples.

  • @PiscatorUK-Fishing
    @PiscatorUK-Fishing Před 4 měsíci

    A wonderful fish on the brink of extinction. There was one angler that said he only takes 2 or 3 salmon a year, he doesn’t think that will make much of a difference to the many that makes it up river to spawn. Sadly this is the attitude of many anglers not just salmon anglers. Thats thousands of adult salmon lost forever not to mention the potential millions of offspring. Salmon anglers blame everything else for their demise.

    • @Allaboutsalmon
      @Allaboutsalmon  Před 4 měsíci

      I understand where you are coming from, but it isn't technically correct in assessed fisheries where there is harvestable surplus. Most fish are returned but regardless, provided juvenile uptake is consistent and throughout a system, there is a harvestable surplus? Sadly, we now only look at the low end of survival of the species in many rivers, whereas we should be looking at harvestable surplus as the benchmark. Classic shifting baseline syndrome unfortunately.
      Back when the film was made and that recorded in the late 1990's the spawning on that particular river was very very healthy and still is, so it, as an isolated case is accurate. The chap only fished for two weeks a year in the Hebrides, where stocks were healthy and still are. But I appreciate on other rivers you would not want to kill fish, in fact, if that bad no fishing should take place at all of course. Anglers are not the problem and all organisations agree with that assessment.
      Back in the day, for example, in England and Wales, let's say 1970's, over 100,000 salmon were caught and killed by nets each year on average. Now only 130 were killed last year. Angling, in Wales in 2022, only 1 salmon was killed (declared at least) by an angler.
      We should fight to improve our rivers and in the meantime, yes, reduce angling and killing any where stocks are perilously low.

  • @FamasFTW98
    @FamasFTW98 Před rokem +1

    never knew u can catch salmon o fly in saltwater

  • @fraser5754
    @fraser5754 Před rokem

    And had she put that salmon back and not killed it?

    • @Allaboutsalmon
      @Allaboutsalmon  Před rokem +1

      I am sure it tasted delicious. Makes no difference when you have healthy runs and a harvestable stock surplus. Remember, some systems are healthy, with ample juveniles to fill the entire catchment. Granted in dying rivers returning fish is wise. Indeed, leaving them alone completely is better! But given a good run and healthy adult returning numbers to fill spawning many times over, it is not an issue to kill fish to eat.

    • @fraser5754
      @fraser5754 Před rokem

      @@Allaboutsalmon my point precisely is that we do not have healthy runs and stock of Atlantic salmon at all, indeed far from it, almost every (it could be now every single one) river in scotland is class 3 now and that's a ban on having in your possession a dead sea trout, salmon or eel, any migratory species must be returned to the water, It's a sad state of affairs mostly caused by fish farms increasing disease and parasites on the wild stock but over fishing by coastal, estuary and poachers nets and indeed anglers bagging 6 or 7 a day in the good times have led us to this. So there for IF she had returned it???? How many would that fish have produced to help the extinction threatened Atlantic salmon? It's damned foolish attitudes toward salmon like your own that got us here, you don't even know they are under threat! Ignorance and if not that, arrogance of selfish humans always ruins everything we touch. An animal world without humans would last just fine, we've been here a tiny fraction of the time the animals have and we've ruined the place with attitudes like yours. In Scots dialect I urge you "awa n bile yer heed" and serve it up "wee tatties" to the animals as it's no use to the world as if is.

    • @Allaboutsalmon
      @Allaboutsalmon  Před rokem +1

      @@fraser5754 I'm afraid you've got me all wrong. The fish was caught in 1998 or thereabouts and a harvestable surplus was perfectly fine. Indeed, on many rivers there is still a harvestable surplus. Anglers often get confused about the Atlantic salmon. Only interested in 3 months of a five year life cycle. The river in question has data for juveniles going back 30 years. The juvenile population is the same as in the 1990's. Returning adults have reduced, most notably due to the North Atlantic Multidecadal oscillation and the impact that has on sea surface temperatures, phytoplankton and subsequent zooplankton that salmon feed on. However, despite this, the salmon population is healthy.
      I agree human activity of any kind tends to harm all creatures, from micro bugs to elephants and whales. You're a fair way out on poaching. I know of 50 a night being taken around the Hebrides but fortunately the Police are now helping the local bailiffs and prosecutions are happening.
      There are no salmon farms near most rivers suffering. The Grimersta, on Lewis, with 5 fish farms in the estuary had a rod catch of over 600 last season, best for decades. The Wye with no fish farms had 450... One is small 12 rod fishery too. So agriculture is the big one in the UK but every system is unique and the fish that run them are relatively unique, having evolved to deal with the conditions there. Of course, we sometimes (not in the wild places like Lewis and Harris) impact on catchment riparian zones a lot and this reduces the juvenile habitat significantly. Fortunately, on the river in question, no change to land use has happened in a century and thus, the population is healthy. Some years returning adults are high % and some low but always the number of eggs laid has saturated the available habitat, which is good news. I agree, in other locations, not grade 1 should not kill fish and possibly not fish at all (gradings did not exist back when the fish in the film were killed for food). But without anglers, all rivers would be sewers, although, more recently other organisations have started to focus on pollution.

