Home Blog Page 716

Inland Fisheries Ireland prosecutes Irish Water for fish kill on the Ballycorrigan River in Tipperary

Inland Fisheries Ireland prosecutes Irish Water for fish kill on the Ballycorrigan River in Tipperary

Inland Fisheries Ireland prosecuted Irish Water yesterday at Ballina District Court, Co. Tipperary for the discharge of a harmful substance into the Ballycorrigan River, on 17th May 2018, causing a fish kill. Among the fish mortalities were 100 brown trout of different age groups, three juvenile salmon and one stone loach which were killed when a cleaning substance was discharged into the river.

Fish Mortalities on Ballycorrigan River

Judge Patrick Durcan heard evidence from Mr. Michael Fitzsimons, a Senior Fisheries Environmental Officer with Inland Fisheries Ireland, that following a pollution report received from the general public, Inland Fisheries Ireland carried out a detailed investigation. It found that the fish kill was caused by a combination of effluents arising from an uncontrolled maintenance event from the Irish Water Ballina/Killaloe Wastewater Treatment plant.

Irish Water entered a guilty plea. Judge Durcan directed Irish Water to pay Inland Fisheries Ireland’s legal costs of €2,290 and fined Irish Water €2,500. Judge Durcan stated that Irish Water did not take into consideration the environment and conditions when discharging into the river and that Ireland’s rivers are its most important natural resource. He said that while these resources are maintained under the vigilance of Inland Fisheries Ireland, Irish Water needs to be vigilant too.

Ms. Amanda Mooney, Director of the Shannon River Basin District with Inland Fisheries Ireland said: “Irish Water co-operated fully with Inland Fisheries Ireland’s investigation and updated its cleaning protocols for the use of chemicals in treatment plants nationwide with more appropriate methods now in use as a direct result of this incident. Our fisheries resource is an extremely valuable asset, both from a recreational and economic perspective and it is crucial that we continue to protect and conserve it for future generations to enjoy.”

Inland Fisheries Ireland has a 24 hour confidential hotline number to enable members of the general public to report incidents – 0818 34 74 24 or 0818 FISH 24. All reports are treated with confidentiality.

For more information about Inland Fisheries Ireland, visit www.fisheriesireland.ie.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Four new Irish record fish caught by anglers during 2018

Four new Irish record fish caught by anglers during 2018

Irish Specimen Fish Committee publishes report

Four new Irish record fish were caught by anglers during 2018 according to the just published Irish Specimen Fish Committee (ISFC) report.

New records were set for four marine species – Golden Grey Mullet, Thin Lipped Mullet, Black Bream and Tope. The mullet species were taken in Cork while the Tope was caught off Greystones, Co. Wicklow. Kilmore in Co. Wexford was the venue for the Black Bream. The details are as follows:

  • Angler Stephen Hanway from Dublin caught the tope weighing 34.02 kg at Greystones, Co. Wicklow on the 3rd of October 2018.
  • Noel Lane from Cork took a thin lipped mullet weighing 2.95kg from Cork Harbour on the 15th of July.
  • A golden grey mullet of 1.52kg was caught in Cork by Stephen O’Neill on the 15th of August.
  • A black sea bream of 1.45kg was caught by Welsh angler Gordon Thornes at Kilmore Quay on the 17th of September.

Further details of these record fish are in the Irish Specimen Fish Committee Report 2018, which has just been released. The Irish Specimen Fish Committee, which is supported by Inland Fisheries Ireland, is an independent all-Ireland voluntary body which verifies and records the capture of large fish caught on rod by anglers in freshwater and marine waters.

As well as the new record, detailed information on 393 specimen fish (large fish) taken by anglers from venues throughout Ireland in 2018, comprising many different species, is detailed in the report. The main species were smaller shark species like Smooth hound and Spurdog and, in freshwater, Carp and Pike dominated. All fish were caught, weighed, measured and released.

The Irish Specimen Fish Committee report is available on the ISFC website www.irish-trophy-fish.com or from the Inland Fisheries Ireland website http://www.fisheriesireland.ie. Hard copies of the report are available from Inland Fisheries Ireland offices nationally.

The ISFC Awards Day, when anglers will be presented with their awards and certificates, will be held on 16th Feb 2019 in Dublin (in conjunction with Irish Angling Show weekend: http://www.maramedia.ie/irish-angling-expo).

Meanwhile, anglers both at home and abroad will be reading the report carefully to plan their angling trips to catch the big fish in Ireland in 2019.

