Wednesday, 7 June 2017

Back online!

My apologies for the lack of blog yesterday.   A combination of a trip to Umba to deliver new boats and slow internet speeds meant that I ran out of time.

Back here the news is that finally, finally, we have seen the sun.  I had almost forgotten what it looked like and the whole river feels like a different place with a bit of warmth on it.

A lively fish on Bear Corner
The fish are responding in kind although it does feel as if they are making up for lost time and are running very hard.

I have just spoken to Toby at Middle who said that yesterday was the first day that they have seen lots of fish moving, jumping and generally getting on with how we would expect them to behave.

And landed...
They have landed 62 fish for the past couple of days and again they have had some really good ones.
Phillip T landed a cracking 15lbs fish from Fortress whilst Ian H landed 6 from Peartiha and lost a further 6.  Keen blog watchers will note that it is the high water pools that are still the most productive.

Here at Lower we have seen great strides in the casting of everyone and whilst 24 fish for the past couple of days is not quite as many as we would have liked, we have had great fun in getting them.
With the water now, eventually, steadily dropping, there are more and more places where we can ambush the running fish and news of fish showing at Middle is spurring everyone on to intercept more of them before they get there!

The Arctic Terns have only just started to arrive
The fish may be showing at Middle but they are not yet at Pana.  We do need to water temperatures to warm up a touch to help them make the distance faster but I am sure that any minute now they will be there.

Kitza has slightly gone in fits and starts with John E having a great session on Sasha’s with 4 fish but some of the beats being rather more stubborn. They have banked 25 fish to the 8 rods over the past two days and again, dropping water will make the whole beat more fishable.

Our first picnic lunch of the season 
It is a warm morning today and it really does make putting on the waders a much more appealing prospect than it was when looking out onto snow showers.  More tomorrow when I hope we have dropping water, increasing temperatures and rising numbers of fish.

Charlie White

Monday, 5 June 2017

A tough day

Yesterday was a funny one in that we didn’t catch nearly as many fish as we were hoping but at the same time there were signs that things are beginning to happen as we would expect.

At Lower we only landed 4 fish for the day.  We lost a few others and there were various encounters but the truth is that it was a slow and yet another cold day.  Eoin Fairgrieve and Bill Drury were on the river working their magic and we saw an improvement in everyone’s casting.

Jonny C on Bear Island
It is difficult, with the high water, to get away with just overhead casting and spey casting is a new thing to many here which is as we would expect with this being the tuition week.

Pana saw the first fish of the season landed by the guests.  Just 2 but welcome signs that fish are there, particularly as the 2nd fish was landed at Rockface which is halfway up the beat.

Igor reaching for Stewart H's fish
Kitza landed 5 fish with Joe M landing 2 from Sasha’s in the morning.  Jack, the camp manager, reports that finally the river is dropping away from being bank high and there are more and more places that are easily accessible to wade.

Middle does what it always does, which is to blow everyone’s theories out of the water.  They landed 61 between the 12 rods with Hugo M and Rob McK landing 6 apiece from their session in Peartiha. Colton C managed to outfish his father by 6 to 1 which, as he is only 16, was a very good effort.

Is Spring finally coming? Birch buds just showing this morning
It is at last a bit warmer this morning although the water temperature is still only 3 degrees but Stewart H went out at 6.30 this morning and landed 1 from Heli whilst also losing 2 more which has given everyone encouragement and we hope for more of the same as the day goes on.

Charlie White

Sunday, 4 June 2017

A new week but the same weather

Yesterday was a busy day at Murmansk.  Changeover day is always hectic but it is also great fun as it gives the chance to catch up with the many people who come year after year.

We were actually through the airport in record time and everyone was in camp by at least 4pm. Murmansk airport is now a pretty comfortable experience but the sheer tension and excitement levels mean that any wait feels forever.
Brendan - giving it his all as ever
Once in camp it was time to set everyone up, find out which bits of kit were required and discuss the past week’s events.

