The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Fresh blow for Perth as another shop to close

PD Malloch store on High Street to shut its doors after 149 years in business

- ROSS GARDINER rogardiner@thecourier.co.uk

A Perth sporting shop, whose founder shaped the angling industry on the River Tay, will close permanentl­y this month after more than a century in business.

The PD Malloch store on the High Street, which specialise­s in fishing and hunting equipment, is due to shut on February 26.

The business, started by Peter Duncan Malloch and his brother James 149 years ago, is the latest in a growing list of highprofil­e names which have pulled out of Perth in recent weeks.

Department store Beales, St John’s Shopping Centre’s pop-up Disney Store and clothing retailers Gap have all announced closure plans since the beginning of January.

Elaine Buntin, who runs PD Malloch with her husband John, blamed the closure on falling trade.

She said there had been a general decline in business since the couple took over the reins in 2005.

“It’s difficult to get young people to come into the shop,” she said.

“I think they are probably more interested in video games than fishing and shooting. It is also time-consuming to get a teaching certificat­e and things like that.

“There’s no other store for fishing in Perth. There are ones in Glasgow and Edinburgh and I think in Dunfermlin­e as well, but those are further away.

“You just need to come to the High Street in Perth to see for yourself.

“Possibly looking at the rates could be an option but I don’t really know what the answer is.”

Perth City Centre councillor Peter Barrett said the firm’s presence in Perth will be sorely missed.

The Liberal Democrat said: “This is sad news. Mallochs are a piece of Perth’s history.

“Records show Mallochs have been a presence on the High Street since 1880 as manufactur­ers of first-class fishing rods and tackle and taxidermis­ts.”

PD Malloch also establishe­d the Tay Salmon Fisheries Company in 1899, buying up the fishing rights along the river and estuary and creating one of the biggest operations of its kind. That business folded in 1996.

Mr Malloch was the first to study the importance of scale markings on salmon, and proved they could explain every period the fish had spent in river or sea.

When Georgina Ballantine landed the largest-ever line-caught salmon in Britain, it was with a PD Malloch rod.

The 64lb catch was hooked near Caputh in Perthshire in 1922 and immortalis­ed by Malloch’s taxidermy team before being fed to patients and staff at Perth Royal Infirmary.

 ?? Picture: Steve MacDougall. ?? The PD Malloch store specialise­s in fishing and hunting equipment.
Picture: Steve MacDougall. The PD Malloch store specialise­s in fishing and hunting equipment.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom