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Report: Will mechanical harvesting of seaweed lead to ecological disaster? Irish Examiner

Report: Will mechanical harvesting of seaweed lead to ecological disaster?
Report: Will mechanical harvesting of seaweed lead to ecological disaster?

With licences being secured and sought to mechanically harvest seaweed in Bantry Bay and parts of the west coast residents fear the damage may be irreparable, writes Louise Roseingrave. Irish coastal dwellers have been harvesting seaweed by hand for hundreds of years but that’s about to change in Bantry Bay. Following a five-year application process, the first licence for the mechanical harvesting of seaweed in Ireland and Britain has been secured…
Irish Examiner, 21/04/17. Read the full article ‘Report: Will mechanical harvesting of seaweed lead to ecological disaster?‘.

Report: Will mechanical harvesting of seaweed lead to ecological disaster?
Report: Will mechanical harvesting of seaweed lead to ecological disaster?

Tipperary fish study: citizen science' helps land data on Lough Derg trout stocks, The Nationalist

Tipperary fish study: citizen science' helps land data on Lough Derg trout stocks
Tipperary fish study: citizen science' helps land data on Lough Derg trout stocks

The water quality of Lough Derg is poor but the lake still supports a healthy stock of trout, local anglers have been told. The comments came at a meeting to outline the findings of the Lough Derg Native Fish Biodiversity Project, which has been ongoing since 2006 when anglers noticed a fall in trout numbers. Joe O’Donoghue, chair of Lough Derg Anglers Association, which comprises 13 clubs, described the work as an “example of citizen science”, with anglers catching, photographing and measuring fish taken from the lake…
The Tipperary Star, 20/04/17. Read the full article ‘Tipperary fish study: citizen science’ helps land data on Lough Derg trout stocks‘.

Tipperary fish study: citizen science' helps land data on Lough Derg trout stocks
Tipperary fish study: citizen science’ helps land data on Lough Derg trout stocks

Angling Notes: keen test at first trial for ladies’ home international team, Irish Times

Angling Notes: keen test at first trial for ladies’ home international team
Angling Notes: keen test at first trial for ladies’ home international team

The Irish Ladies Flyfishing Association (ILFA) commenced their season recently with a trial on Lough Lene in Co Westmeath, the first of four to select an Irish team to fish in the home international championships in Wales in 2018. A great day’s fishing was had by the 10 hardy ladies who braved the elements with lures and wet flies responsible for a terrific catch throughout the catch-and-release competition…
Irish Times, 24/04/17. Read the full article ‘Angling Notes: keen test at first trial for ladies’ home international team‘.

Angling Notes: keen test at first trial for ladies’ home international team
Angling Notes: keen test at first trial for ladies’ home international team

Liz lands the first salmon of the season, Portadown Times

Liz lands the first salmon of the season
Liz lands the first salmon of the season

Portadown lady angler Liz Dermott landed her first salmon and the first salmon of the season to be caught on the fly on Lough Melvin for 2017. Liz and her husband Mark went out fishing on Lough Melvin, soon after casting out her line on their first drift of the day on Thursday, April 13, in Garrison Bay, Co. Fermanagh, Shaking with excitement, she safely landed the 10-12lb salmon…
Portadown Times, 22/04/17. Read the full article ‘Liz lands the first salmon of the season‘.

Liz lands the first salmon of the season
Liz lands the first salmon of the season

Read more at: http://www.portadowntimes.co.uk/news/liz-lands-the-first-salmon-of-the-season-1-7924689

Young sea anglers set to take on the world, Belfast Telegraph

The Irish Federation of Sea Anglers have announced their Junior and Youth teams, who will represent Ireland in the 2017 World Junior Shore Angling Championships on the beaches of Cote d’Opale, France, in July. Each team will consist of five anglers and a reserve, a manager and assistant manager and the IFSA’s National Youth Officer, Joe Bryne, will also accompany the teams…
Belfast Telegraph, 22/04/17. Read the full article ‘Young sea anglers set to take on the world‘.