Those events were perhaps inevitably dominated by talk of Middle Varzuga where the 12 rods finished their week on 408 fish for the week.  A superb weeks fishing with some specimen fish landed.
Stewart H with his first Russian salmon last night
Lower Varzuga started to really pick up in the last few days and the team of 8 who came from Kitza landed 89 for their 3 days here which was a good effort.

At Kitza it is taking longer to get going but some fish are there and the same can be said at Pana.  It is hard work and very cold but the old adage of “you cannot catch a fish if your fly is not in the water” was never truer.
My mother meeting Feorder - I am not sure what she said but it has me worried
The new week always brings fresh enthusiasm and the team at Middle had 13 before the cold got to them last night.  At Lower, Stewart H went out almost as soon as the helicopter landed and on his second cast caught his first ever Russian salmon.  He had another one before we beckoned him into supper and we have got the week off to a good start although it is still really cold and it has snowed all night.  Surely it will warm up soon…?

Charlie White

Friday, 2 June 2017

Supply run

A quick blog today as Friday is the day when we resupply all of the camps with provisions for next week so it will be a long day on the helicopter.

Yesterday was more of the same across the camps in terms of catches and weather.  It is still really cold and we had driving rain for most of the day.  Full credit to the team here who all put in a full shift and not one of the boats came back early.

Adrian D on Bear Corner
That was probably because they were all catching fish.  We finished with 31 fish for the day to our 8 rods.  Predictably Brendan was the top rod but he was closely followed by Bruce B and Andrew W-D who had 5 each.

At Kitza there was better news as Brad B hit the first of the pods to run the river and he landed 4 from Gold Mine – things are starting to happen there and I suspect that next week could be pretty good.

Middle continues apace and they had a further 76 fish to their 12 rods. Jeremy B landed 6 fish from Fortress including one of 16lbs whilst Brian W had 12 to his rod from Upper Fortress and Birthday.

Andrew W-D on Beach
I am off to Pana in a minute with their supplies and I understand that another fish was caught just outside of camp by one of the guides yesterday so it will be interesting to see what I find when I get up there.

There will be no blog tomorrow as we fly to Murmansk to say goodbye to these guests and welcome our new ones and I hope that on Sunday I can report some better weather – snow was not really what we wanted to wake up to this morning…

Charlie White

Thursday, 1 June 2017

They’re here

Thankfully, yesterday’s confidence was not misplaced.  We had a much better day at Lower Varzuga and it is clear that the main run of fish has now started to arrive.

It was very evident that fish were running in pods and you had to be there at the right time but when you were, the action was electric.

Adrian D on Upper Sviats
This was best shown by Adrian D who had a red letter session in Upper Sviats and landed 8 fish in the afternoon.   John G had 6 for the day whilst Brendan G continues to fish all hours he can whilst also catching fish during them.

We finished on 33 for the day which is by no means a big day when it comes to Lower catches but it is a very big step in the right direction.

Paul C with a good fish from Middle
I went up to Middle Varzuga for dinner which is a journey I normally really enjoy (about 50 minutes by boat) but I have to say that it was utterly freezing last night.  There is still a lot of ice on the banks and snow on the ground so any wind has a real bite to it.

They had a very good day and landed 80 fish to the 12 rods.  Everybody had contributed equally but the interesting thing I discovered was that the home pools have not yet started producing in a major way.

The new dining room at Middle
Middle normally scores very highly thanks to these home pools and the out of hours fishing that the team do but practically all of the fish they have caught this week have been in the guided hours.  This is very encouraging for the strength of run as it implies that they have caught the first run of the bigger fish and the grilse will start to stack up from here on.

David C on Clarkes
Sadly, Kitza and Pana did not fare so well.  The cold spring has affected their catches and without reward it is increasingly difficult to motivate the team to fish hard.  Kitza finished with 4 fish and one of the guides at Pana caught a fish just outside of the camp last night so some fish have got there and we hope that today brings them better fortune.

