Tuesday, 15 June 2010

Close to 100 fish for the day

We had a good day yesterday and landed very nearly 100 fish for the day across the camps.

Arctic tern

Kitza had 30 to their rods and the highlight was undoubtedly Peter Dickson’s 18lbs fish from the Old Dam. A real cracker and straight in off the tide. Randall H has now landed 8 fish in his two days fishing which given that he has never fished for salmon before is some effort.

Pana had 41 again with Lord T utilising his unrivalled knowledge of the river to take 10 fish to his own rod.

Plenty of stoneflies for the wagtails

Here at Middle we had 23 and the prize for the top rod for the day goes to Gregoire De S who had 8 fish from East Generator and Fortress. Jean Christophe landed his first salmon and took some wonderful photos of the birdlife on the river, on which he is an expert.

Waxwing

Joseph C continues to impress us all with his determination to master the art of casting and suffered the agony of losing 3 fish yesterday – not long now and there is every chance that you will hear the celebration wherever you happen to be.

Jean Christophe with his first salmon

Jean Christophe with FFG - first fish grin

We caught fish yesterday on floating lines, sink tips, big flies, small flies and a skater so it is difficult to give definite advice but the one sure thing with this place is that if you are on the river you have a chance.

Charlie White

Monday, 14 June 2010

More firsts

Well I am not building an igloo but I won’t be sunbathing for a bit either. It is cold but dry today and the wind has a bite to it – not quite what we would expect in mid June. The rain of yesterday morning pushed the river up a couple of inches but it appears to have stopped rising now and hopefully we are fishing a falling river once more.

Yesterday Eric C and Frederick M landed their first ever salmon and Joseph C cast his first fly. He did not connect but with his epic enthusiasm it would be verging on mean of the fish if they don’t reward him soon.

Frederick making sure he got to know his first fish

Frederick M had the good sense to leave his fish until the last minute so that everyone was going past him in their boats as he played the fish – big grins all round.

A rather more formal introducion

Kitza had 28 for their first day to the 7 rods and Pana had 41 to their 8. We have been using a combination of sink tips and straight floaters; neither one seems to particularly outfish the other but Doug U did have a fish on a skated fly yesterday so we will try a few more of those today.

Despite being overcast, the river looks beautiful at the moment with wild flowers lining the banks and the areas around camp. The Arctic Terns are here in force and there are Waxwings everywhere, flying around and chasing the insects on the river as we fish. Yesterday Doug U and Ron S saw a White Tailed Eagle so all we need now is to see a bear – I will go down to the woods and see what I can find....

Charlie White

Sunday, 13 June 2010

The new week brings new weather

As in most remote places, if you don’t like the weather as it is then just wait 5 minutes and it will probably change. That has been the case this morning as we woke to heavy rain and strong winds.
James W with 1 of his 17 fish from last week - not bad for someone who has never been salmon fishing before

The breakfast table was full of dark thoughts as to how cold everyone would be but by the time all the rods got to the boats to go to their beats, it was much warmer and had stopped raining entirely. It is now quite mild but the wind remains.

Last night saw Arnaud L land his first salmon and I would like to show you a picture but in the excitement of landing it he took a bit of a swim and his camera is now on the radiator...



Nick M with one of the 307 fish landed at Middle last week

Bill P took 2 fish out of Generator this morning and the team have set off with high hopes. I know from the radio that fish were caught at Kitza last night and this morning at Pana so the week is off to a good start.


Garth with his biggest fish of the season so far....

I have now got access to Garth’s camera and I thought a few pictures of the fishing here last week would be fun to see. More tomorrow when I will be either sunbathing or building an igloo.

Charlie White

Saturday, 12 June 2010

A quick update

After a moderately sensible leaving party at Lower, I flew with our Kitza and Lower clients to Murmansk today where we were met by our second helicopter which brought in our guests from Middle and Pana.

Murmansk on Saturday is always amusing with everyone keen to know how everyone else got on and swapping stories whilst meandering through the never less than interesting systems that they have in the airport.

James S with another fresh one from Wires


It is normally pretty busy up there but I did manage to speak to Sir Gordon L who yesterday landed a 25lbs fish from Pana which finished his week off in fine style.

We all got to camp by about 5pm to be greeted by warm sunshine but with quite a stiff upstream breeze. A few rods have raced to the river and I know that one of our Belgian guests has already landed his first Atlantic salmon so I hope it is a positive portent of things to come this week.

