Salmon fishing: tactics, rivers, beats and seasons for Atlantic salmon across the UK and beyond
Atlantic salmon is the fish that gets into your blood and never leaves. The wait for a take that may never come, the weight of a fish finally felt, the river that drew you back season after season – nothing in freshwater fishing compares.
Trout & Salmon’s salmon pages cover the full breadth of the sport. At home, that means spring fishing on the Tay, Tweed, Spey and Dee, summer grilse on spate rivers in Wales and Ireland, and the beat knowledge that separates productive days from blank ones. Further afield, we cover Norway’s Gaula, Namsen and Alta – rivers where 40-pound fish are a genuine possibility – Iceland’s legendary waters, and Atlantic salmon rivers in Canada. Fly selection, Spey casting, reading water and travelling to fish: it’s all here.
The fish are fewer than they once were. Every day on the water matters more because of it.
A trio of long tapered leaders designed to deliver flies delicately when faced with difficult low-water conditions
A celebration of the lives of the early professionals who knew their rivers better than anyone else, by the late Crawford Little. This article was first published in February 2019.
Follow this expert eight-point plan for early season success
As the leaves and temperatures drop, it’s time to change tactics and select lines that can deliver
A summer of major fish kills has affected rivers
Governing body seeks 100% catch-and-release
Anglers urged to ask Icelandic MPs to stop harmful fish farms
Long-term scientific work underway to address the causes of salmon decline
When a salmon takes a small fly on a floating line it is thrilling. Jim Coates explains why late spring is the perfect time to try the technique
From our archive: The wisdom of Robin Elles