If you have placed an order via the Fishing Passport, please fill in you catch returns via your user account.
To give feedback on other fisheries or for Wild Stream Permit holders click here.
Please use this search facility if you only want to view a certain type of report.
For example, if you are interested in salmon fishing only, select "Salmon" in the Fishing Type box, leaving the other boxes blank and click "Search". All the salmon fishing reports will then be listed, with the latest at the top.
Please use the other options for more detailed searches or ignore the search facility and scroll down to see all reports.
Page 4 of 11
ID:46820
G. S. from Bury St Edmonds
Friday 2 August 2019 (6 years ago)
Area:Upper Wye
Beat:Clettwr
Fishing:Trout (River)
No. of Anglers:1
River looking good despite low levels. Certainly changed since my last visit. It’s nice to see a river left to do its own thing and see natural processes taking place. Yes, it’s makes for challenging progress let alone fishing but this makes the Clettwr a bit of a one off. Fished tenkara using a 3m rod, maybe could have done with something a little longer but managed ok. Simple stiff hackle kebari worked the best with a switch to a soft hackle jun kebari showing the fish wanted that too but had trouble connecting.
A lot of v small fish about, good for the future.
As is the diverse and complex habitat.
Stayed at the Rising Sun in Pandy as usual, nice central location and just a great place to stay.
12 Trout
ID:47051
D. C. from Accrington
Wednesday 17 July 2019 (6 years ago)
Area:Upper Wye
Beat:Clettwr
Fishing:Trout (River)
No. of Anglers:1
If you ever watched the film Jurassic Park and were upset that they didn’t offer trout fishing trips there, then here’s your chance. A wild place with challenging fishing. Conditions were very tough – genuinely gin clear water, marble-smooth bedrock and little to hide your approach other than stealth and cunning. Camouflage wouldn’t be out of the question… Every pool, run, riffle and glide held fish, but most were spooked once you stepped within 20ft of them. Each little stretch differs from the previous, and each requires a considered plan of attack. I don’t want to take too much of the magic away, so won’t give a blow-by-blow account of the day; suffice to say that the fishing was excellent and the setting otherworldly. Not too many fish compared to previous days on other streams in the area, but each fish was a genuine achievement.
25 Trout
ID:45508
D. G. from Hereford
Tuesday 18 June 2019 (6 years ago)
Area:Upper Wye
Beat:Clettwr
Fishing:Trout (River)
No. of Anglers:1
Late p.m. & evening. My first visit to the Clettwr. You'd normally have to go to the Amazon for this sort of experience. Water clear and plenty of it. 3 trout on goldhead nymphs completed an entertaining few hours.
3 Trout
ID:45159
J. R. from Innsworth
Friday 31 May 2019 (6 years ago)
Area:Upper Wye
Beat:Clettwr
Fishing:Trout (River)
No. of Anglers:1
I made my annual trip up the Clettwr gorge (while the family enjoyed the Hay festival) at the end of a damp and windy week. While there was some light rain in the late morning, it was largely dry and overcast with a little of the strong wind making its way to the bottom of the valley as a gentle downstream breeze.
The approach seems more overgrown than last year and fallen trees meant that I ended up sliding down into the stream bed itself perhaps 80m before the start of the beat and walking up from there. There are a few more fallen trees in the lower half of the beat - a particularly big fall is starting to block the flow pretty much due North of Crickadarn. There is a lot of detritus being held by the handful of trunks across the stream and, although it can still flow through a decent gap on the left, another winter or two might see that close up.
Aside from that, the beat continues to have a large number of excellent pools that require a bit of a hands and knees approach but still give decent room to swing a rod. The lower part of the gorge is easier to fish that the upper half which opens out with pasture on either side and trees growing lower down so many more branches getting in the way.
The fishing was as good as ever - plenty of trout in most of the pools prone to a couple of acrobatic leaps immediately on the hook being set. I managed 11 to hand with about twice that being lost after a few seconds of head shaking. Both nymphs and dry flies worked well in dark colours with most fish being around 8" but one coming in at 10". The pool below the ruined water mill where a tiny tributary cascades in was a particular hotspot with some big looking fish moving on the surface however, despite half a dozen splashy rises and a couple of strong pulls on the nymph, I was unable to connect with any of them.
Another lovely day on a great beat, thanks WUF.
