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Sheelin lived up to it's reputation and produced excellent trout this week

Lough Sheelin Angling Report By Brenda Montgomery, IFI -July 25th – July 31st 2016

“Whether I caught fish or not, just the thrill of rolling out that line and watching my fly turnover has been good enough for me. That and the hundreds of treasured memories I have of this wonderful sport.” Curt Gowdy

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Peadar McAvinney, Monaghan with his trout of over 5lbs caught on a Peter at the back of Church Island

Lough Sheelin, reputed to be one of the best wild brown trout fisheries in the world, a kaleidoscopic stretch of natural magnificence, lived up to this reputation over the past seven days by producing some excellent trout catches and opportunities for its anglers.  Most anglers were caught unawares by the sudden change over from sluggish daytime fishing to areas of water that seemed alive with trout on the move.
Over the past number of weeks, fishing opportunities have been more or less restricted to the evening, dusk and darkness where Sheelin’s trout rose to the hatches of the night time sedges – the Murrough and Green Peter. Day time fishing was poor with little or no surface activity and then, last Tuesday it was as if someone flicked on a switch across this lake and it seemed as if a coded message was transmitted to the trout to start rising to the surface and Sheelin became a completely different place from the one it had been a few days previously.  One angler, caught up in the euphoria of good fishing said it put him in mind of Gary Barlow’s song ‘The greatest day’.
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Lough Sheelin – an ever-changing, challenging and memorable place to fish

 
Lough Sheelin is a constant mystery with nature continually reminding us that it is not us who make the rules. There is no fixed agenda, we can only speculate and follow in the general pattern and direction which this lake and its trout lead us in.
July and August, with water levels perhaps at their lowest and water temperatures approaching their highest, bright skies and the warmth of the summer (which at times isn’t that warm) combine to make these months usually the poorest of the season as fish gorge on fry and the trout season slows.  The trout locked on to the perch and roach fry caused no end of frustration to the angler and Sheelin’s only salvation up until this week had been the late evening rise with the arrival of the sedges and chironomids on the water with the moths and ants being a terrestrial species that offered a possible alternative in the trout’s menu. The ‘picking up’ of the fishing here normally doesn’t happen until later in August so lulled into the ‘usual’ this change of direction set anglers into a spin and as word got out, numbers fishing the lake increased from the previous Marie Celeste situation.

The Catches…

For the past number of days, fishing conditions have been excellent with good cloud cover, a bit of a surface wave and warmth, morning to night produced the goods as large numbers of fish were reported to be rising – pitching and boiling on the surface. Some anglers reported a continuous showing of bigger fish i.e in the 4lbs upward bracket but more reported great sport and catches around the 2 -3 lb mark and below.  There were good sedge hatches in certain areas of the lake, with these making their initial appearance by crawling in large numbers up the gunnels of the boats, the fish were rising and taking small sedge patterns in a size 14 -16.  It was noted with the Green Peter that trout were only taking this sedge when it was sitting on the water drying its wings and not on its eventual return to the water to lay eggs.
Most of the days during the week saw little or no insect activity on the lake, as one angler put it to me ‘the only fly on the water was my own’ but trout were still surfacing and in general taking what was on offer by the angler.  Anglers were fishing on the blind and trout were coming up to the artificial.  At the weekend anglers reported good and continuous rises but the trout frustratingly coming short of the dries all day.
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Selection of the catches
Gene Brady, Cavan – 1 trout at 3 ½ lbs on a Murrough in Goreport.
Brian McAvinney, Clones – 1 trout at 3 ½ lbs
Des Elliott, Dublin – 15 trout for the week, heaviest at 7lbs, 4 and 3 ½ lbs. Caught on wets – Sooty Olives, Golden Bumbles and Bibios.
John McGauren, Baileboro, Cavan – 1 trout at 5 ¼ on a Green Peter.
Frank Smith, Dublin – 5 trout, heaviest at 4 ½ lbs on Peters.
Mathew Sommers, Dublin – 16 trout for the week, caught on wets (Sooty Olives and Invictas) and dries (Peters and small sedge patterns)
Thomas Lynch, Cavan – 1 trout at 7lbs on a Green Peter.
Peadar McAvinney, Monaghan – 6 trout heaviest at 5 ½ lbs caught at the back of Church Island on a Green Peter.
Danny Murray, Dublin – fishing with Loughsheelinguiding – 9 trout on July 27th, heaviest at 3 ½ lbs wet and dry fly fishing.

