Scot DeBruyne is employed by the owners of Årøy. The guide is included when You fish Årøy (max 4 rods). He was not there last year due to Covid though. The food is fantastic as well.
Ernst Horn it’s got nothing to do with the food source in the juvenile stage, it’s the fight for spawning grounds, the aggressive nature of the pink salmon, and the possibility of new diseases, that can wipe out Atlantic salmon. There’s no reason for the, already diminished Norwegian salmon to be submitted to experiment with an intruder like that. They belong at the Pacific coast.
@@wonderwatch2239 Atlantic salmon are more aggressive than all other salmon. Researchers over in the Pacific rivers found that out. The pink salmon eats different food to the Atlantic salmon. The pinks have been around since the 50s when they were introduced into the Barents basin by the Russians. The main threat to Atlantic salmon are us - fish farms, nets, trawlers, taking fish, handling fish wrong, etc. If pink salmon were a threat to Atlantic salmon why have Atlantic salmon become established in the Pacific? Here they were able to compete with 5 species of salmon as well as steelhead. Pink salmon also spawn earlier than Atlantic salmon so the pinks will not be about to affect the Atlantic salmons spawning. As for the eutrophication argument most Atlantic salmon die after spawning so the pinks will only slightly increase the amount of nutrients added to the river.
@@aaronwilliamwallace Do you have any serious notion of how invasive species and food chains work? Food chains are finely tuned over thousands of years like a puzzle. Every single thing from temperature, diseases, immune systems, all predators, all prey down to microscopic's ,oxygen levels, keep things in perfect balance. Every species a piece of the puzzle, adding pinks is like adding a extra piece to full 100/100 puzzle....... Um where are atlantic salmon ESTABLISHED in the pacific? Honestly im curious, as ive fished it my whole life. There's been many fish pen escapes around. Which lead to atlantics spreading a disease prv specific to them, but ive never heard of a truly established wild population running with native chins,coho,etc. Saying'' it works on west coast'' means nothing anyways. The water temps,the rivers, the food sources , predators etc are often different. These things normally regulate salmon like coho,chinook etc, the birds,seals,whales, temperatures,diseases, immune systems obstacles,other fish EVERYTHING are designed to keep the species in perfect harmony. stopping them from over breeding or dying out..... I can't reiterate enough how many things come together to make a food chain. Just one different thing can mean a population explosion or die out for a invasive species. There is 0 chance they don't have at least a slight impact. The reason there surviving could be any of these reasons or a combination of them. Sometimes its the temp is more optimal (again like EVERYTHING in there normal environment it'd be regulated so they don't over breed) could be prey isn't used to there speed, could be they jump the falls easier, i think you get the point... The notion that atlantic salmon is the most aggressive is also silly. Such a thing would vary with temperatures,size,diet,hormones,envirorment etc. In science you can't just make insanely wide sweeping claims. They have a hard enough time measuring fish speed. Very few species have true numbers, The environment and species vary so much. in the credit river in the great lakes its been suggested by biologists the brown trout need to go because they dominate spawning grounds. Harming the reintroduction of the once native lake ontario atlantic salmon. Though sea trout get along just fine with atlantics.,, the environment,size, etc makes a difference Again if your suggesting they'd completely dominate the spawning grounds,. This would depend again on numbers(pink salmon run in massive numbers), size,kypes, that specific fishes mood, etc and if they don't totally dominate its less atlantic's even if its just a few. Thus a negative impact on a native basically endangered fish. Btw
Top Gun Norwegian specialists sharing their knowledge with us!! What a honour. Thanks Guys. Tusen Takk!
These guys are awesome, definitely want to see more of these 2 on the Chanel 😎
Epic Episode Gutter, Hils fra Australia
I love it! A South African guiding in Norway!!
A South African guide in Norway! What a good surprise.
Do you know which tour guide company they used?
@@SpeachBubbleWRX you buy the fishing straight from the estate.
Really beautiful water and informative tips on traditional swinging!
Artig å se dere på denne kanalen og😎
Again great video 😁 I'm shocked by the bridges, really amazing place, beautiful nature. It must be a great feeling to flyfishing there ☺
amazing! more salmon videos please!