Young sea anglers set to take on the world
Young sea anglers set to take on the world

Increased garda patrolling of angling lakes after burglaries, The Connaught Telegraph

Increased garda patrolling of angling lakes after burglaries
Increased garda patrolling of angling lakes after burglaries

ANGLERS and others parking vehicles at Mayo lakes have been issued with a warning by gardai about increased burglar activity in recent days…
The Connaught Telegraph, 20/04/17. Read the full article ‘Increased garda patrolling of angling lakes after burglaries‘.

Increased garda patrolling of angling lakes after burglaries
Increased garda patrolling of angling lakes after burglaries

Local teams to the fore at World Club event in Spain, Impartial Reporter

Local teams to the fore at World Club event in Spain
Local teams to the fore at World Club event in Spain

Two Fermanagh based clubs represented Ireland in the World Club Championships for Feeder Fishing on the River Xuquer, Fortaleny, near Valencia in Spain recently. Tubertini Match Group and Van Den Eynde Erne Anglers both based in the county were selected to take part in the Championship by the National Coarse Fishing Federation of Ireland…
Impartial Reporter, 22/04/17. Read the full article ‘Local teams to the fore at World Club event in Spain‘.

Local teams to the fore at World Club event in Spain
Local teams to the fore at World Club event in Spain

First Boyne salmon of season caught earlier this month

Angler poses with his salmon
Pat O'Toole with the first Boyen salmon of 2017

Maureen Byrne, IFI Dublin, reports that the is the first River Boyne salmon of 2017 was caught on fly at Navan Ramparts by Pat O’Toole on Thursday 6th April. The fish was fresh off the tide and there  were salmon lice on board.  This lovely looking Boyne springer, 10 lb, took a Chartreuse Park Shrimp, tied by Robert Gillespie.

Angler poses with his salmon
Pat O’Toole with the first Boyen salmon of 2017, just before release.

Go fishing…

The River Boyne is Catch and Release for 2017.

The River Boyne rises near Newberry Hall in Co. Kildare and meanders its way in a north easterly direction for seventy miles through counties Offaly, Meath and Louth before entering the Irish Sea below the historic town of Drogheda, between the townlands of Mornington and Baltray. The Boyne has a good run of salmon and sea trout in summer and early autumn. The majority of salmon fishing in this area is controlled by Angling Associations with some being maintained by private fishery owners.

The following angling clubs control salmon fishing on the River Boyne:

Permits

Permits and day memberships for the above angling association waters are available from the secretaries of the above named Angling Associations and the following local tackle dealers.

Navan & District Anglers Association

  • Clarks Sports Den,
    Trimgate Street, Navan, Co.Meath.
    Tel: +353 46 9021130
    Web: www.sportsden.ie
  • Anglers World,
    Balmoral Industrial Est, Navan.
    Tel: +353 46 9071866
    Web:
    www.anglersworld.ie
  • East Coast Angling,
    Balmoral Industrial Est, Navan.
    Tel:  +353 46 9073377

Rossin, Slane & District Anglers Club

  • Boyne Angling Centre
    Unit 11, Boyne Shopping Centre, Drogheda, Co. Louth
    Tel: 041 9872943
  • Top Gun Sports,
    50 Magdalene Street, Drogheda, Co. Louth.
    Tel: +35341 9842225. Email: [email protected]

Drogheda & District Anglers Club

  • Drogheda Angling Centre,
    Boyne Shopping Centre, Drogheda, Co. Louth
    Telephone: +353 (0) 41 98 72943
    Email: [email protected]

Casting Tuition and Instruction

  • Peter O’Reilly (APGAI Ireland and FFF Master)
    Ballybatter House, Boyne Hill, Navan, Co. Meath.
    Email: [email protected]
    Phone: +353 46 902 8210 Mobile: +353 87 646 8882

Guide Services

  • Seamus Lenihan
    Clonardon, Garlow Cross, Navan, Co. Meath.
    Tel: +353 (0)46 90 25787
  • Colm Lynch,
    Tel: +353 (0)87 2044996
  • Peter Cunningham,
    Drogheda Angling Centre, Boyne Shopping Centre, Drogheda, Co. Louth
    Telephone: +353 (0) 41 98 72943 Mobile: +353 (0)86 4682516
    Email: [email protected]

