Miramichi Season Ending Blog October 17

Karl Furlaga, fishing out of Country Haven, caught this beautiful, bright salmon in the rising water during the closing days of the 2020 Miramichi season.

On October 15th the remainder of the Miramichi River system closed to fishing for the year – the headwaters closed on September 30.  There are bodies of water like the Bartibog and Tabusintac that are open until October 30th, but everything on both branches of the Miramichi system is now closed.  It was for all Americans, as my fishing friend Ralph Vitale said, the season that never was.  But even though we couldn’t witness it in person, it was really quite an interesting year, and hopefully will end up as a good one for salmon spawning.

The early season had some lovely salmon like this one from the Orr Pool by Adam Stone of NB.

Fishing conditions were the worst I have seen in my time on the river.  The problems came in two forms.  First, was the warm water.  It isn’t that 2020 was a record hot summer.  The average daily mean temperature for July was 20.1C/69F.  This number is about a one half a degree C warmer than the average July mean for the last 90 years, and cooler than the Julys of 1970 and 1990 – along with many others in between.  We did, though, get hit with a very unusual June heat wave, and the water really never got back to a good fishing temperature until well into August.

This angler was fishing long into the evening too. You can see the lights have come on for the night on the Blackville bridge.

The second problem, and frankly a much larger one than the temperature was the lack of rain.  We didn’t have a decent rain storm from early July right through until a couple of days before the end of the season.  Rain is important for a number of reasons: first it cools down the river and keeps it consistently cooler, and  second it encourages new fish to enter the river and fish already in it to move from pool to pool up the river, and to generally be more active.  These are the fish that will most eagerly take a fly.  The lack of rain kept fishing confined to only the better low water pools, and there are just not enough of them around for everyone to fish them.  Even in those pools, though, the fish get very stale, and without new recruits fishing can be poor – dour as the Scots call it.  Jason Curtis and my neighbor across the river from Campbell’s, Jody Newman, kept me supplied with pictures of the startling low river.  If you ever wanted to pull the plug on the river to study the bottom configurations this was the year as nature did it for you.  Many years since I have owned Campbell’s the lowest water we would see on the Blackville gauge was in the mid .5 meter range.  Up until 2018 I had only seen .4 readings once or twice before.  In 2018 we saw .38, and this year we saw .33.  Amazing!

Graphic of water height from mid June until the end of the season. It got low in June, had a little spike, and then was far below normal, sometimes incredibly low, from early August until the end of the season.

Deirdre Green fishing with Country Haven releases a beautiful salmon on the edge of darkness. Wish I could claim this photo as my own.

Fall fishing was very frustrating to anyone who didn’t have access to good low water pools, and even for them it wasn’t nearly as good as it could have been.  The water cooled off nicely in late August, but with the low water we were left with fish holding in the deep bottoms of the low water pools, and that was more or less it until later in September.  Beginning around the third week in September new fish started slowly entering the lower reaches of the river in spite of the low water.  Jason Curtis would say that it was their time and they were desperate.   All of a sudden there were a lot of fish in the river.  Byron Coughlin of Country Haven sent me an e-mail on October 6th, and told me that his long time guide Kenny Vickers said that: “Its been a long time since he has seen so many fish in every pool he goes to.”   Pictures were all over Facebook and lodge websites of smiling anglers with big Atlantic salmon, some of them very silvery in appearance.

Big Paul Hammond from NS was clearly very happy with this nice cock salmon from down in the Rapids.

Beginning late in the day on 10/13 it started to rain and nearly two inches fell quite uniformly over the Miramichi watershed by the next morning.  I like Jason Curtis’s recount of the morning of the 14th: “Brad, I had a fun morning down at Keenans. It was very cold but there were a lot of fish on the move. Probably saw 15-20, most all jumping but one or two rolling.  I saw one very large bright salmon jump on the Campbell side with the rest being pretty dark. It’s funny the way they were jumping, most all were like very hard and aggressive porpoises. On the move I guess. They were below the pool, in the pool and above. Very happy fish finally getting some water to move in. I did not land any, lost one salmon after a minute or so but had several takes and follows. I used a #4 chief and stayed with it.”  One of my angling buddies Pete Howell described Jason’s comments along with some photos Jason provided of the rising, wind and rain-swept river as being  “evocative,” and I think he is right.

An evocative scene indeed at Keenan’s and Campbell’s.  An October day on the Miramichi with big fall salmon on the move.

Jason’s well-chewed Chief Needahbeh.

It was easy for me to see myself standing on the Keenan shore, with my hood tilted against the wind and rain, see the eyeballs of those big fall salmon as they moved aggressively upstream against the rising river, and waiting for that occasional jolt as one of them latched onto my fly.

Jason Curtis fished this Chief Needahbeh all day on 10/14. A normal fall would have had three or four raises like that one, and each would have provided some level of action.  In retrospect, though, we came perilously close to ending the season on a bone dry river, but we didn’t.

 

Mahoney Brook on Cains the last day of the season.