Jessie on his last run back to Camp - hope to see him again next year


Middle camp is looking stunning at the moment and I am looking forward to spending a week up here, and reporting some good fish being landed.

Friday, 11 June 2010

Last day at Lower

The final day of our fishing here at Lower Camp is upon us which seems almost impossible to believe. Kitza, Pana and Middle Camp will fish on, but sadly we will hang up our rods here this evening. We have had a great season at Lower with lots of fish, fond memories, laughs and the odd hangover – exactly what a season on the Varzuga should be.

Rob W with one of his four fish from yesterday



Just reward for his success

Tonight we will get the boats out of the water and store them and their engines in our containers in order to protect them from the Arctic winter, before raising a glass or two to celebrate friendships made and memories shared.


Pasha and Feoder, top guides and top lads

Yesterday was a better day across all the camps with Rob W and Mike T leading the way with 4 apiece from Lower, at Pana they had 23 fish with Jack M taking two fish out of the camp pool on a skater after dinner. Kitza had 13 and lost quite a few, Middle reported consitent fishing with another 50 fish to the 12 rods.


Mike T with one from Green Bank

The weather is all over the place at the moment but this morning it is bright sunshine and it is really quite warm – a good day for fishing right on the surface, the guides all took monofilament leader with them this morning (rather than fluorocarbon leader - mono fishes skated flies much more effectively as fluorocarbon tends to sink).

Tomorrow we head back to Murmansk for changeover day, next week I will be based at Middle camp where I look forward to meeting up with the great team of clients and old friends that I know are coming out.

Charlie White

Thursday, 10 June 2010

A tricky day

Sometimes we have to accept that the salmon will win on the odd occasion. Yesterday was one of those days and for whatever reason it was a tough day to catch fish. As you can imagine, we are not short on theories!

Konrad S with his first fish from the Varzuga, having already done well at Kitza


Here at Lower, Ian E was the top rod with 4 fish and at Middle the same number was landed by Egide de B, much to his delight, in amongst the 42 that the team had between them. At Pana they had 23 between them whereas over at Kitza, 13 were landed with our American friends showing everyone how it should be done. They went out for an hour in the morning, both caught a fish and then decided to call it a day – ultra cool was the word on the radio.


Sabacci rapids now look ideal for a skated fly

After yet another feast from Jenna, our team here decided against fishing but Jessie, the manager, went out for an hour or so and landed one as well as losing one. He got a couple of fish to come to the skated fly but with our water temperature at about 8 degrees last night they were not totally committed.

It is warmer now with a gentle breeze so hopefully the odds are now back in our favour and today will be a day where the rods come out on top.

Charlie White

Wednesday, 9 June 2010

A change in the weather

After 3 cold days we have got our summer back and today is warm, windless and feels much more like June.

Peter L with one of his fish from Coconut

Yesterday provided a great day at Middle with the 12 rods beaching 71 fish; Hugo M had a very productive afternoon and took 10 fish to his own rod. At Pana they had 25 fish, all below camp but two rods are going to take the float trip today to see how many fish have got to the upper reaches which will be an interesting experiment.



Nils M with one from the boat

Last night we flew to Kitza to do the mid week changeover and we bought back 8 very happy rods who had taken 94 fish in their 3 days over there with fish caught around camp and at the top of the beat. The very relaxed team who we took to Kitza had 41 fish for their time at Lower.



Looking upstream from Kitza camp last night



And then downstream - it looks perfect

Yesterday afternoon the team here went to look around the village and then spent time in camp so the home pools are well rested for the rods that we have here now and Ian E went out for an hour or so after supper last night and landed two fish as well as losing two others.

The water has now stopped rising and has pretty much levelled off without starting to drop yet and with the water temperature rising to 9 degrees this morning it is all set for a much nicer day to be fishing.

Charlie White

Tuesday, 8 June 2010

Going back in time

The bright sunshine that I feared was coming our way has not materialised and yesterday was another cold and wet day. The water level is now back to where we were on the 26th May and it feels more like early spring than summer.

Tony A with one of his fish from Heli


Our rods at Lower took 20 for the day with the highlight being Jerry W’s first fish which led to a celebration that was heard from here to Pana!



Jerry W's first salmon

I went to Middle last night where Donna cooked us a superb supper before a great fun evening developed with me learning Scottish as it was meant to be spoken. .. Nick M was very busy teaching our Belgian friends the finer points of deep frying Mars bars which led to a few bemused looks!

They had a better day yesterday with 53 fish landed whilst Kitza had 32 with Ian E and his son Peter leading the way with some excellent fish in the book.

