1 4 SALMON. 



The fish pass every practical)le obstruction till they 

 arrive at their spawning ground, some early, and some 

 late in the season. The sj^awning in the river Tweed 

 continues throughout the autumn, winter, and beginning 

 of spring. It commences about September, and I have 

 caught full roeners as late as May ; but the principal 

 months are December, January, and February. Mr. 

 John Crerar, who was fisherman to the Duke of Atholl 

 for sixty years, and who left behind him some pages in 

 manuscript on the habits of the Salmon, has recorded in 

 them that fish full of mature roe may be caught in the 

 Tay in every month in the year. 



The fish become weak and wasted before the spawning 

 time, and change in colour. The male loses its silvery hue, 

 and is deeply tinged in the cheeks and body with orange, 

 and is also dappled with red spots, when, in the upper parts 

 of the Tweed, it is sometimes called a " Soldier." The 

 under jaw also becomes longer, and a cartilaginous sub- 

 stance grows from the point of it, and extends upwards till 

 it buries itself in the nose above. In this state the fish is 

 very thin in the back, and altogether much wasted ; 

 but its flesh is sometimes eatable, and at any rate 

 infinitely superior to that of a fish which has newly 

 spawned. The female, when ready to spawn, is dark in 

 colour, and her flesh is soft and worthless. 



Salmon are led by instinct to select such places for 

 depositing their spawn as are the least likely to be af- 

 fected by the floods. These are the broad ^^arts of the 

 river, where the Avater runs swift and shallow, and has a 

 free passage over an even bed. Here they either select 

 an old spawning place, a sort of trough left in the 