Noel Lane with a thin lipped mullet.

 

 

Stephen O’Neill with golden grey mullet
Stephen Hanway with record tope

Delphi Opens New Season In Style

February 1st is Opening Day on a number of salmon rivers around the country, and anglers have been wetting a line on several fisheries in glorious sunshine, despite the cold. Already we have a report from the Delphi Fishery of a cracking spring salmon caught just before midday. The fish took a Collie Dog and was caught by visiting angler Mattias Eder in the Meadow Pool. The beautiful springer weighed 14lbs 3oz, and was retained as it was a fin-clipped hatchery fish (all wild salmon are released). I’m sure it will make for a fine feast at the long table in Delphi Lodge this evening!

Well done to Mattias and his guide Robert Gillespie. Hopefully this fine fish is a sign of a good spring run to come, and Delphi will be a fishery worth keeping an eye on over the next few weeks.

 

Mattias Eder with his magnificent spring salmon, the first fish of the season on the Delphi Fishery. The fish weighed 14lbs 3oz and took a Collie Dog fly in the Meadow Pool. Also in the photo is his guide Robert Gillespie.

 

 

Rig Up Right in Galway!

Galway Bay Sea Angling Club is a progressive club for sea anglers in the west of Ireland that is keen to introduce people to the sport, and they hold regular outings for members throughout the year where experienced anglers are happy to show new and prospective members the skills needed to become a successful sea angler.

One of those skills is tying your own rigs, or traces, for bait fishing. While there are many online tutorials and videos, nothing beats hands-on instruction from people who know what they’re doing. So if you’re thinking of trying sea angling, are near Galway, and would like to learn or improve your rig tying, come along to Salthill Aquarium on Thursday the 7th of February, from 7.30 pm. Club members are holding a rig tying workshop and will be on hand to demonstrate the different types of rigs and how to tie them.

To get in touch with the club, or for more details, contact them through their Facebook page at www.facebook.com/galwaybaysac

Irish team prepare for 5th FIPS- Mouche Masters Fly Fishing Championship

A team of four Irish anglers are currently preparing to represent Ireland in the 5th FIPS- Mouche Masters Fly Fishing Championship to be held in Dullstroom, South Africa.

John Burke from Ballina,  Michael Twohig (Captain) from Cork, Eugene McCarthy, Cork &  Stuart McGrain, Wicklow will hold the Irish flag high on the 9th of February, with the Official Opening Ceremony of World Angling Games in Sandton, Johannesburg. From there, they will travel to Dullstroom where the competition will take place at WMFFC, from the 10th-16th February 2019.

The competition will be intense for the Irish team, with four angling sessions of three hours ahead consisting of one river bank and three boat sessions.

 

Pictured is John Burke from Ballina. This will be John’s first time fishing in the nationals but he has fished for Ireland seven times in the Home Internationals and was a Gold Medal winning Captain in 1998.

 

 

 

Good Luck and Tight lines to all!

Protecting the Fisheries Resource – A Day in the Life of a Fisheries Officer

Inland Fisheries Ireland is currently recruiting for Seasonal Fisheries Officers. Here two staff members tell their story of what the job is really like on the ground.

A Fisheries Protection RIB in action.

Michael Kelly is an Assistant Fisheries Inspector from Cavan, working in the North Western River Basin District.

Assistant Fisheries Inspector Michael Kelly

 

How did you become a Fisheries Officer?

I came from a farming background so I have a love of working outdoors. Apart from that, I am also a carpenter so when a vacancy for a General Operative in fisheries arose which allowed me to use my carpentry skills and to work outdoors, I went for it. I progressed from there to become a Fisheries Officer and now an Assistant Inspector.

My background in farming is useful in this job. Landowners are one of the biggest stakeholders. It is important to us to have a very good relationship with them as we are dealing with them every day.

What does an average day look like?

My work mainly is on the development side of things in fisheries. I’m fairly new in the post. An average day for me is going in, checking emails, going out on site in the afternoon with staff, assessing structures that have to be replaced, replacing these structures and surveying the quality of them, dealing with landowners, ordering various materials and making sure there is a work plan for staff on the ground.

What is your favourite part of the job?

My favourite thing is being out and about, meeting different people. They will tell you areas where they believe suspicious activity is going on or areas that we can improve from a development side of things. Maybe areas that used to be good fishing spots but infrastructure now needs repair. Angling is very important to the local economy so it is nice to be able to contribute to this.