For more information see: https://fishinginireland.info/salmon/east/boyne.htm

 

 

Follow Ireland’s juvenile salmon numbers through new online tool

Salmon Smolt
Salmon Smolt

Follow Ireland’s juvenile salmon numbers through new online tool

Inland Fisheries Ireland has launched the SMOLTRACK project in Ireland which gives the public the opportunity to follow the numbers of juvenile salmon making their journey down the River Erriff – the National Salmonid Index Catchment (NSIC). The project is running in five other locations in Europe and will help determine the survival of young salmon during their migration.

The EU funded NASCO project will see Inland Fisheries Ireland work alongside partners in Northern Ireland (River Bush), England (River Tamar), Spain (River Ulla and River Tea) and Denmark (River Skjern) in rolling out a counting, tagging and tracking system. Traps are used to catch migrating salmon smolts for tagging before releasing them to continue their migration journey. In order to provide stakeholders with the opportunity to follow and compare the migration timing of smolts in several countries, the daily numbers of salmon smolts counted in each system is uploaded for online viewing.

In Ireland, tagging is being carried out on salmon smolts from the Black River, a tributary of the River Erriff (NSIC), which flows through County Mayo. The Erriff is one of the premier salmon fishing rivers in Ireland and its smolt run typically occurs over six weeks during April and May. This year, the smolt run commenced on the river on the 3rd of April with 289 salmon smolts counted on the system to date.

Salmon Smolt

The salmon smolts are tagged with miniature acoustic transmitters and their subsequent migration is followed via acoustic listening stations situated at various locations. This information will help scientists to understand the survival rates of salmon smolts during their migration through the lower parts of rivers, estuaries and coastal areas, in addition to providing data on smolt run timing and migration behavior. The project will provide new data which will inform future salmon management and conservation work.

Dr. Cathal Gallagher, Head of Research and Development at Inland Fisheries Ireland said: “This is an exciting project which will allow us to gather new information around the survival and timing of salmon smolts journeying seaward through the River Erriff, and into and through inshore coastal waters. Daily smolt counts will be uploaded onto an online monitoring tool which is available to all for viewing.

We look forward to determining more about the smolts once they have been tagged by following their migration journey. As we are working with partners in Northern Ireland, England, Spain and Denmark, we can also learn from the data gathered in their regions. Ultimately, this information will inform our work in the area of salmon conservation which will prove invaluable to Ireland’s fisheries resource in the long term.”

To view the online smolt tool for the River Erriff and for more information about Inland Fisheries Ireland, visit: http://www.fisheriesireland.ie/Fisheries-Research/smoltrack-project.html .

Irish Angling Update – 20 April 2017

Lough Sheelin’s ‘Pink Moon’
Lough Sheelin’s ‘Pink Moon’
Lough Sheelin’s ‘Pink Moon’
‘Pink Moon’: Bitter winds, frustrated anglers, beautiful trout – Moody Sheelin

In between hiding chocolate eggs, eating them, then finding forgotten and lost eggs and eating them too, anglers found the time to get out on the water at venues from north to south. There were a few coarse angling festivals which fished well enough considering the sometimes windy conditions and spawning activity. The same easterlies did for other anglers at sea and inland at times too, but good fishing was had when the winds blew in from other quarters of the compass…

The first fly caught salmon on Lough Melvin was caught on 13th April, by Irish Ladies international Liz Dermott in Garrison Bay. The fish is estimated around 10-12lb and was returned safely to fight another day.

Angler poses in a boat with a salmon
Liz Dermott with the season’s first fly caught salmon from Melvin, released

Moving south we learn that the Moy returned a better catch last week, due in part to dropping water levels and the Easter break bringing out more anglers. In the end 48 salmon were reported to the office including a few double figure fish. There was one salmon reported from the Laune last week and a few sea trout. Anglers saw good numbers of fish run the system over the weekend. Currane also saw an upswing in reported catches as 7 salmon were landed last week. The River Suir is not turning out many salmon yet, but a couple of good looking fish were landed by Carrick on Suir and District Anglers club secretary Tommy O’Keefe, fishing the fly.