11 Trout
ID:44462
R. L. from Tenbury Wells
Tuesday 7 May 2019 (6 years ago)
Area:Upper Wye
Beat:Clettwr
Fishing:Trout (River)
No. of Anglers:1
I could not get to the beat until 4pm which was too late in the day . Access was frustrating. The footpath is easy to identify, but no white posts to be seen. The obvious path going down towards the stream, continues for some hundreds of yards, but is then obstructed by fallen trees, and stops. There is a fork near the top of the path which takes you along the top of the wood for maybe 400 yards and eventually down to a bridge over the stream, where I then started. Some fly about, but no fish rising. An adventurous beat with so much fallen timber to circumnavigate. A wonderful gorge.
1 Trout
ID:43499
S. C. from Pontypridd
Saturday 23 March 2019 (7 years ago)
Area:Upper Wye
Beat:Clettwr
Fishing:Trout (River)
No. of Anglers:1
2 trout on weighted pheasant tail nymph. Beautiful morning with river level quite high but water crystal clear. Spooked several fish. Stunning spot.
2 Trout
ID:41960
L. R. from Swansea
Sunday 30 September 2018 (7 years ago)
Area:Upper Wye
Beat:Clettwr
Fishing:Trout (River)
No. of Anglers:1
Well, where do I even start. It is a fantastic beat to fish, but you absolutely need waders. I thought I could get away with just waterproof walking boots but the banks are steep and overgrown beyond imagination, meaning spooked fish and poor accessibility. The ONLY way up the beat is up through the stream, nipping onto the bank if and when you need. On top of this, there are no white posts to follow to the start of the beat, so make sure you take the path AWAY from the village and take the left hand fork when it splits in two. There are fallen trees and times when the path looks like its run out but keep pushing on until you get down closer to the river.
I spent all day climbing, crawling and sliding on my hands and knees to try and land a fish, and somehow in the end I managed to catch one. I did hook another one out of a nice deep pool by the bridge on a nymph but he wriggled himself free (sigh). Never the less, I threw on an Olive wooly bugger as a last resort to sniff out any territorial/ferociously hungry trout and managed to take a beautiful little 6 incher out of a deep pool who smashed the fly, day saved.
This beat is PROPER wild fishing. If you are not prepared to approach it like a military op in stealth on your hands and knees, with a few scratches in the brambles on the way, then go elsewhere.
All in all I will be back, with waders, and cannot wait to do so. Beautiful wild fishing and a point to prove to myself of catching more fish.
1 Trout
ID:40759
S. E. from Ty Croess
Tuesday 28 August 2018 (7 years ago)
Area:Upper Wye
Beat:Clettwr
Fishing:Trout (River)
No. of Anglers:1
The beat may look rough and overgrown, however once you make your way down the steep banks there’s plenty of casting room. Plenty of trout in the river, but very low water made fishing difficult. Several fish hooked but none landed. I will visit again when there are better conditions.
ID:38983
J. S. from Oxted
Saturday 16 June 2018 (7 years ago)
Area:Upper Wye
Beat:Clettwr
Fishing:Trout (River)
No. of Anglers:1
A really wild beat. Loads of trees across the stream which look quite recent falls.
Water level was very low and fish easily spooked. Managed to Induce a few splashy takes but nothing that came to hand.
ID:38744
M. D. from Walton on Thames
Monday 4 June 2018 (7 years ago)
Area:Upper Wye
Beat:Clettwr
Fishing:Trout (River)
No. of Anglers:1
We approached this beat with some trepidation, having read the reports that suggested a combination of fishing and mountaineering skills would be required to succeed. The most difficult part was in fact the path down to the start of the beat, which is steep in places and has become very overgrown over the final 100 yards. A days work with saws and loppers could make access to the beat much easier. However, once we reached the stream a couple of 70 year olds were able to make progress upstream, and we were rewarded with a series of delightful pools, although casting a fly was always a challenge as virtually all then pools have trees overhanging at some point.
We worked our way to the mid point of the beat where two small side streams enter on the right bank. Not all the pools produced fish, but we did rise fish in a lot of the pools, and the final tally was five beautifully marked wild brown trout up to about 10 inches, although far more were missed. In the final pool, I rose and missed a much larger fish which looked to be at least a pound.
It had taken us about 3 hours to reach this point, so we decided to stop and find the road back to Erwood, which is possible by climbing out of the gorge at the point where the second side stream comes in.
This is a delightful beat, but is definitely challenging, particularly for us older anglers, but well worth the effort.
5 Trout
Page 4 of 11