Cavan is a haven for coarse fishing so we have a lot of angling infrastructure that needs management. It’s good to get input from the public and local businesses.

What is the most challenging thing about the job?

Some people traditionally don’t want fisheries or the public on their land. There might be issues with access so you have to respect that.

We also work to many deadlines which can be challenging.

What do you think are the most important skills needed for the job?

Common sense and good judgement. You’re dealing with the public the whole time so you have to be a good communicator. You have to be observant and you need to be able to remain calm if a situation develops in front of you.

You have to remain calm, talk to the person if they are committing an offence, sometimes people genuinely won’t know they are doing something wrong so you need to keep your composure and explain to them. It’s always important to be courteous to members of the public.

What would you say to someone considering a job in fisheries?

I would say if you have a love of the outdoor life, then definitely apply to fisheries. You will have a great time, you will learn about fish and their habitats as well as the environment, get to meet people and it could potentially turn into a lifelong career for you.

Paul Reynolds is a Fisheries Officer from Galway working in the Western River Basin District.

Fisheries Officer Paul Reynolds

 

How did you become a Fisheries Officer?

I started in fisheries at the age of 19. I began as a General Operative, getting a contract working on Lough Corrib and it went from there. I just had an interest in fishing. I am 23 years in fisheries.

What is your favourite part of the job?

The best thing is the variety of the job, no two days are the same.

What is the most challenging thing about the job?

The most challenging thing is dealing with some members of the public plus technology and social media bring their own unique challenges.

What do you think are the most important skills needed for the job?

You need to have good people and communication skills. You need to be able to get an overall view of a situation and communicate it. You need to be streetwise, that’s the biggest attribute you need. Once you have that, the rest will come in time.

What would you say to someone considering a job in fisheries?

I would say it is probably one of the most rewarding careers you can get in the public service. The variety of the work we do, the equipment we use and the way we use it is very interesting.

Fisheries Protection Kayak Patrol

If you would like to work outdoors and help protect the fisheries resource, visit www.fisheriesireland.ie/careers for further information. The closing date for applications is Friday, 8th of February 2019.

 

Irish Angling Update 24 January 2019

We are well into January now and the winter has yet to bite properly. Despite some cold days over the past week, with occasional wintry weather, we are back to mild Atlantic weather today, with almost a springtime feel in the air.

Salmon angling was slow again this week, with no fish reported from the few fisheries open around the country. Lough Currane is now open and seeing  a few boats every day, but only kelts have been recorded so far.

Elsewhere, Delphi Fishery is looking forward to their season opening on February 1st, and they have some fishing packages available for prime spring dates.

The first salmon caught on and released on the Drowes Fishery will win the lucky angler a 1kg bar of silver. This is one of a number of innovative ideas being run on the river to mark International Year of the Salmon. The full list of open rivers for 2019 is available at fishinginireland.info/salmon/salmonregs.htm 

prize
A bar of silver for a bar of silver!

 

The weather has certainly suited coarse anglers, and the Munster Coarse Anglers made a long overdue return to Plassey on the River Shannon, in the heart of Limerick City, and were rewarded with plentiful catches of roach and dace. Lough Muckno provided numerous small fish for the CM Lakelands club in their penultimate match of a tightly-contested league.

 

Sea angling has benefited from the mild winter so far, and some charter skippers have taken the opportunity of the more settled weather at times to get out off the coast. Skipper Mark Gannon from Courtmacsherry enjoyed good skate fishing with a group over the weekend, including our Fish of the Week with some nice pollack also taken inshore.

Another fine skate for Mark's guests
Fish of the Week is this Common Skate caught out of Courtmacsherry

 

Shore competition anglers from Ireland and the UK are flocking to Wexford this week, where the annual Winter Beach Festival kicks off 3 days of intense competition today. We hope to have a full report on how it went in next week’s update. South Shore SAC are sure to be well represented, and their recent competition at Morriscastle provided hectic fishing, with dogfish and whiting providing most of the sport – well-known match angler Paul Whelan taking top honours with a great catch of 43 fish – I’m sure he was tired afterwards!

