Lough Fishing Buddies

Providing Fishing courses and Trips in Ireland

Archive for the ‘ Latest News ’ Category

20lb 14oz Ramor Pike

A very cold and frosty morning on Lough Ramor with temperatures only reaching 2C by 10.30am. I did however venture out on the lake, “well togged out with plenty of winter layers” and fly fished away for Ramor’s illusive ”Winter Pike”. The 20lb 14oz predator pictured above was caught on a Stuart Wylie hot orange pike barbless fly. I also had some missed opportunities and a several follows from some larger fish . This fine Ramor pike was returned safely to fight another day, just before the wind and rain came which hampered an excellent days fly fishing. 

A well deserved warm cup of tea was enjoyed before returning home at 2pm.

Lough fishing buddies actively encourage catch and release.

The pike bye-law 809 provides for the following conservation measures:
• a bag limit of 1 pike in any one day,
• prohibits the killing of any pike greater than 50 cm in length,
• prohibits the possession by any person of more than 1 whole pike less than 50 cm or more than 0.75 kg of pike flesh, this provision does not apply to a person storing pike or pike parts subject to conditions,
• prohibits the possession by any person of more than 12 coarse fish for use as bait subject to conditions.
One aspect of the new bye law is that a pike over the specimen weight of 20 lbs. (9.072 Kg.) for a river fish and 30 lbs. (13.608 Kg.) for a lake fish are now protected and cannot be killed as in the previous bye-law.
A full copy of the bye law 809 protecting pike in Ireland can be accessed on the IFI website  – legislation for the pike angler to be aware of are: Coarse Fish, Conservation of and Prohibition on the sale of coarse fish Bye-Law 806, 2006.

Trout: 1st of March – 30th of September

Please feel free to contact us if you have any further questions or queries about Lough Ramor.

Damien Willis 00353 868012546

e-mail info@loughfishingbuddies.com

After a very stormy and windy night across the country. 

A window of opportunity opened for me today to fly fish Lough Ramor for winter pike. I launched my boat from the slip way at Virginia College and motored up the lake to fly fish some of my usual marks. The water itself was very coloured with less than 14″ of clarity due to the excessive rain fall the night before. The afternoon temperature’s peaked at 7.5C with a bitterly cold westerly wind making the day feel more like 3C.

I had caught nothing on my first two drifts so I decided to venture down the lake a little keeping my boat about 80 yards away from the shoreline. I soon hooked a nice double that fought with me for 14 minutes. This fine pike was hooked on a Stuart Wylie self tied barbless Pike Fly. Stuart lives in N.Ireland and is a keen fly fisherman and fly tyer, fishing the Lough Neagh Rivers for brown trout and dollaghan. Over the last 8 years or so Stuart has been targeting pike on the fly. His pike flies range from bait fish to attractor style patterns, both large and small he is also Ireland’s representative for the Pike Fly Fishing association (pffa) – Many thanks Staurt your flies worked a treat for me today.

If you would like more information about this article or wish to inquire about a guided days fly fishing for Pike on Lough Ramor, please feel free to contact me.

Damien Willis +353(0)86 8012546

E-mail info@loughfishingbuddies.com

Pike on the fly proved again this week to be a winner with specimens weighing over 20lbs  – My fishing partner for the day was Daniel Levy; whom did equally as well with some terrific examples in excess of 17lbs. In the space of 5 hours we both caught and released 100lbs of pure muscle pike. All fish were caught on barb-less flies and returned to the water safely.

Lough fishing buddies practice a catch and release policy. If you would like more information about this article or wish to inquire about a guided days angling for pike, please feel free to contact me.

Damien Willis

+353(0)868012546

E-mail info@loughfishingbuddies.com

 

http://www.youtube.com/embed/6ocss3RENGo?hl=en&fs=1

Fly fishing for pike is relatively new in Ireland. Pike on the fly is one of the most exciting ways of fishing. Any area where the water suddenly drops off to deeper levels is likely to hold good sized Pike. There is no closed season for Pike fishing but there is a bag limit of 1 fish per angler per day and all those over 50cm in lenght must be returned to the water, alive. Saying that loughfishingbuddies practice a catch and release policy. Pike are now one of the most highly sought after sport fish species in Europe and there has also been a huge increase in the popularity of pike fishing among Irish anglers. Pike are the largest of the freshwater predators and are abundant in all Irish watercourses from small to large loughs as well as rivers and canals. The ideal outfit is a “minimum of #9 rod with a #10 line and a #10 rod with a #11 line for the bigger flies and waters that are known to hold big pike”

Pike flies can easily be tied and come in a wide variety of colors and fashions. Most are brightly colored and resemble small bait fish for example small perch or roach. A slow drifting boat and good amount of skill and a lot of patience is all is required to catch these predators.