Pana had 21 but the major feature there was the size of the fish; Matthew P and Jack M each landed fish that were weighed at 17lbs and were as fresh as paint.

A couple of fish from Pana last week

The water temperature has dropped to 8 degrees this morning but thankfully the river appears to have stopped rising and it feels a more settled day today. This evening we will take the helicopter over to Kitza for the mid week changeover and I will try and take a few pictures of the river for those of you coming next week.

Charlie White

Sunday, 6 June 2010

A rising river and a day of firsts

The rain of yesterday has continued and its effects are being felt across the system. Here at Lower the river has risen 5 inches in the past 24 hours and my guess is that it has not stopped rising yet.

The rising river has certainly had an effect on the fishing and a pretty tough day was had across all the camps. It is typical that we should wish for rain and then curse it – perhaps we should be farmers not fishermen?

Omer B with a nice fish from the Beach

I will give the full figures tomorrow when everyone has come back in but a quick check on the radio revealed that Pana had around 20 to the 8 rods, Kitza 25-30 to 7 and Middle were around 40-45 fish to the 12 rods. At Lower we had a similar day but we had a day of many firsts. Peter L and Christian S landed their first Russian salmon and Tom W landed the first salmon he has seen in his life.

Peter L with his second Russian salmon, landed in the Wires pool


All the way from Mississippi, Jerry W and his son Tom have been grinning ever since they got here, not allowing the fact that they had never cast a fly before daunt them. It was justice for their determination to enjoy everything set before them that Tom should land his first fish this morning and his second this afternoon, we are confident that Jerry will not be far behind.

Tom W with his first fish on a fly


Sink tips, intermediates and 1 inch plastic tubes are still the best bets and whilst spring may have come early this year, it is not letting go easily and it was cold today with a biting downstream wind. Tomorrow is bound to bring bright sunshine and then no doubt we will curse that too!

Charlie White

Saturday, 5 June 2010

Saturday evening update

Blimey, where did those two weeks go? Well, if you were here, it involved just under 2,000 fish landed to 58 rods so I have a slight feeling that I may have been in the wrong place ...

It is great to be back and thanks to Christopher for running things so smoothly. After a relatively pain free journey through Murmansk (did I actually see a customs officer smile at me ..? Surely not) we got to camp by about 5:30 pm to find the river lower than when I left it but not as low as we have known it in the past on the 5th June.

A happy team at Lower this evening

It has been raining quite hard and the river rose today by a couple of inches which should freshen things up a bit and give new impetus to the runs of fish.

I hear on the radio that Barrie W has been out for about 20 minutes and landed his first fish outside of Pana camp and is now retiring to champagne cocktails - not a bad way to start the week.

Here at Lower we had an excellent early dinner and all the rods are now going to give it a try before retiring.

More tomorrow when it will be interesting to see what effect all of this rain has had in the upper reaches as it will take some time to filter its way down here.

Charlie White

Friday, 4 June 2010

One of those days

Heavy rain last night, and a damp misty morning. At morning radio call Kitza confirmed that they had 40 to their seven rods yesterday. A good result.


Foggy morning - fish on

I flew up to the village to see the huge truck that arrived last night after a two day drive up from St Petersburg, laden with this years village supplies. On it I hoped were many important items amongst which were a washing machine for Leanna here at Lower Camp, and two outboard engines.

I guess I had made a bit of a fuss about getting this kit into Camp as quickly as possible - typically Michaelovitch pulled my leg and landed the helicopter not on the heli pad but right outside the modest office that over-looks the river. The good news is that the saw-dust left behind by the builders on the grass by the lodge has gone, the bad news is that most of it ended up in the office.


This was compounded by a massive stone fly hatch; they seem to love my printer and when I print a document there are a handful of stone flies ironed onto the page.

Jeff G had a tough day too, lost a good fish that darted through his guides legs at the last moment, broke his rod, and then had his zinger snap. The later a small thing I know, but really trying when a day is not going well.

On the fishing front - wish I could report more news - Tom at Kitza had set dinner back to 9 p.m. as rods were still out, I know that Oliver P had a 20lber from Beaver. It sounded like a good day over there. Pana picked up with 37, again with some big'ish fish, 7 over 12lbs and two around 15lbs. Here at Lower we had 24 to our five rods by this afternoon, several went out this evening and I hear that Didier F-M has just had his 60th salmon for the week.

No real rise in river level after the rain, it remains steady at the moment - and still a consistent 10 degrees. It looks well set for next week.