    • @fraser5754
      @fraser5754 Před rokem +1

      @@Allaboutsalmon Atlantic salmon were endangered then and ARE endangered now! What utter nonsense to deny that! Had fish been returned back then we'd be in a far far better position now. Take the two rivers annick and Irvine in ayrshire, both abundant salmon rivers even up to the 60's yet I've fished both since 1978 and seen a handful of salmon, caught none, caught maybe 4 sea trout yet managed to catch 60-100 brown trout per year and two rainbows the idiotic office bearers of the local clubs decided to pug in for competition days. Some rivers of Britain they're extinct, most in scotland are class 3 including aforementioned ayrshire rivers and a lot of west coast salmon that are left are skinny or disease ridden

    • @Allaboutsalmon
      @Allaboutsalmon  Před rokem

      @@fraser5754 Totally agree especially about Ayrshire rivers. I helped get a prosecution for the pollution incident at Catrine weir last year. My wife's family live there. I fished the Ayr and it wasn't great but did see one or two fish in the holding pools. I think what I am trying to say is that resolution is important. Blanket approach to "salmon are endangered" isn't strictly correct. Each freshwater catchment has to be looked at in isolation as regards population health - not returning adult health but population health. There are 30 times more parr than adults at present in rivers and these can be in equal abundance to the halcyon days of the 70's on less polluted rivers. Basically, anywhere near human economic activity (most of Souther Scotland, England, Wales, France etc) is suffering in freshwater as well as the general lower survival at sea. But the far North and Hebrides are far from intensive pressures and by and large are doing fine for salmon. Clearly a lower abundance of returning adults and those fish are smaller (I was a ghillie out here for 11 years back in the 90's and early 2000's) but regardless, in rivers like the one most of this film was done on, there were ample adults to replace the juveniles. It's a grade 1 along with most of the larger Hebridean rivers. Some that are not are purely down to managers not submitting catch returns on time, so a grade 3 is automatically put on it. But I hear you for Ayrshire rivers, some of the big East Coast ones too. Again, abstraction, canalisation, dams, pollution, agricultural waste and chemicals all impacting on juvenile densities per sq m. Then the protection of many fish eating birds and such that wasn't there in the past. It all takes its toll. There is no way back for many rivers because successive governments put economic development ahead of nature. That is a great pity and something I fight to change and ensure impacts are minimal. Again, much easier in the sparsely populated Hebrides where salmon runs have been pretty good the last few years, especially 2020 and 2022.

  • @martin7955
    @martin7955 Před rokem +1

    Our salmon are destroyed in ireland farmers and greed did it

    • @Allaboutsalmon
      @Allaboutsalmon  Před rokem +1

      where is this you speak of? And are we talking land farmers or sea? For sure, rivers like the Wye have been destroyed by agriculture... Thankfully, the fish farmers around the Hebrides have improved a fair bit of late and Grimersta, for example, had exceptional catches last year, near double their five year average, so things not so bad but there are areas now where rivers are not able to sustain a healthy stock.

    • @jackburke1977
      @jackburke1977 Před 11 měsíci

      Love to take bit of time to see this part of the world. We hace land on the west coast of ireland, salmon sadly are a no show, life goal is to re introduce salmon. Need all the knowledge i can muster

    • @martin7955
      @martin7955 Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@Allaboutsalmon land farmers yes come to eire and I'll show you

    • @davidgray3321
      @davidgray3321 Před 6 měsíci +1

      That’s correct, the same applies in Scotland

  • @bv3bv334
    @bv3bv334 Před 10 měsíci

    Not as exciting as Bass fishing.

  • @bigbang7897
    @bigbang7897 Před 11 měsíci +2

    It's always the angler that takes the blame how about targeting the poachers and the high sea netting .