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Incredible Ferox Season For Tomi On Corrib

Man in boat holding huge trout

Big fish guide Tomi Kurman may be still out targeting big pike, but he wrote a round-up of what was an epic trout season for him and his guests on Lough Corrib, despite the spring lockdown which meant no fishing for a long part of the early season. Tomi and his partner also welcomed a new arrival in July (congrats guys!) which meant another break from fishing!

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Over to Tomi:

 

So that’s it! 2021 TROUT SEASON is now over. And what an exceptional Season it was. Exceptional and strange at the same time. Season started on February 15th but because of the travel restrictions (Covid-19) we were unable to venture to the real Ferox grounds until April 13th…. Then in July we had a break from fishing for just over a month due to a new family arrival and also temperatures were too extreme for safe fishing. Ferox welfare is always my priority so we just stepped back for a while. At the beginning of August we were back in action again, and I think the Ferox appreciated that move because they were happily visiting my boat in numbers…

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My official scorefor the Season is now 122 Trout over 65cm. The magical number 100 was boated on 22nd of August and that was a huge achievement…. When I started count I was hoping for 50!  We have also caught a lot fish which just missed the count because they were a little too small, but they were there too.

 

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in total we hunted Ferox over 42 days (some full days, some mixed with pike, some just short sessions due to the bad weather). Out of 42 days we blanked 8 times. That meant we have not caught fish, we lost fish, or we caught one too small for the count… that makes an average catch rate of 3 Ferox per day over total days or 3.6 Ferox over the day which made the count! This season we have missed the best of brown trout fishing, when normally we would have days with 30-40 wild trout caught PER DAY, but I’m sure we will have a go at them next year.

May be an image of 1 person and body of waterThe biggest fishof the Season was 91cm, and over 20lbs beauty, followed by two different fish measured at 89.5cm (90cm is a Holly Grail of any Ferox angler!) another exceptional fish was 85cm and weighed at 18lb 12oz! A future record for sure!!! From 122 Ferox over 65cm, we have produced 38 SPECIMENS by length (>75cm) or 45 SPECIMENS by weight (>10lb) according to Irish Specimen Fish requirements.

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Along with the great trout catches we also had some BIG pike, where current count is 40 fish over 100cm! (Season for pike still runs). Some of them caught as “by catch” while trout fishing and some as a result of planned targeting….Now enjoy a collection of some notable catches and if you want to be included in Next Season COUNT just drop me a line. Bookings for next season are open for February and March for now. Following months will be open after New Year, to accommodate corporate and regular bookings and also after dates of big Fishing Competitions and World Championships are announced.

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Go Fishing

Check out Tomi’s Facebook page here for regular updates and contact details:

www.facebook.com/tomi.guidedfishing

Better weather brings great pollack fishing in Galway Bay

A nice pollack

After a weather-enforced break, John Fleming had the Brazen Hussy II out again over the weekend in much better conditions. Guests enjoyed great pollack fishing on the reefs, with some wrasse too, and one angler even had a surprise tope.

 

A nice pollack
Pollack
Cuckoo Wrasse
A fine tope
Skipper John shows how it’s done, catching pollack 3 at a time!

Go fishing…

To book fishing with John aboard the Brazen Hussy II, give him a call on 087 7571320

A regular day is between 9am- 6pm from either Rossaveal, Spiddal or Galway depending on species being sought after. Fishing on the inshore reefs for pollock, cod, ling, wrasse, conger eel and mackerel can be reached in 10 minutes from departure, while our offshore reef marks are within 45 minutes of departure. Our ground fishing for tope, spurdog, ray, bullhuss, turbot, plaice and the giant common skate can all be reached within the hour which ensures the most amount of time is spent fishing.
The shark season usually starts at the end of June and runs into late October, this is the ultimate angling adrenaline rush with these hard fighting blue and porbeagle sharks all being tagged and released safely.
Package deals available

Address: Baile an tSagairt, Spiddal, Co. Galway.
Telephone: +353 (0)87 7571320
Facebook: www.facebook.com/BlueSharkAngling

Blue Shark Angling Galway,
Phone John Fleming : +353 (0)87 7571320

A Wet End To A Dry Season On The Erriff

 

The Erriff Valley looking splendid on a fine early autumn morning. 

Donavin Brinklow was in touch with a round-up of the season on the Erriff. Overall, the season was mixed, with low water levels prevailing for much of the summer, when the grilse would have been running, and few floods to get them moving.