The Competitions…

The McDonnell cup will be held on Saturday August 6th on Lough Sheelin, fishing from 11am till 6pm from Kilnahard pier.. This competition has been fished catch & release for the last four years, which proved to be very successful. Measures will be provided for all boats with the cup awarded to the longest fish. This competition is open to members of the club only but membership is available on the day
There will be lots of prizes on offer and this day is generally viewed as a great day out.
For further details contact Thomas Lynch @ 087 9132033.
image034The Lough Sheelin Trout Protection Association will be hosting a Youth angling day on Saturday August13th.. This popular event will include fly tying, fly casting and trout fishing followed by a Bar B Q. Casting instruction will be given by APGAI and participants will have the opportunity to catch fish and receive a small prize.
For further details contact Thomas Lynch @ 087 9132033.
Please remember anglers to abide by BYE-LAW 790 which strictly prohibits
• All trolling on the lake from March 1st to April 30th (inclusive).
• From May 1st to June 15th – no trolling between 7pm –6am and no trolling under engine between 6am – 7pm and
• June 16th – October 12th – no trolling under engine between 7pm – 6am.
• No trout less than 14 inches should be taken from the lake
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Caoimhe Sheridan, Cavan
It won’t work if you aren’t wearing it…
Water rarely gives second chances and a life jacket is just that – it saves your life, so we would implore anglers and all other users for their own safety as well as it being the law under
SI No 921 of 2005 – Pleasure Craft (Personal Flotation Devices and Operation) (Safety) Regulations 2005
This week, The Irish Times reported that ‘more than 100 people drown each year in Ireland’.
Capture
Please remember All anglers are required to have a Fishery Permit to fish Lough Sheelin which must be purchased BEFORE going out on the lake.
A catch & release policy is actively encouraged on the lake at all times
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The heaviest fish for this week was a trout of 7lbs 2ozs caught by Dublin angler Des Elliott on a Sooty Olive, Monday July 25th.
Total number of trout recorded : 71

The hatches and the flies…

It was a combination of fishing wets and dries, as no one particular method seemed to be leading the way, perhaps wets during the day and a mixture of both wets and dries for the evening. The Sooty Olives, Bibios, Green Tailed Peters, Dunkeld and Golden Olive Bumbles worked very well with Murrough and Green Peter patterns taking over as the evening light faded into dusk.  There are still copious amounts of fry around with a waning interest by the trout, a Silver Invicta or an Alexandra worked well in the shallows were trout were moving to the fry.


There was still no evidence of the Bloodworm but conditions although warm lacked that necessary calmness that this larvae demands. There was good bloodworm fishing on this lake during the mayfly phase which again contradicted the normal pattern for this chironomid larval appearance as this usually happens at the end of July so again Sheelin is bucking the trend this year as far as predictability is concerned.
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Lough Sheelin’s Welshman’s Button

There is still Murrough hatching but these sedges are dwindling in number and are being replaced by the Green Peter. There were good hatches of Peter particularly in and around Goreport in the late evening with anglers reporting good rises to this sedge.
Fishing in Chambers Bay last Saturday night was magical. A little light in the Northern sky was reflecting on the water and when there was a fish trout rising between you and that sky you were able to see them rising, the only bother being that you’d only know vaguely where your fly was.  Luck was a big element and when this was on your side on the strike, then the rest is history as you play and take in a Sheelin 4 lb plus.


There were large hatches of Caenis in the late evenings, living up to its nickname ‘the anglers curse’ by sticking to everything and requiring precision and minuscule fly imitations from the angler in order to stand any hope of catching trout taking this small insect. There were good hatches of this fly before sunrise but the requisite of flat calm didn’t happen. Early morning is a bit like fishing the evening backwards and requires a special kind of dedicated and motivated angler and on Sheelin we have a few larks who can be seen moving around Church Island and beyond as the sun rises at the very cusp of a new day.
The flies most used this week by anglers were the Murrough, a Small Brown Sedge (12-14 or smaller), Klinkhammers, , the Bibio, Gorgeous George, Yellow Humpies, the Fiery Brown Sedge, the Chocolate Drop, the Grey Flag, hoppers, the Hare’s Ear Sedge, the Alexandra, the Sooty Olive, the red-tailed Green Peter, the Sedge Invicta, the G&H Sedge,  the Black Pennel, the Claret Pennel, the Welshman’s Button, a variety of Bumbles and the Silver Invicta.
A combination that worked well this week was a small Golden Olive on the point, a Green Peter Muddler in the middle and a Claret Bumble on the top dropper.
The top dropper is the most important as this is the fly that attracts the trout so something bushy and vibrant should be the criteria when choosing the team of flies.
No one particular area on the lake stood out from the rest but at a push Chambers Bay, the back of Church Island and from Inchacup down to Sailors Garden seemed to feature most but again this lake’s fishing is steered by wind direction so areas differed from day to day as winds and weather changed.

A look around Sheelin


Brenda Montgomery IFI

Fishery officers held up at gunpoint after confronting masked thugs using illegal nets – Irish Independent

Fishery officers were held at gunpoint after they confronted masked thugs using illegal nets to catch salmon.
One of the officers received six stitches in a head wound after he was struck with a rock.

Investigating gardai suspect the men may be former members of the Provisional republican movement.

Inland fishery officers set up a surveillance operation after they spotted the illegal nets in the river Eany in Mountcharles, Co Donegal on Wednesday evening.

They were lying in wait in a clump of bushes around dawn on Thursday when at least two men, wearing balaclavas and paramilitary style clothing, arrived on the bank of the river….

Irish Independent 29/07/2016  Read the full article ‘Fishery officers held up at gunpoint after confronting masked thugs using illegal nets’

Independent 29.07.16

 

Cracking 5.5lb hybrid for late night angler

Owen Martin - 5.5lb Hybrid from River Erne
Owen Martin - 5.5lb Hybrid from River Erne

Owen Martin made the most of the bank holiday weekend by heading off to fish the River Erne.  He finished out the month of July by catching a cracking 5.5lb hybrid late at night at Belturbet.

Owen Martin - 5.5lb Hybrid from River Erne
Owen Martin – 5.5lb Hybrid from River Erne

See more on this area on our website at https://fishinginireland.info/coarse/north/cavan/belturbet.htm

Alice Murtagh
Inland Fisheries Ireland – Corlesmore Office, Arva, Co. Cavan
alice.murtagh@fisheriesireland.ie
Tel:
+353 (0)49 4337174

 

River Inny trout for angler Enda

Enda's fish...
Enda's fish...

Angler Enda Nolan enjoyed some good fishing on the River Inny last week.  With the conditions over cast and no wind Enda was the only one on the river.  He got four trout, 2 perch and pike all on small fry lure.  The trout was the biggest of the lot and the other 3 were all about the pound mark.

Enda's fish...
Enda’s fish…

 

Six pound trout jump to the evening hatches at Carrigavantry

Presenting the cheque to the Nadine Cancer Fund
Presenting the cheque to the Nadine Cancer Fund

When you get a chance to do some thing good and enjoy a day’s fishing, you should feel blessed.  Waterford City and County Trout Fishing Association run a sponsored charity fund-raiser every Spring at Knockaderry.  A lot of preparation and time is given when organising this event.

This year the chosen charity was the “Save Nadine Cancer Fund”, which hopes to raise $250,000 – the amount needed for Nadine to have a life-saving operation in the US.

Waterford Fly Fishing raised 7,160 euro, and the photo shows the cheque being presented by Michael Sheehan , the event organiser, and Pat Smith, the club treasurer. Receiving the cheque is Donal Flynn of the “Team Nadine”.

PRO David Tantrum says they are delighted to have helped in some small way towards saving Nadine’s life. Well done to all involved.

Presenting the cheque to the Nadine Cancer Fund
Presenting the cheque to the Nadine Cancer Fund

The fishing at this time of the year is very dependent on the weather and is concentrated in the mornings and evenings, especially if the day is bright and warm. Waterford Fly Fishing have closed Knockaderry till the autumn because of the water quality and the fact that the fish are stressed, which makes them prone to infection. A winter stocking of large rainbows will take place in the late autumn and both lakes will be open for winter fishing. They are carrying a large population of grown-on fish due to the increasing use of “catch and release”. Due to the hot weather, and the fact that a lot of their members have caught salmon fever, Carrigavantry is lightly fished and boats are readily available. In October the lakes will be busy again with sponsored events and competitions.
A man in the know is the Chairman Keith Fennelly who reported to David that late in the evening he experienced a prolific hatch of sedges and released three Rainbows the best of which he estimated at six pounds .

So what are you waiting for, if it’s good fishing you are after, head to Carrigavantry.

Carrigavantry - October 2015 1

FLY FISHING ON KNOCKADERRY CARRIGAVANTRY BALLYSCANLON

Carrigavantry – This 30 acre reservoir is hidden in the hills behind Tramore. The lake can be fished from the dam and road and the rest of the lake shore needs waders. The deepest part is the island at 10 feet.Prolific hatches of lake olives and damsels occur. Stocking is with both browns and rainbows. You could loose your catch here to a 20lb Pike!

Knockaderry – The deepest part of the lake is 24 feet at the dam tower, the average depth is 6ft and this results in good weed growth. Trout fatten fast in this fertile water on caddis, snails and stickle backs, while lake olives,buzzers sedges and damsels bring on prolific rises. This 80 acre reservoir is a traditional top of the water drift fishery.

New members are welcome and an active programme of fly tuition is pursued to encourage beginners and get our youth out into the countryside.

For Information about Wheelie Boat, day permits and membership ‘Click here for information’Here For Information

To place a booking…

David Tantrum,

Waterford City and County Trout Angling Association

Email: tantrumd@gmail.com

Web: www.waterfordflyfishing.ie

Phone: 051-384428 – Pat Smith (Treasurer) + Wheelie Boat Bookings

Nick and Katie Wet a Line on the Boyne

Katie With Her First Fish From the River Boyne

Despite the recent showers water levels have continued to drop in the River Boyne and the river is currently in great condition. Local angling guide Peter Cunningham from Drogheda has been on the river this week with Nick and Katie from Florida in the USA. Nick and Katie wanted to try their hand at fly fishing on an Irish river during their stay. With assistance and guidance from Peter both Nick and Katie managed to land fish from the famous River Boyne with Newgrange acting as a fantastic backdrop.

Nick and Katie from the USA on the River Boyne This Week
Nick and Katie from the USA on the River Boyne This Week

Fishing on the River Boyne

If you a days guided fishing on the River Boyne with Peter Cunningham and the Boyne Valley Fishing Guides the why not give Peter a call on his mobile at 086 4682516 or email him at petercunningham3@gmail.com

Additional information on fishing with Boyne Valley Fishing Guides can be found at www.boynevalleyfishingguides.com

Additional information on fishing the lower Boyne can be found at http://www.rossinslaneangling.com/ and https://www.fishinginireland.info/trout/east/meath/boyne1.htm

Katie Plays a Fish on the River Boyne Earlier This Week
Katie Plays a Fish on the River Boyne Earlier This Week
Nicks First Irish Wild Brown Trout on the River Boyne
Nicks First Irish Wild Brown Trout on the River Boyne
Katie With Her First Fish From the River Boyne
Katie With Her First Fish From the River Boyne

Lovely fishing on the reefs for Carrigaholt skipper

All together now boys !....
All together now boys !....