I'm off tomorrow to UK, Charlie is taking over for a couple of weeks. Leaving here is a real wrench; I'll be back on 19 June, but may not see the Russian team at Lower, some us go back a decade or more, a few of us nearly two decades .....

....Большое спасибо Лене и Мише, Федору, Паше, Леше и Сергею за поддержку обеспечения рыболовной программы. Надеюсь, что вам удалось порыбачить немного больше в этом году. Также, огромное спасибо, Владимиру, Минере и Марине. Я ценю вашу помощь. Вернусь 19-26 июня на Пундостров. Скорей всего я вас уже не увижу, поэтому мои лучшие пожелания и огромное спасибо. Жду с нетерпением следующего года – увидимся в начале мая 2011 года. Кристофер.

Christopher Robinson

Thursday, 3 June 2010

Rain on the way

We seem to have settled down to pretty consistent catches – the river is remarkably steady at the moment despite three days of sun. The water level has hardly moved, nor has the temperature which remains in the 9°C – 11°C range. Kitza remains steady also, the water temperature there at 8°C for the past week or so.

We had another really bright day, a bit more wind unfortunately which troubled some fishers. Late afternoon it clouded over and this evening we have rain. The guides reckon we should get a few days of damp weather, the forecast looks this way too. None of us want too much rain, just enough to hold us up at this level for a few more weeks – asking too much I suspect!



Jessie with Jeff - trying to winkle one out of the run into Heli Pool this morning

Like yesterday the fishing was a bit patchy, good results but not always evenly spread. Pana had 21, down on yesterday which was a surprise. They fished more upstream today, and it seems the fish are still mainly below Camp. Kitza too had the same experience, Sasha’s Pool, below camp, produced really well today, and the upper beats did less well. They had between 30 – 35 for their seven rods – most still out when I spoke to them.


Brian C with one on at Moscoi

Middle camp confirmed that they had 66 yesterday (12 rods). Garth reckoned that they would be around the same today. Here on Lower we still have a couple of keen fishers out in the rain and I guess the five rods will account for around 25 – 30 for the day – very similar to yesterday. We are still seeing some excellent fish being banked. Pana again had three over 12lbs. Below is a photo of a really fit 15lber caught in Coconut Corner here at lower Camp this afternoon.

A very fit 15lber from Lower this afternoon

A consistent couple of days fishing despite the sun and wind. The rain is on its way, possibly bringing better fishing conditions, but we will miss the stunning blues of the river and the back light on the translucent green birch leaves that the sun illuminated so magnificently.

Christopher Robinson

Wednesday, 2 June 2010

A bright day

A bright day but with no wind thank goodness, by this afternoon the sky was a piercing blue and the fishing conditions not at their best. I have not had any meaningful scores in yet as our guests are making the most of another warm’ish end to the day to enjoy the river in the evening light.

Tom at Kitza said that Julian P had 12 salmon, others had done less well but were still out. The same with Middle, I know of two fishers who have 25 salmon between them today, but I gather the fishing was a bit patchy and many found the afternoon lean. At Pana Aaron mentioned that they had to work hard today, they had just over 30 by 6 p.m.

Dave leading Jeff G into the Heli Pool hot spot

Here at Lower the team who came over from Kitza got off to a good start, after dinner last night Arnaud FM landed five to give us a great show of how it should be done, including two from Paris Pool right outside the lodge. The afternoon was tougher here too, with a very bright sun right into the salmons eyes, despite that I think we will be around 5 salmon per rod.

Jeff G this afternoon

The river has hardly dropped in the last 24 hours and remains at a perfect fishing height, the rain storms a few days ago seem to have kept it topped up. Despite the sun the water temperature remains a constant 10°C.

If you are coming out this Saturday – Intermediate tips on floating lines are favoured by most fishers at the moment, the full floater with a slightly heavier fly also works well. The best flies are still around 1” or more. The mosquitoes are early this year, not a nuisance at this stage but it is best to bring repellent just in case.

But it could all change so come prepared - we are a long way North, it snowed at Pana on 8 June last year!

Christopher Robinson

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

Case Dismissed

The wind picked up again today, a really nasty blow from mid-morning until we came in at six; it was from the North so at least it was downstream which was a partial blessing. Very bright. Not the easiest of days, although this evening was again sublime, clear and great fishing after dinner for those with the stamina to give it a go.