It is another bitterly cold day but Brendan has landed 2 fish this morning from the Heli pool which got everyone going and it was a prompt start here this morning.

Charlie White

Wednesday, 31 May 2017

Slowly, slowly

I hardly dare say it for fear of jumping the gun but slowly, just slowly, spring is coming and so are the fish.

Having seen very little bird life, signs of new growth or anything much in the way of warmer temperatures, yesterday felt as if we were getting somewhere.

Brendan on Heli last night
We saw the first cuckoo of the season and the birch buds are just beginning to show.  Also beginning to show are salmon.

After a tough morning here, Jamie K fished Beach in the afternoon which is our bottom beat and not only landed two fresh fish but most encouragingly saw plenty more coming into the beat.

Philip L-J at Kitza
The feeling that fish have eventually got here was backed up by the fact that before we flew to Kitza to swap parties, we had landed 6 for the day but the new team here landed 6 more after dinner in just a couple of hours, all in the home pool of Heli.

At Kitza, before we flew over to pick them up, they had 8 for their final day there – not epic but going the right way.
Kitza camp looking stunning yesterday morning - the snow has now all gone
The most curious aspect of the whole week has been Middle.  We have fished hard here at Lower and all eyes have been pealed for the first inkling of a run of fish but somehow, an awful lot have got past us without being sighted.

Their 12 rods landed 117 fresh fish yesterday.  Extraordinary really and whilst we are delighted for them, it has made all of us scratch our heads, question ourselves and endlessly theorise.

There were inevitably some high individual scores with Paul C landing 19 and David and Stephen C taking 17 from Clarkes in their morning session but by far the best fish of the day was Jeremy H landing his first fish as a grandfather - huge congratulations to all.


A fresh one from Kitza
The team at Pana went down to the junction of Varzuga and Pana but found only ice walls.  They are going to try again today as we know that the fish have got to Middle in numbers and it will only be a matter of time before they hit Pana.

It is raining hard this morning but that hasn’t stopped Brendan G going out and landing another fish before breakfast and with thoughts of spring firmly in mind we head out with high hopes.

Charlie White

Tuesday, 30 May 2017

Happy Christmas!

I haven’t, yet, gone completely mad but this morning looks and feels like Christmas.  As we ate a delicious dinner last night it started to snow and someone joked that we would get 6 inches by the morning – it turns out that they were wrong, we had 7 inches of snow.

Lower Varzuga this morning
Quite extraordinary to think that it will be June tomorrow and perhaps sums up the most bizarre start to a season that any of us have seen.

The fish haven’t really kicked into gear yet and it was hard work across most of the camp yesterday.  It is possible that they are waiting for the river to warm up before leaving the White Sea but the truth is that none of us really know and we are just looking forward to the first major run of fish to hit us.

Igor with a fresh fish from Beach
At Lower, Phil B continued his run of winkling one out and Brad B joined him whereas at Kitza,
Bruce B and Phil L-J had a double hook up at First Island but apart from that it was slim pickings.

Middle, as is often the case, went against the trend and they had a great day of 61 fish.  Father and son team of David and Stephen C had 6 apiece from their session at Fortress in the afternoon and all of the other rods chipped in although Brian W and his fishing partner topped the scoring charts with 15 between them in the morning.

A winter wonderland
The fish haven’t got to Pana yet but the team up there are keen and no doubt they will head as far downstream today as they can.

There is no denying that it is beautiful here right now and it is actually very warm today so I would imagine that all of this snow will be gone by this evening but we could do with a few more fish to really get the season started in earnest.

Charlie White

Monday, 29 May 2017

“Maybe tomorrow”

It seems that winter won’t let go just yet.  A really cold wind and some very heavy snow showers made fishing pretty tough and it was no surprise that a few called it off before the allotted guided time was over.

The mantra for the past three weeks has been “maybe tomorrow” as everyone here prayed for the ice to break, the river to clear, for guests to be in camp and now it seems for the main run of fish to arrive.