 

Some anglers may be interested in a change of career, and Inland Fisheries Ireland has launched a recruitment campaign for Seasonal Fishery Officers all around the country. There are up to 40 positions on offer across six River Basin Districts. The closing date for applications is 5pm on Friday, 8th of February 2019. To find out more about the roles and how to apply, visit www.fisheriesireland.ie/careers

 

While we have mild weather today, it is expected to cool down and become more unsettled overt the weekend, possibly quite windy too, with a change to colder weather expected around the middle of next week. Frosty nights and wintry showers are expected, so wrap up warm and stay safe if venturing out.

 

Safe fishing to all and tight lines, especially here in Ireland.

Kevin Crowley
Catch, Photo, Release

If you have an angling story to share with the Irish Angling Update please send it to contact@fisheriesireland.ie.


Headlines

Salmon angling news

Sea angling reports

Coarse angling news

Other news

Dog Day Afternoon for South Shore anglers at Morriscastle

South Shore Sea Angling Club had catches boosted by a good showing of dogs recently. Paul Mason reports…

Morriscastle beach

14 January: Well well well…..after an absence of some time in competitions on the east coast the Dogs decided to put in an appearance last Sunday on Morriscastle Beach. South Shore ran the first leg of our inaugural winter league on a near perfect day. 34 anglers entered and were not disappointed. Calm seas had anglers wondering at the start would there be good numbers of flounders in the gulley. Alas they were absent and anglers who plumped for close in lobbing were on the back foot.

The (Great White) Thomas Keogh had three hooks clipped and bombed out on his first cast and was rewarded with a double of a flounder and undersized whiting. Eamonn Bermingham was also into some fish early on getting some undersized whiting with the odd sizeable one.

Anglers were scrambling in their tackle boxes for clipped rigs when a Doggie was brought ashore on peg 1. Game on as daylight departed and all hell broke loose. It was survival of the fittest with lads tearing up and down the beach getting cards marked. Good sized whiting mixed with dogs had cards filling up in double time. The Great White was in his element and secured a zone A win with 33 fish. Zone B was fishing even better and trough to form (Lanky) Paul Whelan was emptying out the sea around his peg. Paul finished with 43 fish just pipping Joe Byrne on his big comeback.

Junior angler Jake Melly had a great bag of 31 fish and won the junior section.

A big thank you to all who attended and we hope to make this a successful yearly event with a good payout.

South Shore SAC

https://www.facebook.com/pages/South-Shore-SAC/147648452021992

Small fish for CM Lakelands at Muckno

CM Lakelands report on the 5th round of their Lough Muckno Winter Feeder League…

20 January: We had the 5th round of the Lough Muckno Feeder League today. 27 anglers took part with mostly small fish been caught long. 1st was Darren fairhurst with 3.300kg, 2nd Alan Larkin with 3kg, 3rd was robertas with just under 3kg and 4th was Artur Boyczewski with 2.840kg

Section winners were, Brendan O’Brien, Mariuz Kilan, Graham Worley and Darius Kobnyinski.

The next round is the final round, and takes place on the 3rd of February. The league is very tight at the moment and anyone in the top 15 still has a chance of getting into the top 7 final places and a share of the €3000 prize fund. The presentation will take in the Old Coach Pub straight after the match.
Best of luck to everyone in the final match of the league.

Join the club…

Membership open to all is €30, €15 for OAP’s/Juniors.

To join contact Brenton Sweeney on 087 2510260 or mail brentonsweeney@live.ie

Facebook: CM Lakelands Feeder Club

CM Lakelands Feeder Club is an affiliated club of the National Coarse fishing Federation of Ireland www.ncffi.ie. You can follow them at CM Lakelands Feeder Club

coarse catch

Roach and dace for Munster anglers at Plassey

Munster Coarse Anglers report on their 1st trip back to plassey in 20 years…

plassey

It’s well over 20 years ago that we held a match on this stretch of the Shannon. Back in the day Plassey, in the heart of Limerick City, was world renowned for big catches of bream. Indeed I saw my late father put back a 104lb bag of bream without making the top 4 in a match. However it was roach and dace that made up the weighs today with lots of bites for every one.

  • 1st Kevin Leahy 24lb 4oz (feeder)
  • 2nd Ian Kelsey 16lb 02oz (on the bolo)
  • 3rd Steve Wright 11lb 03oz feeder and whip
  • 4th Ray Linton 9lb 14oz whip 

We won’t leave it so long for our next visit…

Kevin Leahy
Munster Coarse Angling Club

Join the Club…

Munster Coarse Angling Club are affiliated to the National Coarse Fishing Federation of Ireland and are members of the Angling Council the National Governing Body for coarse and predator angling. www.ncffi.ie