Will T T 'hooked up' today at Lower Camp

I took Dave out this afternoon to guide him through the tail of Green Bank at the Lower Camp. The rule I like when I go off on adventures is floating line and skaters only (I had to break it last night with Julian P and it still haunts me!). We fished hard – nothing happened for two hours other than Dave lost a really serious fish that made a great explosion on the take. He blamed me (the guide) for the total failure; I blamed the weather. Back in camp I printed the barometric graph which showed that the pressure had been rising fast all afternoon. Case proven I thought and no blame could be attached to the guide. Jessie then appeared and he had caught five fishing down behind us using an intermediate tip and a Jessie Special cone head. Case dismissed, this guide in trouble.

Kitza Camp as we came in this evening

There was a degree of nervousness (i.e. another theory) expressed with apparent authority a week ago that the warm, high water this spring might have ‘sucked’ all the spring salmon through early. Last week’s 48 hour blip in catches merely compounded the evidence. I hope, after 19 years, that I have a fairly good eye for the river; the locals of course are much closer to it than I. The warmer weather certainly allowed the autumn fish that over-winter under the ice to move on earlier but the main run is on time with fish splashing through here continuously at the moment. Case dismissed and the run is now in full swing.

A good day on Middle I hear with over 70 or more, as usual most were still out this evening. Kitza did well, they went way up river above Goldmine to Rock Pool and Heli Island and landed 37 to their five rods.

Kitza Camp Pool at 7.30 p.m. today

Pana had 42, with three in the ‘teens’ and on Lower the party of 7 rods had 35 before moving over to Kitza this evening for their three days over there. Water levels are steady after rain storms last night, temperatures too are steady at 10°C on Varzuga and 8°C on Kitza.

Off to read my ‘How to be a Better Guide’ book.

Christopher Robinson

Monday, 31 May 2010

Mixed weather, good fishing

It was indeed a late night, a well deserved party for the guests here at Lower following an electric first day. All up on time this morning, bright eyed, bushy tailed and full of enthusiasm - albeit some looked a little less bright eyed than others!

Jessie James, Lower Fishing Manger - fine guide, fisherman and musician

Light but over cast this morning, air temperature at 12°C by mid-morning. Lunch time brought driving cold rain for a couple of hours and both Middle and Lower Camps had the guests come back to have lunch inside. Again a wonderful end to the day, clear and perfect light.

The water temperature is holding steady at 10°C on Varzuga. Kitza water temperature at 8°C. The drop in water level has slowed down and it is now dropping about one inch a day. It is a perfect height for all camps from a fishing point of view; we’d like to see some rain in the next week to keep it up for boating but at the moment we are getting through well enough to all the beats.
Hugo R this morning

I thought I’d recap on last week. It started really well, but, as I commented on 27 May, we had a nasty high pressure system sitting over us for three days, a harsh, bright sun and a wicked, cold NE wind. The pressure rose steadily on Wednesday and Thursday peaking at 1016 late on Thursday evening – I’m never sure just how much barometric pressure accounts for a salmon’s mood but many believe it does. The fish were noticeably dour giving lots of knocks and soft plucks without much aggression. On Saturday and Sunday (yesterday) the pressure dropped steadily, back down to 1006 last night and the fishing was excellent.

Despite the above we had a good week with 480 to the regular team of 12 at Middle, Michael Evans’s party of eight rods had 156 salmon from Lower and Kitza Camp, while New Zealand cousins Philip and Jerry, plus David, Martin, Lee and Steven had 130 to their six rods fishing the opposite combination. A pretty good result all-round.

Briefly to today – Pana had 38 salmon, again they are getting bigger fish, seven over 12lbs and another two at 20lbs. Middle had 94 and Kitza were on 40 (not bad for 5 rods!) – the fish are well up the river at Kitza; Goldmine produced really well today for Didier and Arnaud F-M. Tom and Ura are going to take the guests even further up tomorrow.
Julian P fishing with me this evening, a glorious sky and a fish on

At Lower we had 42. Lots of experimenting going on, I took Julian P out in a boat after dinner, we could rise fish on tiny skaters and medium Sunrays, but they really only wanted to take Pot Bellied Pigs. I’ll try again tomorrow evening, hope the next run through are more discerning.

This blog seems to have caught on – I know that Sarah, wife of Keith (mechanic and mender of anything) mentioned that the blog had not been posted this evening (about 9 p.m. UK time) so she did not know how we had got on today. Sarah, I'm running late, been fish'in – sorry not to see you up here this year, here is a picture (below) of Keith doing the water height from Keith’s Nail drilled in 14 years ago.

Keith measuring the water from his nail - 14 years of daily records - not bad!

Raining hard now - more tomorrow.

