 Hi, rinneis ym Mhwyl Nygwyd, mae gennym ni'n gweithio gyda'r ddechrau ysbu yma yma'r teimlo'r cymryd. Gweithio gweithio, mae'n gwahog eich gwir o'r snes ym mhawr, ond mae'r cyfwyr yn gweithio. Mae gennym ni'n gwir o'n gwir o'r ddweud o'r gwahog ysbu, o'r sredd i'r zefrishrod 15 ysgol. Mae gennym ni'n gwir o'r gweithio. Mae'n gwir i'r sredd, mae'n gweithio. Rwy'n Mae'r ystylo区ietoedd yn fwy o'n gwneud am ymgyrch o'r cynnwys, mae'r dyfodol yn iawn mor i greu'r ddon yn fwy o'r potgau o'r phorn. Mae'n goysiect o'r ffordd. Fe drosedd gweithio'n gwneud am yr llud ynglyn i heb ar y gyfer yng Nghymys Ilyw Llefwyr. Mae wneud am hynny o'r ffordd a'n gwneud i'r un gweithio i'r llun i'r William Manlyw. Mae'r iawn a gennym i gyrnunio i'r llun i'r llun i'r llun i'r llun i'r llun i'r hwn. I hope they have a great holiday. Catch a few fish. Offani day on the River Spay. I'm with my very good friend Clare Mersonen. Good morning Clare. Good morning Anne. We're so lucky today. We are talking on the spay. So we came from the T because I managed to beat on the T Maclew and I put it on the house. But I love the spay. I mean I love all rivers and swathlin but the T is spay. I think they are my favourite. And this is your second time here isn't it? Yes. And I hope it's not the last one now. But last year when you came you did actually have some fun with fish on. I have a ffinnock. You felt like a big one but nearly was a little ffinnock but still the heart was beating. Which is what you want on a funding day. And that's the most important. And also as well is that it is just a beautiful beat that we are on. We are so lucky. The mountain will be snow. There is a sun. And now we need a fish. We do. And what are you actually using today? You've got a... One of my favourite is my vision catapult. Fought in foot. And I use pretty much everywhere in vision reel and reel AFS pump. And I've just changed the first force. The first sinking tip. And it's like a caledonia fly. A caledonia fly. Nice and heavy. It's beautiful in the water. And I had earlier on something more orangey. I thought let's go for black and yellow. Very much so. So let's... We're going fishing. Tight lines. Tight lines. And what are your top tips for salmon fishing in springtime Tom? Well I would say one of the big things is that suddenly you're facing sink tips, heavier lines and bigger flies from when you finished up at the end of the field. And then just get a wee bit practising before you actually hit the river. Just get a bit more used to it. Would you actually recommend going on say a one day course? Cos I know you do some one day taster that will refresh your days. People that's not familiar with that type of fishing or casting, they don't do any harm. Rather than plodding away through the year. It's just about loading the rod and learning to load that rod up and put that fly so that it's safe. It's pretty handy. The wind's a huge factor in casting. You know anybody that's learning all these different casts so that you make sure they enjoyable and they matter what the conditions are because they're dangerous things and we should be wearing glasses. I know speaking about that but... Hang on, there you go. Hold on to my rod. Am I okay? I've got glasses on. Thank you. Here we are again at the end of a really great opening day in the River Spay. I tend to love this opening of the river. I've always done, since I was a young boy actually, I loved coming down and just getting the feeling of the river after spending the winter. I'm thinking about it all. And nowadays we've come up here at the dolphin. It's a sort of middle beat on the River Spay. And I think at this time of the year, early spring, we've got a great chance of catching a fish pretty much anywhere along the length of the river to be quite honest. So we've come up to this fantastic beat with a whole load of friends and we just have a great fun day. Looking forward what I tend to do is think about my spring fishing in three different categories. I think about the early spring fishing, which is right now. So I mean if I go in here today and I catch a few kelts and I'm not actually looking, I'm not physically looking for a spring fish today. However on the Spay here by the end of March, I'm coming down here and I'm looking for a fish. So that's getting into the middle part of the spring fishing. And then as March rolls into April, April rolls into May. That's coming to high season spring fishing, so my tactics change, everything's great. And it's totally different fishing. You've got big runs of multi-sea winter fish coming and you've got people coming from all over the world to enjoy this fabulous, fabulous scenery and nature that we have in the River Spay here. It is just a fabulous place. When we move on from the spring to the summer fishing, that brings with it all different aspects of fishing and the nature changes again into the autumn fishing and so it brings circle all the way around and we've got fish here at every time of the year for everyone to enjoy. So again we're on the tulcan beat at the River Spay here and this is actually where I take a lot of students that for a number of years we've had from Norway on an exchange visit and it's a fantastic programme we're running here because it gives students aged between 18 and 20 years old a chance to come and fish but not only to fish here but to learn to fish and learn about the culture, the history, all the techniques that we use when salmon fishing and for me it's just magic to encourage younger people on to the river and all the beats up and down the river are right behind this now so I think getting youngsters into the river, getting youngsters with a rod in their hand, showing them the right techniques, showing them how much fun it can be because it can be seriously good fun. Last year we had one of the guys in the Norwegian group, he caught a 23 pound salmon, he came here in April, caught a 23 pounder, he was delighted absolutely over the moon and it's seeing these guys with a smile on their face, introducing them to salmon fishing which we've got an abundance of not only here on the River Spay but all over Scotland it just is such a fantastic thing and it's something that I think from a health perspective too that young people should get out and enjoy because we've got an abundance here in Scotland.