Early Season

Early season was tough with not much rain and low river levels. The first flood on the Erriff produced a few fish for the Delphi anglers and on the 5th May Nico Mittmann caught the first salmon of the year in the Bridge Pool on beat 9, weighing 6lbs, and another 7.5lbs fish in the Garden Pool. The next day proved to be good too; Urs Leibundgut landed a 9.5 lbs salmon in the Bridge Pool using a Silver Stoat. Between then and mid-June there were 13 salmon landed, as low water held sway.

Johnny Betts with a fine fish

June

June continued on a dry weather pattern, with tough fishing conditions, but anglers were meeting fish regularly as grilse ran upstream in low water. Among the anglers to land fish during this period were Patrick Molloy with 2 fish to 7lbs, John Ryan had an 8-pounder, Levi Caffrey had 2 fish to 7lbs, Neill Boyle took a 12lbs fish off the Falls Pool, and George Dawson had 2 fish to 5.5lbs on Beat 5.

Benny Weltz with a nice fresh grilse.
Catch Photo Release
#CPRSavesFish

July

Early July was reasonably good, with 9 salmon landed on the 7th, and many other days with 6-7 fish reported. Kevin Mitchell was one of the lucky anglers, with a 7lbs salmon and 3 sea trout. Others of note were Peter Kavanagh, with 2 grilse on Beat 9, Mark Helmore had 5 fish to 5.5lbs, Conor O’Leary had 2 fish on Beat 6 and Peter Coyne had 3 fish from Beats 8 and 6. In spite of the weather, July still saw 104 salmon in the book.

 

Levi Caffrey with one of his fish.
Catch Photo Release
#CPRSavesFish

August

Late July saw a heatwave, with air temperatures in the high twenties, and water temperatures reaching 27C. Fishing was halted until the weather changed and fish could be targeted again without putting undue stress on them. Once rain arrived in early August fishing really improved, with a lot of fish caught. The 6th saw 12 fish landed, 17 on the 7th and 37 fish on the 8th! Johnny Betts had a red letter day, landing 8 fish off Beats 3 and 4, including a fine 15lbs salmon on a Cascade.

Alexander Mills caught 5 fish on Beat  5, Jimmy Keogh had 4 fish off Beat 7, Jake Delaney had 3 fish off Beat 9, while many other anglers including James O’Neill, Mark Helmore, Conor O’Leary and Martin Wiltort had 2 fish each. Definitely the day to be there! August was the best month of the season, with anglers putting 141 salmon in the catch book.

Eabha Jones with her first ever salmon

September

Late season again saw mostly dry conditions with the odd flood, but the Erriff tends to fish well in September, and this year was no exception with 84 fish recorded. Among the anglers to meet fish were Ian Ferris, who had 2 salmon in Altamont’s Dam, and D. Edwards, who had 3 salmon on Beat 7. Rain at the end of the season meant that there was no angling on the final day, with exceptionally high water levels making the river unfishable. If only we’d had some of that rain during the season!

Overall

The season total was 372 salmon, including 269 wild fish which were all released and 103 ranched fish. The best fish was Johnny Betts’s 15lbs salmon on the 8th August, with James O’Neill also landing a 14lbs fish on the 11th. John Phelan had a 12.5lbs fish, while Jimmy Keogh, Paddy Donegan and Neil Boyle all landed 12lbs fish. Top flies this year were the Cascade, Willie Gunn, Posh Tosh, Stoats Tail and Collie Dog.

Thanks to Donavin for his updates throughout the season and for looking after the visiting anglers.

Fishing the Falls Pool on Beat 9

October blues for Dungarvan Offshore Charters

It was like mid summer for Dungarvan Offshore Charters last Sunday as they managed to land and tag six blue sharks as part of the Irish Marine Sportfish Tagging Programme – not a bad return for the middle of October!

The largest was just under 90lbs and all fish were tagged and released.

 

 

Tagged blues and golden sunsets for Silver Dawn

Dave Edwards of West Cork Charters fishing aboard the Silver Dawn out of Courtmacsherry reports that bluefin tuna are still avoiding the south coast, but he thinks that could change any day and the settled spell forecast this week will help build the bait shoals inshore that will be ringing the dinner bell for the bluefin.

Dave is offering the option of cancelling any tuna charters that anglers have booked or switching to offshore shark fishing if conditions allow. His anglers on Sunday opted to go for shark and were rewarded with 8 good Blue Shark with 3 at 100lb.

Tagged blue

Dave was using the new IFI Floy tags once again under the Marine Sportfish Tagging Programme; he thinks they are a great improvement on the previous model and are far less invasive for the sharks which all swam away strongly after measurement.

