In the beginning of July 1886 I commenced my
inspection of the Fisheries in Orkney by driving from Stromness to
the Bridge of Waithe, under which the waters of Loch Stenness flow
into the sea in a deep strong current, through three arches, and the
flood tide from the sea mingles with the waters of the loch.
Loch Stenness is a great sheet of water about 15
miles in circumference, including its upper and lower divisions. The
name is sometimes applied to designate both the divisions of the
loch, and sometimes it is applied only to the lower loch which
communicates with the sea; while the upper loch, which is entirely
fresh, is termed the Loch of Harray. The banks of these lakes, like
those of all the Orcadian lakes, are bare and treeless ; and the
upper loch is divided from the lower by two long narrow promontories
that jut out from opposite sides, and so nearly meet in the middle
as to be connected by a low bridge, called the Bridge of Brogar,
over which the roadway passes.
The area of the Loch of Stenness is 1792 acres, and
that of the Loch of Harray 2432 acres ; or, together, 4224 acres. A
better idea of their great extent will be got when I state that the
famous Loch Leven, in Fifeshire, which receives nearly the whole
drainage of the county of Kinross, which yields an average of at
least 11,000 trout per annum, the mean weight of each trout being
nearly a pound, and brings a rental of £1000 a year to its fortunate
possessor, has an area of only 3406 acres, or 818 acres less than
Stenness and Harray. 1 am quite convinced that, if these lochs were
as well protected as Loch Leven they would soon become as
productive. And it should be kept in mind that their season
commences just about the time when that on Loch Leven ends.
A deep margin of sea-weed extends for some distance
above the Bridge of Waithe into the Loch of Stenness, and on the
seaward side of the bridge there is also a thick growth of
sea-weeds. Beyond the margin of sea-weeds only inside the Bridge of
Waithe, we find a little farther on sea-weeds mixed with fresh-water
plants, and in the Loch of Harray fresh-water plants alone. Stenness
is decidedly brackish, while the water in Harray is fresh; the
former is nearly 4 miles long, with a maximum breadth of H miles;
while the latter is 4f miles long, and varying in breadth from 3
furlongs to If miles. There is no transmutation of the marine
vegetation anywhere to be seen into fresh-water forms. They are as
distinct now as they were thousands of years ago, as is
eloquently pointed out in the following passage from Hugh
Miller’s Footsteps of the Creator:—
Along the green edge of the Lake of Stenness,
selvaged by the line of detached weeds with which a recent gale had
strewed its shores, I marked that for the first few miles the
accumulation consisted of marine algae, here and there mixed with
tufts of stunted reeds or rushes, and that as I receded from the
sea, it was the algae that became stunted and dwarfish, and that the
reeds, aquatic grasses, and rushes, grown greatly more bulky in the
mass, were also more fully develojDed individually, till at length
the marine vegetation altogether disappeared, and the
vegetable debris of the shore became purely lacustrine,—I asked
myself whether here, if anywhere, a transition flora between loch
and sea ought not to be found? For many thousand years ere the tall
gray obelisks of Stenness, whose forms I saw this morning reflected
in the water, had been torn from the quarry or laid down in mystic
circle on their flat promontories, had this lake admitted the waters
of the sea, and been salt in its lower reaches and fresh in its
higher. And during this protracted period had its quiet,
well-sheltered bottom been exposed to no disturbing influences
through which the delicate process of transmutation could have been
marred or arrested. Here then, if in any circumstances, ought we to
have had, in the broad permanently brackish reaches, at least
indications of a vegetation intermediate in its nature between tlie
monocotyledons of tlie lake and the algre of the sea; and yet not a
vestige of such an intermediate vegetation could I find among the
up-piled debris of the mixed floras, marine and lacustrine. The lake
possesses no such intermediate vegetation. As the water freshens in
its middle reaches the algre become dwarfish and ill-developed ; one
species after another ceases to appear, as the habitat becomes
wholly unfavourable to it ; until at length we find, instead of the
brown, rootless, flowerless fucoids and con ferae of the ocean, the
green, rooted, flower-bearing flags, rushes, and aquatic grasses of
the fresh water. Many thousands of years have failed to originate a
single intermediate plant.