There was mixed fishing on the Midlands loughs last week. Olives were hatching on Ennell and as trout started rising some great fish to over 5lb were landed. On Derravaragh trout were rising despite the lack of any visible hatch – fry were thought to be the culprits. Lough Lene has been fishing well recently and some good rainbows and browns were taken at the Paddy Caffrey Cup. The last week on Sheelin was a tough one. The lake remains a cold place especially in the bitter winds that accosted the anglers for much of the week. Water temperatures are only 9C, about 3C less than normal for the time of year. Despite the elements working against the anglers there was a steady number fishing this lake during the week and at the weekend, and 27 trout to 6lb were reported to the office. There were some decent hatches of Olives on Lough Corrib, but for the most part the trout were not easily had even where they were rising. Some anglers did well and met good trout of 4, 5 and even 6lb. Lough Mask also saw some decent fishing at times, but mostly for smaller fish. On Lough Melvin anglers did well fishing wets during the hatches of buzzer and early sedges.

After three days of fishing the Erne Anglers Easter Festival the 19 competitors had caught and released over 422kg of roach, bream and hybrids. Simon Huthwaite was the winner on 51.700kg. Cathal Hughes did well to fight off the competition at the 3 day Easter One Festival fished on Lough Muckno. Bitter easterlies challenged the anglers, but overall catches were up 25% over last year. Cathal’s win makes for him a hat trick at this popular event. The CM Lakelands Easter Festival is a 2 day event and it was won by Alan Larkin whose 12.620kg catch on Day 1 gave him a strong lead. Pleasure anglers also had good fishing, particularly at Lanesborough where roach to over 1lb, bream to around 6lb and good hybrids are being reported. One angler had a 40lb bag of fish and others are managing nets to double figures in short 2 hour sessions.

Some good pike reports came into us over the last week. On Lough Ree fish to 22lb have been landed. Hopefully the lake will continue to produce pike like this for the International Pike Festival and World Cup being fished at the end of the month. Great fishing was enjoyed by tourist anglers staying at Melview Lodge in Longford last week. A group of Belgian anglers ahd 151 pike for their week’s fishing while 3 French anglers had 122 pike over 6 days.

Angler poses with a large bass
Glen with his 87cm bass. A catch of a life time for Catch of the Week

Finally we get to sea angling reports and our Catch of the Week. Glen Wightman had a bass of a lifetime on a North Kerry beach towards the end of last week. Fishing a small plug he caught and released a beautiful 87cm bass. Staying in Kerry, Tralee Bay SAC had good flattie fishing at Cashen with flounders to over 4ocm landed and charter boats in Dingle and Valentia Island are also reporting good fishing. There was also a report of good charter boat fishing from the Clare coast last week while up in Donegal Bay shore anglers had some excellent sport as the predators binged on abundant fry.

Waterville Lakes and Rivers Trust is hosting an information event for business owners and members of the public in Waterville and the surrounding areas. The event, which will take place at The Sea Lodge, Waterville, on Thursday 27th April at 7.30pm, will focus on sharing results from a recent economic survey carried out in Waterville among angling tourists to the area. The research reveals some key opportunities for business and service providers in the locality. For more information see: http://www.fisheriesireland.ie/

Dry in many places on Friday also but scatted outbreaks of rain in northern parts. Rather cloudy overall. Highest temperatures  from 11C in northern counties to 16C in southern areas and winds will be light northwesterly. The outlook is for mainly dry settled weather continuing over the weekend but more unsettled and rather cold conditions developing during the early days of next week with northerly breezes developing. Not the best forecast but at least the easterlies have moved on…

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

Myles Kelly

Catch, Photo, Release

If you have an angling story to share with the Irish Angling Update please send it to [email protected].


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