Have you checked this one out? ruclips.net/video/VQgYUGBBjlM/видео.html
@@harikkebn Super. I have subscribed now. Really enjoy the salmon fishing, keep it up guys
Awesome! Thanks a lot! 👍👍👍
Good job guys
Your eyes having tics Anders?! 😂😂
Nice film, nice river! 😁
Good video😎
Griiiisedeilig
Does anyone know which tour guide they used? Keen to head there this year if possible and the South African in Norway is unreal!
Scot DeBruyne is employed by the owners of Årøy. The guide is included when You fish Årøy (max 4 rods). He was not there last year due to Covid though. The food is fantastic as well.
@@bjornarneriise836 thanks for the info
There's always a South African around. Nice :)
Nicee👍
👍👍👍
Song name 0.06-0.20 .?
I år drar dokker til målselva ;)
:-D that would be exactly my river. If thousands of men manage to not fall into it me the highlord of clumpsiness will do :-D
Should never be rubbing or touching the fishes eyes ….
Tired of these competition videos with rock music... Its nature fgs..not a disco event.... And is the size of the fish so flickan important...
Why would you kill that fish i dont get it why he did that does somebody ?
Ernst Horn it’s got nothing to do with the food source in the juvenile stage, it’s the fight for spawning grounds, the aggressive nature of the pink salmon, and the possibility of new diseases, that can wipe out Atlantic salmon. There’s no reason for the, already diminished Norwegian salmon to be submitted to experiment with an intruder like that.
They belong at the Pacific coast.
@@wonderwatch2239
Atlantic salmon are more aggressive than all other salmon. Researchers over in the Pacific rivers found that out. The pink salmon eats different food to the Atlantic salmon. The pinks have been around since the 50s when they were introduced into the Barents basin by the Russians. The main threat to Atlantic salmon are us - fish farms, nets, trawlers, taking fish, handling fish wrong, etc.
If pink salmon were a threat to Atlantic salmon why have Atlantic salmon become established in the Pacific? Here they were able to compete with 5 species of salmon as well as steelhead.
Pink salmon also spawn earlier than Atlantic salmon so the pinks will not be about to affect the Atlantic salmons spawning. As for the eutrophication argument most Atlantic salmon die after spawning so the pinks will only slightly increase the amount of nutrients added to the river.
@@aaronwilliamwallace Do you have any serious notion of how invasive species and food chains work? Food chains are finely tuned over thousands of years like a puzzle. Every single thing from temperature, diseases, immune systems, all predators, all prey down to microscopic's ,oxygen levels, keep things in perfect balance. Every species a piece of the puzzle, adding pinks is like adding a extra piece to full 100/100 puzzle....... Um where are atlantic salmon ESTABLISHED in the pacific? Honestly im curious, as ive fished it my whole life. There's been many fish pen escapes around. Which lead to atlantics spreading a disease prv specific to them, but ive never heard of a truly established wild population running with native chins,coho,etc.
Saying'' it works on west coast'' means nothing anyways. The water temps,the rivers, the food sources , predators etc are often different. These things normally regulate salmon like coho,chinook etc, the birds,seals,whales, temperatures,diseases, immune systems obstacles,other fish EVERYTHING are designed to keep the species in perfect harmony. stopping them from over breeding or dying out..... I can't reiterate enough how many things come together to make a food chain. Just one different thing can mean a population explosion or die out for a invasive species. There is 0 chance they don't have at least a slight impact.
The reason there surviving could be any of these reasons or a combination of them. Sometimes its the temp is more optimal (again like EVERYTHING in there normal environment it'd be regulated so they don't over breed) could be prey isn't used to there speed, could be they jump the falls easier, i think you get the point...
The notion that atlantic salmon is the most aggressive is also silly. Such a thing would vary with temperatures,size,diet,hormones,envirorment etc. In science you can't just make insanely wide sweeping claims. They have a hard enough time measuring fish speed. Very few species have true numbers, The environment and species vary so much. in the credit river in the great lakes its been suggested by biologists the brown trout need to go because they dominate spawning grounds. Harming the reintroduction of the once native lake ontario atlantic salmon. Though sea trout get along just fine with atlantics.,, the environment,size, etc makes a difference
Again if your suggesting they'd completely dominate the spawning grounds,. This would depend again on numbers(pink salmon run in massive numbers), size,kypes, that specific fishes mood, etc and if they don't totally dominate its less atlantic's even if its just a few. Thus a negative impact on a native basically endangered fish.
Btw
Worst fly tv show ever. Don’t waste your time