Christopher Robinson

Sunday, 30 May 2010

A Great Start to the Week

Seldom have I seen such enthusiasm from the fishers as last night. It is infectious; and gives all of us who work on the programme a lift. It was a classic Varzuga evening, wonderful light, calm and mild. Heaven.
At Lower Camp the seven rods had 16 salmon after dinner – the two father and son teams both returned to the lodge, quite tired after a long’ish day travelling from Helsinki, but with huge smiles, all had landed their first Varzuga salmon. Great to see them, and the rest of the team, off the mark within hours of arriving.

Robert P with a cracker from Green Bank this morning


A bit of mixed weather today – sun to start then cloudy, wind at times but not bad, foggy and chilly in the afternoon and again a magic clear light this evening.

A much better fishing day with good numbers of fresh fish running through all the beats, particularly down here at Lower. I took a boat up to Middle to see the team for dinner, silver fish jumping ahead of me all the time. The shallows now getting a bit skinny in places, Keith and Dave relieved to see me bring it back with no knocks or scrapes. Phew!

I have got back to find Julian P and Dan R organizing a celebration, they had heard on the radio that Lower had out-scored Middle today with a very respectible 52 fish to seven rods against 66 to 12 rods at Middle Camp. This could be a late night......

Adrian T T

At Middle, Stuart R started in style with his first Varzuga salmon a deep, fresh 12lber. At Lower the notable score went to Julian P who banked 18 salmon. Over on Kitza the five rods had 20, I think they broke a record with one guest losing 14! All camps are reporting some really chunky sized fish in the 10 – 12 lb range. Our Spanish guests at Pana had 32 with a good number of bigger fish, eight between 12 and 15lbs.


Will T-T, one off the tide.

Most rods are using sinking tips with largish flies of 1”+. I’m trying to convert them to more surface fishing, but it is only one day into the week and we can start experimenting once they have a few more under the belt.


Steve Hammond ( at Moscoi Rapid last week) with a good example of the really fit fish we are catching this year on Varzuga

Weather looks good for tomorrow, I'll let you know how we get on.

Christopher Robinson

Saturday, 29 May 2010

A New Week Starts

Old Kola hands know that Murmansk airport can take hours to get through. We used our new system again today had the Lower Varzuga guests here in camp by 3.50 p.m. Just four hours after the charter landed. Thank you Olga, Dima and Leonid! – your efforts were much appreciated.

Dan R with one on this evening

Thereafter routines differed somewhat – the Middle Camp rods rushed to the river and when I spoke to Donna at 8.30 she was still missing a few for dinner. It is glorious evening here at Lower, Jessie and Jenna decided that an early supper at six would be a good idea with fishing after, seldom have I seen three delicious courses go down so fast. They were on the river by 8 p.m.

I heard briefly from Pana and Kitza, enough to know that the rods were out fishing and that fish were being caught. Middle seem to have done fairly well this evening and on Lower Jessie was confident that they were all into fish. I popped down quickly to see Dan R in action in Heli Pool.

A busy day today, I’ll catch up with all the camps in the morning and give you a fuller update.

Christopher Robinson

Friday, 28 May 2010

After the gale

After the gale of the past two days the wind dropped overnight and we had a welcome calm day with high clouds, giving us much more pleasant fishing conditions. The water temperature remains steady in the 9°C to 11°C range and the level continues to fall towards ‘summer’ levels.

Over on Kitza, which is always a week or so behind Varzuga, the water level is still steady and the temperature remains 7°C. They had a better day today with 23 landed and a good number lost, Tom reckoned that the run was now really moving on up river and from this weekend they are going to push right up to the top beats while they have the water to do so. A wonderful chance for some guests to get up to areas we seldom fish.

Jessie, Lee, Steven and Pasha taking 'time out'
On Lower Varzuga we had a fairly quiet day, possibly due to last night! We did just get into double figures, the good news was that the bigger fish are still running and we had four real beauties in double figures. Floating lines are definitely in and we tried the Sunray again with some smashing surface takes.

Middle Camp picked up after a dour day yesterday and reported a respectable 74, also with a good number of bigger fish. As always detail is lacking I’m afraid as they are too busy fishing, I’ll try and sharpen them up next week.

Tomorrow I go to Murmansk to say farewell to the current teams and to see the new parties into their camps. I hope to be able to post a quick report tomorrow evening. I thought I’d finish this week with a couple of photos that show the changes over just 18 days. The new decking was finished today. More photos of the full refurbishment next week.


10 May

28 May

Christopher Robinson