What we have all been waiting for
We did catch fish and at Lower Varzuga, Phil B and Will D landed 5 springers between them but it was hard going for everyone else.

At Kitza it was much the same with the metronomic Brendan G landing 3 of the 6 they had for the day.
Brothers in arms - Will and Rhod with a good fish from Jannaways
The team at Pana fished hard for the morning but with no luck chose to have an extended lunch with red wine to the fore.  The fish will reach them but we could do with the water temperatures to warm up a bit to get the whole system moving.

Care still needed when wading
At Middle Varzuga the very experienced team of 12 rods landed 37 fish for the day with one regular rod landing 14 of those.  Paul C landed a specimen springer of somewhere between 18-20lbs which put up the kind of fight you would expect from a solid bar of silver. 

Feorder and Michael G ready to go
A bear was seen on the island which is the first sighting of the season but whilst that is fun, what we all want is to see a few more fish and that the mantra can become “today”.

It is much warmer this morning and there is noticeably less ice coming down the river so things look promising.

Charlie White

Sunday, 28 May 2017

The season has started

It is a fantastic feeling to be back on the Varzuga.  After the coldest spring in living memory, the river is now fully open and we have all of our four beats up and running.

Whilst I have seen the river higher for an “opening” week there is no doubt that a lot of the snow has already melted into the system and my guess is that it will consistently drop away from these levels.

The frozen Kola river yesterday
One of the unexpected benefits of the other rivers on the Kola having to cancel their opening weeks was that Murmansk airport felt like a ghost town yesterday.  38 clients went through in record time and we were all in camp by 3pm.

It is fair to say that it was pretty obvious that all of our team were keen to see new faces after weeks of confinement and our arrival had a celebratory feel to it.

Snow in camp this morning
However, winter has not let go entirely; it is still very cold and in three of our camps the first thing everyone did was to head for the fire and a cup of tea/glass of wine/whisky – pretty much in that order.

At Middle Varzuga no such indulgence was tolerated and pretty much everyone went out.  A score of 12 by supper was a good effort but I suspect the fact that the river has stopped rising this morning will have a very beneficial effect on their numbers by this evening.

A high but dropping river
It is snowing hard this morning and it was not hard to take the decision to have lunch back in camp. This normally leads to a certain amount of dissent as there is no doubt that coming back, as opposed to having lunch on the river bank, cuts into the guided fishing time but no one murmured and as everyone put on indecent amount of layers this morning I think it will be a cold bunch that we welcome back in a few hours time.

Sunset at Kitza 
Fifteen feet of T-14/17 with short leaders, heavy flies and thermals are the order of the day and although it is chilly, all of us are delighted to have the season under way.

Charlie White

Thursday, 25 May 2017

Quick update

There is precious little to add this morning as all of the managers, cooks, guides and helpers are busy clearing out the camps, setting up boats and ensuring that everything looks spotless for our first guests arrival on Saturday.

Boats at Lower waiting to be launched
At Middle and Lower, nether Toby nor Bill have fished yet as there is still substantial ice coming down and fishing on your own in those conditions is not a good idea.

Picking a moment to launch a boat between the ice
Frustratingly, Toby cannot send me pictures of the river at Middle as he has a problem with his connection but I understand that the ice has left behind substantial ice walls on Generator pool which we have seen before.  When the water rises, as the snow around the tundra melts, this will all go but it sounds as if we will need to exercise caution for the time being.

Luba at Kitza preparing lunch for the guides
Jack, over at Kitza, has been getting to grips with the new rubber boats that we have purchased for this season which will be a real boon in low water.  Ironically, this is one season where we almost certainly won’t see low water before we leave but such is life on the Kola and it is always good to make progress.

One of the new rubber boats at Kitza
I am heading up to Helsinki tomorrow and am hugely looking forward to typing the next blog beside the river.  It has been an extraordinary couple of weeks and it will be great to see some fish on the bank and the operation up and running.