Besides sea-trout and yellow trout, the lower loch is
said to contain flounders, cod, herrings, skate, whitings, eels,
lytlie, saithe, and gray mullet. There are no salmon now to be found
in the Loch of Stenness. But in a book entitled Present State of the
Orkney Islands, published in 1775, and reprinted in 1884, we are
told that—
In this loch are abundance of trout, and in all
probability there would be a good salmon fishing here, were it not
that the mouth of the loch is so much choked up with sea-weed that
the fish cannot get into it. What confirms this opinion is, that in
some charters belonging to the gentlemen in the neighbourhood the
salmon fishing in the loch is expressly reserved to the king as his
exclusive right.
The yellow trout in Stenness and Harray are equal in
quality to any in Scotland. But they are not nearly so plentiful as
they ought to be; nor, as a rule, do they rise freely. They have
been taken as heavy as 6 lbs. But such a size is very rare, though
individuals of 2 and 3 lbs. are not uncommon. I have known one
gentleman catch twelve trout in Harray in a few hours, weighing 13
lbs. ; and Mr. A. Irvine Fortescue of Swanbister, in answer to my
printed queries about the trout fishing in the Loch of Harray,
writes:—
Myself and friend once caught twelve and a half
dozen, weighing 40 lbs., with fly, in four hours.
Mr, Fortescue states that, at times, the trout
assemble in dense shoals in some of the small bays of the Loch of
Harray, and are, on such occasions, swept out iti vast quantities by
the net, and he is therefore of opinion that the use of the
sweep-net should be prohibited in the Loch of Harray, as he
considers it even deadlier than set-lines and set-nets. Mr.
Fortescue mentions that, on the occasion when he and his friend
caught the twelve and a half dozen, as above stated, they had come
upon one of these shoals of trout, and he says that, with a net.
The entire shoal might have been taken at one sweep,
the result possibly a cart-load.
Sea-trout ascend to the Loch of Stenness and the
other Orcadian lochs communicating with the sea, beginning in July
and continuing throughout the autumn. The best place for sea-trout
fishing in connection with the Loch of Stenness is called “The
Bush,” the term applied to the lower part of the stream on the
seaward side of the Bridge of Waithe. I have known upwards of fifty
sea-trout hooked there in a day by one rod, though, for want of a
landing-net, only twenty of them were basketed. “The Bush” is a
favourite resting-place for sea-trout before running up into the
loch, and the most favourable time for fishing it is from half-ebb
round to halfflood. A westerly wind is said to suit it best.
Before 1881 and 1882, when the Orkneys were
constituted a Fishery District, and the usual bye-laws passed fixing
estuaries, a close season, the meshes of nets to be used for the
capture of fish of the salmon kind, and prohibiting certain methods
of fishing, all kinds of destructive and improvident modes of
fishing were commonly practised on the Loch of Stenness, and more
particularly on the upper part of it, the Loch of Harray. Set-lines,
set-nets, sweep-nets, and the otter, were in constant operation;
and, although the use of the otter and the fixed nets is now
illegal, the “Harray lairds,” as the small proprietors on the banks
of the Loch of Harray are called, cannot be prevented, as the law at
present stands, from using the sweep-net or set-lines, as they are
udallers, and many of tlieir properties have a frontage to the loch.
No District Board has been formed for the Orkneys, nor is there any
Angling Association for the protection and improvement of the
fishings; and from what I saw and heard when in Orkney, I am by no
means convinced that the statutory restrictions intended to prevent
wasteful and improvident modes of fishing are much attended to on
the Lochs of Stenness and Harray. Were they fairly fished and
properly protected they ought to be equal to any lochs in the United
Kingdom; and this is not merely my own opinion, after a pretty
extensive acquaintance with these lochs, but that of every angler
who has had much experience of them. In his admirable book on The
Orkneys and Shetland, published in 1883, Mr. Tudor writes as follows
of these two great lakes :—
For years, nets, set-lines, and the infernal poaching
machine, the otter, have been used to such an extent that it is a
wonder any trout have been left, but now the Orkneys have been
formed into a Salmon Fishery district, set-lines and otters became
illegal, and netting can no longer be carried out with the lierring-net
mesh, and in the reckless manner hitherto in vogue. In fact, if only
the fish can be protected during the spawning season, these two
lochs should, for angling, be second to none in Scotland.
To the same effect Mr. Sutherland Gneme of
Grsemeshall, who has a large estate on the Mainland of Orkney,
writes, in answer to my printed queries: —
I believe that if the lochs of Stenness and Harray
were properly looked after and preserved by an Angling Association,
they would be the finest fishing lochs in Scotland, both for sea and
loch trout.