Yesterday – the day after the season closed – I got e-mails from Byron Coughlin and Jason Curtis.  Byron said that his friends fishing for stripers well down in the estuary were still reporting silvery salmon jumping, and Jason said that he had seen a strong number of fish, with a good percentage quite silvery, leaping in front of his house in Blackville on their way upriver to spawn.  This showing of strength in the second half of the season is important to me.  While we don’t have government trap information to analyze this fall, and even some of the traps that we did have such as the Dungarvon Barrier were really frustrated this year by terribly low water that no doubt warped their results, we do know from all possible eye-witness accounts, that the early run of salmon was the best in years.  So now we know that the whole 2020 season was strong.

Today on 10/17 the Miramichi is expecting another inch plus of rain tonight and rain forecast for Tuesday 10/20.  It looks like the drought is coming to an end.  This is the beginning of spawning time for the salmon.  Most of them will spawn over the next two weeks and essentially all will be finished within the next four.  It appears they are going to have good water for this all-important annual event.  Let’s now hope that nature doesn’t overdue a good thing.

Otter Brook pouring into the Brophy Pool on October 14. Fish were there!

With this season over there is nothing to do now but start to make our plans for next year.  Hopefully between improved treatments, a potential vaccine, and just the disease running its course Covid will not be the problem it was in 2020.  I do have a program in mind for winter blogs that may make the wait a little more fun.  I have my camp logbook here at home, plus I have 7 years of past blogs.  I think that I will read over these records and pick a few of the most memorable events that I have witnessed on the river during that time.  I’ve got a lot of digital salmon fishing photos to go along with them too, so it should be fun.

Brothers and New Brunswick guides Jeff and Jason Curtis quickly switched gears to the famous NB bird season.

What can we do today to help the Miramichi salmon?  I would ask you to take the action that I did earlier today when I received this letter from the coalition of conservation groups and First Nations bands that are trying to get the government to issue the permits necessary to remove the non-native, illegally stocked smallmouth bass with rotenone.  You can read all about it and then take action at this link: https://www.miramichismallmouth.com/take-action.

By the way.  This e-mail was set up for Canadian residents, but I see no reason why Americans shouldn’t comment.  In many cases we are seasonal residents and property owners, and in many other cases we have long supported businesses including fishing lodges all along the river.  Canadians who own property and pay taxes in the American south would sure expect to comment on government work in their back yards.  I am confident that our comments will be welcome.  None-the-less you need to use a CA zip code or your e-mail will be kicked back by the software.  Feel free to use mine at Campbell’s if you want.  Here it is: E9B 1L2

Also, the message in the form can be customized just by typing in the box.  I would not hesitate to tell them that you are an American citizen, and explain briefly your interest in the Miramichi such as fishing there for many years, being a club member, property owner etc.

Jason’s bird dogs faithfully watching over the Murray Pool on the Cains River.

Many thanks to Byron Coughlin and Jason Curtis for the bulk of the photos I have used in this year’s blogs. 

Want to receive your own free notices of future Miramichi Salmon Blogs as I write them?  Just take a second and click on Subscribe Here in the fish pictured below.

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9 Comments on “Miramichi Season Ending Blog October 17

  1. I echo your thanks to Byron and Jason for the photos they provided all season. And thanks to you Brad for keeping us connected to the happenings on the Miramichi while we were prevented from being there in person. Let’s all hope for an open border by April 2021.

  2. I sure hope they can open for 2021…I can’t go another year without my Miramichi fix……only missed one year before this one…in over 30 years……..guess I’ll have to go four times next year to make up for this year…I had no idea how much I would miss the river and my friends…….I’ll swim the St.Croix next year if I have to………..take care all, and see you on the river soon…Mac

  3. Hello Brad,

    Thanks for adding me to your email list. It’s really neat to get your blog and the images.

    Have a safe Winter and may the virus abate so the Border will reopen.

    Best Regards,
    Jon

  4. Brad:
    My rod is rusty !!!!! I’m going to start tying fall flies in anticipation of a stellar year in 2021. Hope you have a good fall/winter season and do all the fixing you always wanted to do but never had the time. Look foward to future blogs and will be in touch. Thanks, rick Seder.

    • Rick – Jason and Darrell did a lot of work around the camps and on the grounds this past summer. Everything should be ship shape. One of the things they did was to put a new glass railing on the cocktail deck at Campbell’s which I’m sure everyone will enjoy. Brad

  5. Hi Brad,

    Happy Belated Birthday! And thanks as always for the update. I did try to respond to the Ministers and Director General on Friday by following the link and using the form. However, it wouldn’t accept my US zip code, so I emailed them directly, copying and pasting the message text and adding my own two cents. However, I see today someone changed the zip code to
    a non-required field, so non-residents should now be able to respond leaving the zip code field blank.

    Looking forward to the 2021 season and praying they’ll let us in next June! Be well.

    Doug

    • Doug – thanks for the comments. Please say hello to Senor Cheep if you see him. I hope all is well with you too. Brad

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