Charlie White

Wednesday, 24 May 2017

Blog by proxy

As Jack mentioned yesterday, all of the camps are now fully staffed and are beginning to get up and running after the endless winter.

Lower Varzuga this morning
I understand from Bill that it was a whirlwind of activity with the helicopter going non-stop all day as it was loaded, unloaded, refuelled and re-positioned time after time.

Upstream at Kitza yesterday
Yesterday also bought us the news we had been hoping for as there was a serious amount of ice floating past Lower all day.

Home pool at Pana last night
In a cold spring it can take time for the main ice sheets to get moving and after the initial thrill of seeing the ice break up, it can dispiriting to be at Lower and not see much happening.  It just takes time and yesterday bought us much more of what we are looking for.

Ice sheets going past Lower at lunchtime yesterday
The river beside all of the camps is now clear of ice and things can start in earnest.  More tomorrow when I hope to have photos of Middle which for some reason keep getting lost in the ether this morning.

Charlie White

Tuesday, 23 May 2017

The Last Supper

It's finally upon us. The day we start to split off for each camp. Initially our set up week(s) consisted of buying provisions in Murmansk and then moved into dividing them among Pana, Kitza, Middle and Lower Varzuga.

A little higher this morning
Now finally it is time to load all the laden bags into Helicopters and set off for our camps. With all the time in the world to get things ready it would stand to reason there was nothing left to do but somehow yesterday seemed to be a whirlwind of printing and packing.

A quick cast
We all sat down to our last supper together for a while. Despite extreme cabin fever I have become rather fond of the people around me and am actually slightly sad to be leaving. We have hatched a plan to meet up for supper together post season.

Sushi last supper
This will be my last post for a while as Lucy and I head out to Kitza to unpack our provisions and get things ready for our first guests. It has not been the easiest thing to write the blog at times but mother nature is a far more powerful entity than I and we have made the best of what she has been giving us.

Set up and ready to go
Thank you for putting up with my ramblings and I look forward to seeing many of you on the river shortly.

Jack Selby

Monday, 22 May 2017

Arrived and ready

Twas the night before "monday" and all through the house, nothing was stirring not even the mouse... Then Matt and Beanie arrived... on a hover boat.

All pretty jealous of this entrance
It actually turns out that they are a great asset already but it was quite a shock to the community system. My BBQ was burned out about 3 hours too early but we had the most delicious pork dish that Lucy cooked and a few beers to welcome the new recruits.

Matt and Beanie
The sun arrived yesterday afternoon and is still here this morning. We did have some light snow in the morning but not enough to settle. The river has dropped a little and it was cold last night again.

This morning the river has dropped a bit
The good news is they are no longer crossing the river on the ice at the village. However just above it is still somewhat solid as far as we can see. It's no longer possible to walk into the village along the river's edge so things are moving but it all seems jolly slow.

Sunset over the camp last night
More tomorrow morning when we will have had a chat with the Russian team about what is happening up above.

Jack Selby

Sunday, 21 May 2017

Bigger and better

This morning the river is up and looks like a proper river. There are still chunks of ice gently trundling down past us. It's cold and there is light snow.

Bigger and Better this morning
Yesterday evening a huge chunk of Ice came down past us. It was almost in one piece and picked up a massive boulder in front of us and rolled it along the river bed like it was a pebble. As it went through the rapids it broke up.

Toby watches as a big sheet goes through
The area below camp has largely cleared meaning we dont get the build up anymore. From where we look out it just looks like a bigger and better river at last.

Another big chunk late last night
Having said that there is an awful lot still to come to clear the full river and the snow and ice that is left on the banks needs to make it's way into the system also. However from a fairly depressing outlook last week we are much more hopeful of things to come.

Massively satisfying watching it drift into the rapids
Matt and Beanie join us tonight from MMK and we are going to cook them a BBQ. It's going to be both pleasant and odd to have new blood in camp. We've become slightly institutionalised by the last two weeks.

I hope to have even more ice flows to report tomorrow.

Jack Selby