But without a District Board or an Angling
Association, what is the use of statutory prohibitions of
destructive and unfair modes of fishing 1 What are laws good for if
there is no one to enforce them 1 They are a mere dead letter, not
likely to be respected or observed by those whose interest, or
fancied interest, it is to break them.
Mr. Heddle, the proprietor of the island of Hoy, an
experienced angler, agrees with the views above expressed, and he
stated to me when I was in Orkney that no good has, as yet, resulted
from bringing the Orkneys under the operation of the Salmon Fishery
Acts of 1862 and 1868. No District Board, no Association of
Proprietors has been formed, no prosecutions have been
instituted—matters go on just as before. With regard to the Lochs of
Stenness and Harray, he believes that nothing short of the killing
of the spawning fish and extensive ottering could have so much
reduced the fishing on such great expanses of water with such
wonderful natural capabilities. Fair fishing would never do it.
Twenty-one years ago his father and he killed so many fish in
Stenness in one day that they did not like to take any more. There
were between 100 and 200, all good-sized trout. Four years ago he
fished the same loch and got only about half a dozen fish. One of
these, however, was 2b lbs.
Mr. Gould, chamberlain to the Earl of Zetland,
corroborates these views. He told me that the Acts had done no good
as regarded the great lakes of Stenness and Harray, in which
poaching was as rife as before the Acts were made to apply to the
islands. A clause should be put into an Act of Parliament absolutely
prohibiting ottering. Mr. Gould is of opinion that the right of
salmon fishing, or rather sea-trout fishing, in the Lochs of
Stenness and Harray belongs to the Earl of Zetland or to the Crown.
He maintains that the Harray lairds are not udallers, and that their
riparian rights give them a title to yellow trout fishing only.
In the autumn of 1880 a public inquiry was held by
the Commissioners of Scotch Salmon Fisheries at Kirkwall, Stromness,
and the Bridge of Waitlie, in connection with the proposal to erect
the Orkney Islands into a Fishery District, and some interesting and
important evidence was laid before them about the fisheries in
Stenness and Harray, and the sea-trout fisheries in the Orkneys
generally. With regard to the size attained by the Orcadian
sea-trout, one witness stated that he had heard of one caught in a
net, 21½ lbs. weight, and had seen one of 12b lbs. ; and another
witness stated that he had seen one of 14 lbs. One of the witnesses
examined at Kirkwall said, that about six years ago there was a
curious epidemic among the trout in the Loch of Harray, when most of
the fish died. He went down to the banks of the loch one day and
found them lying dead all along the shore. There was no appearance
of any fungoid growth on any of the fish. The season had been a very
hot and dry one. Next year there were very few fish. The majority of
the witnesses examined agreed as to the evil effects of the
destructive modes of fishing practised in Lochs Stenness and Harray,
such as set-lines, sweep-nets, and fixed nets, otters, and the
non-observance of any annual close time. In consequence of this the
sea-trout and loch-trout are less numerous, and the individual fish
are smaller in size than they used to be. In short, the tendency of
the evidence taken by the Commissioners clearly proved the evil
effects of allowing fishing unrestricted as to season or implements,
and the necessity of imposing some restrictions. One witness deponed
that he had seen eight or nine otters being used on the Loch of
Harray one day, and the next day two on the Loch of Stenness.
Another said that during the last five years there had been a marked
falling off in the fishings, which he imputed to the use of
sweep-nets, lines (each with several hooks) set during the night and
drawn in the morning, and nets stretched and fixed across the whole
breadth of the water above and below the Bridges of Waithe and
Brogar, so as to intercept the passing fish. These nets have a small
mesh, like herring-nets, and are set, not only in the lochs, but
also across the burns running into them, where they do a great deal
of mischief, especially during the spawning season. Another witness,
who had then (1880) known the Loch of Stenness for thirty years,
said, that when he first knew it there was nothing but fair fishing
with rod and line. He also said that he had, long ago, killed thirty
sea-trout with rod and line in that loch in three hours. They
weighed from 3 lbs. downwards. Such a take would be impossible now
owing to the otters, set-lines, and nets; but if a close time were
enacted and enforced, and the lochs protected, such are their
natural advantages that the fishings would recover in a few years. |