Luke Aston from Carrigaholt reports:

Saturday 23rd July we were back out on the reefs. The mackerel were a bit more patchy but plenty about.  Some nice Ling and Pollack but again the fishing was a bit stop start. Good day though with a bit of banter on board.

All together now boys !....
All together now boys !….

The following day we did our first Blue Shark drift. We had four takes with 3 sharks to the boat. The best was about 85 lbs. Although conditions were a bit rough it was a good start. On Monday last we got a short session at a Tope mark in the morning and had a few. Also plenty Mackerel in the estuary now.

On Tuesday we were back out on the reefs again and there was plenty of fine pollack and a few haddock and codling about.  A windy estuary on Thursday but the lads did manage a couple of Tope with a bit of patience though.

Luke Aston
Clare Dragoon

Go fishing…

Clare Dragoon is a LOCHIN 366 powered by 650HP engine that operates out of Carrigaholt Co. Clare.

I have some offers up on my web site www.fishandstay.com and if anybody is interested in putting a trip together please do get in touch. Also I Twitter from the boat on @fishandstay and try to update my face book page www.facebook.com/CarrigaholtSeaAngling fairly often!

To experience some of the best deep sea fishing available in Ireland contact Luke.
Telephone: +353 65 9058209 or +353 87 6367544
Email: lukeaston@eircom.net Web: www.fishandstay.com

All fish great and small for Killybegs Mariners SAC

Stefan Martin from Killybegs Mariners SAC reports on the fishing around Donegal Bay…

Summer on the bay is in full bloom now with all forms of mini universe’s on the bay acting out their annual hunts and survival techniques, drop a smidgeon of ragworm into a seemingly barren kelp stack and it gets ambushed by tompot Blennys and wrasse. Huge shoals of small sprats whizz by followed by coleys and pollack and all being attacked from the sky by gannets. Great to watch it all from the rocks chucking in lures and baits. We had 11 species turbot, flounder, plaice, dab, Tompot Blenny, ballan wrasse, corkwing wrasse, pouting, pollack, coley, dogfish in rain and sunshine just glad to be out..catch, photo, release

 

 

Stefan Martin
Killybegs mariners SAC

Facebook: www.facebook.com/mariner.sac

Crab and lobster protected by new fishing laws, Galway Advertiser

Crab and lobster protected by new fishing laws, Galway Advertiser
Crab and lobster protected by new fishing laws, Galway Advertiser

Under new regulations, private and recreational fishers are only permitted to retain five crabs and one lobster daily. The new limits have been constructed to help conserve healthy fish populations, in particular those of crab, lobster, and whelk, and promote the legality of registered fishermen in coastal areas…
Galway Advertiser, 28/07/16. Read the full article ‘Crab and lobster protected by new fishing laws‘.

Crab and lobster protected by new fishing laws, Galway Advertiser
Crab and lobster protected by new fishing laws, Galway Advertiser

Irish Water guilty over 3000 river fish deaths, Irish Examiner

Irish Water guilty over 3000 river fish deaths, Irish Examiner
Irish Water guilty over 3000 river fish deaths, Irish Examiner

Irish Water is to work with Inland Fisheries Ireland (IFI) on rehabilitation works on a river the utility polluted last year, causing the death of more than 3,000 fish. A district court judge instructed Irish Water to carry out a full review of its waste water treatment plants, and provide a report to her by July 21, 2017. Judge Catherine Staines’ decision at Portlaoise District Court came after the IFI successfully prosecuted Irish Water for the discharge of chemicals into the Clodiagh River, on August 18…
Irish Examiner, 28/07/16. Read the full article ‘Irish Water guilty over 3000 river fish deaths‘.

Irish Water guilty over 3000 river fish deaths, Irish Examiner
Irish Water guilty over 3000 river fish deaths, Irish Examiner