Dave always applies best practice when bringing shark onboard for tagging which he thinks is safer for all concerned including the shark; helping the sharks to relax out of the water makes them far more placid until they are returned and the scientific study onboard Silver Dawn this year is helping prove this.

Silver Dawn, Golden sunset

Go fishing…

West Cork Charters operates the Silver Dawn, a 41′ Rodman 1250 with twin 430 HP Engines out of Courtmacsherry. The range of fishing found within close range of Courtmacsherry is superb, with trips producing anything between 6 and 15 different species as a norm and in excess of 20 is possible if anglers are prepared to change methods and use different baits and lures throughout their trip. As a rule mackerel, pollock, cod and ling are usually encountered but several species of wrasse along with whiting, pouting, coalfish, bull huss, conger and many more are often added to the catch.
If you do choose to head offshore to sample the superb shark fishing available within 10 miles of Courtmacsherry, there is a very strong chance of encountering blue sharks and an increasing chance of bringing a porbeagle shark to the boat.

Address: The Pier, Courtmacsherry, Co. Cork.
Telephone: +353 (83) 449 1403
Email: [email protected]

Web: www.irelandseaangling.com

Inniscarra fishes well ahead of Feederfest 2021

Anglers have been testing the waters on Inniscarra reservoir ahead of the Feederfest 2021 event, which is due to kick off on Sunday October 17th with the Fountain House Cup followed by the main event from Monday 18th through to Friday 22nd.

Over 70 anglers have signed up for the event already so it should be a good one.

In mixed conditions of sun, rain, wind and flat calms, the anglers had decent bags along the Greenway with lots of roach, hybrids and some good skimmers.

As ever, O’Callaghan’s in Coachford will be the event HQ for the week and Pat and Eileen  are really looking forward to welcoming the anglers back to the community and surrounding areas.

For updates, keep an eye on the Inniscarra Lake Facebook page and we’ll publish a final report at the end of the week.

Cork and District Pike Anglers Moxley Cup competition

Cork and District Pike Anglers held their Moxley Cup competition last weekend.

The competition was won by Damian O’Mahony with 32lb 6oz; second was Paul O’Donovan with 29lb 14oz with the heaviest pike of the day, a really good fish of 15lbs 1oz.

Paul’s 15lb fish
New club member Valdas Galinskas also had an impressive 12lb 5oz pike. Altogether the club had 41 seniors and 2 juniors fishing with a total catch of 66 pike which were all returned safely.

Good pike for French guests on Derg

Two happy clients of TJ's Angling Centre

Regular visitors to Lough Derg and TJ’s Angling centre in Ballina, Richard and Katia from Bordeaux in France, kicked off their week’s fishing in style with some lovely Derg pike.

Richard caught four good fish on day one, including a cracking specimen of 105cm. Hopefully the rest of the week goes just as well; it’s great to have our overseas anglers back in our boats!

Richard and Katia and their specimen pike
Happiness is…. a specimen pike on board

Potential new Irish record for Clohessy in Cork

Regular contributor and well known Cork angler Jim Clohessy had a day to remember on Tuesday. Jim and crew were targeting big whiting, haddock and hake and caught some really good fish.

It was the not so well known stone basse that made the day though, Jim managed to land a tremendous fish weighing 13lb 6oz. The current Irish record of 11.72lb was caught by UK angler Tony Rainer on 14 July, 2005, fishing out of Baltimore. If Jim’s fish is ratified by the Irish Specimen Fish Committee, he will be the new record holder!

Nice fish Jim!

Jim and his potential record fish

The Irish specimen weight for stone basse (Polyprion Americanus) is 8lb and young fish (up to 20lb or so) are sometimes encountered at the surface near floating wreckage. Adults, which may grow up to 100lb, tend to keep near the bottom in deep water.

Jim and crew also caught whiting, haddock and hake

 

The end of a great day’s fishing

Whopping late season trout for L. Mask angler

Toby with his super 9lb+ trout
Toby with his super 9lb+ trout

The trout season has ended on all of our loughs and rivers but we got a nice (albeit late) report in this week from an angler who spent the last few days of the season fishing on L. Mask. Toby Gibbons has been fishing L. Mask for years and spent the last few days of the season targeting trout that were feeding on daphnia. He was catching well, with a few fish in the 1-1.5lbs category when all of a sudden his Yellow Octopus was engulfed by a much larger fish. After a number of strong runs which stripped him to the backing, he eventually boated what turned out to be a fish of a lifetime, a whopping 9lb 5oz trout. What a way to end your season!