So if it pike you are after on the fly – why not give it a go.

The pike bye-law 809 provides for the following conservation measures:• a bag limit of 1 pike in any one day,
• prohibits the killing of any pike greater than 50 cm in length,
• prohibits the possession by any person of more than 1 whole pike less than 50 cm or more than 0.75 kg of pike flesh, this provision does not apply to a person storing pike or pike parts subject to conditions,
• prohibits the possession by any person of more than 12 coarse fish for use as bait subject to conditions.
One aspect of the new bye law is that a pike over the specimen weight of 20 lbs. (9.072 Kg.) for a river fish and 30 lbs. (13.608 Kg.) for a lake fish are now protected and cannot be killed as in the previous bye-law.
 

If you would like any more information about this article or fish to inquire about a guided day’s fly fishing for pike, please feel free to contact me.

Damien Willis +353(0) 868012546

E-mail info@loughfishingbuddies.com

With the may fly almost at an end – Sheelin did not disapoint this week with a brace of trout all returned safely as pictured below. All our trout rose to a small grey wulf during the late afternoon last week. Sedge fishing is said to be the cream of the season on Sheelin and this commences in full swing from about mid June and continues right through to the end of the season in October 12th. Small brown sedges hatches become prolific as the season advances. Best methods are fishing dry in a small size from 14 to 16’s. Anglers fishing sedges this time of year are advised to look for calm spots on the lake, sit and wait for rises. Anglers will also catch fish: fishing blind, so vary tactics. 

The Lough also gets hatches of Silverhorn sedges and small dark sedges in August and early September. A small size 12 or 14 fished dry close to the shore especially towards dusk can often take a good trout. Useful fly patterns are Green Peter, Murrough or better known as The Great Red Sedge and smaller brown sedges. Trout will be caught by various methods and using flies not mentioned above. The fly angler should bear in mind two points: Best results are generally obtained along sheltered shores in a small to moderate wave. Fishing the evening rise into the night usually gets better results than day time fishing. Be careful and get to know the lake. Lough fishing buddies actively encourage all anglers to return as many fish as possible in order to safeguard the welfare of the fish for years to come. Lough fishing buddies practise a catch and release policy.

If you would like more information about this article or wish to arrange a guided days fishing on this lake, please feel free to contact me.

Damien Willis +353(0) 868012546

E-mail info@loughfishingbuddies.com

The May Fly on Sheelin is now in full swing with clouds of spent in abundance dancing along the tree lines of sheltered bays. Sedges including Welsh Man’s Buttons and the occasional Murrough had also made an appearance through out the week. So where are the fish you may ask? – Well I have spent the last few days on the lake with various well respected anglers to try and answer that exact question. May time temperatures for this time of the year are close to March time temperatures averaging only 11C -Strong squalling wind directions also have played an important factor as well as the water temperature which at its peak reached only 6C for the last week. Trout are extremely sensitive to ever changing weather and will swim out to deeper water and will remain almost in stasis until the temperature of the water rises to approx 8-10c. They will also feed in deeper water on nymphs and food that is in easy reach not expending too much energy – Why go out for dinner when the food is in front of you. The fish dont need to surface at present as may fly nymps and sedge pupae are still in plenty of supply below the surface. The current wind conditions have also coloured the lake blowing consistent from a southwest and westerly direction. I remember listening to Dr Martin O Grady earlier this year about Zebra Mussel and the feeding habits of wild brown trout in general. In particular he spoke in dept about Lough Sheelin explaining that the mussel took between 6to12 days approx to filter the lake. Sheelin itself also drain’s into the Inny Systems which is in the opposite direction of the current wind direction. This explains why the lake remains coloured from above the Stray Rock to the North Eastern Shores of Dinner Island. Good news however is on the horizon - “The weather is set to change from Friday the 3rd of June” Wind direction is also set to change, blowing from the east which will most certainly help clear up the very much coloured Sheelin. Day time temperatures are also set to reach 24c which will certainly raise water temperature up to the magic 10c. I just hope that the May Fly will present as the Holy Grail of fly fishing this year has yet to happen. 

The latest loughfishingbuddies video is now available on www.youtube.com- Type in loughfishingbuddies in the search bar and enjoy. This week, watch the May Fly on Sheelin.

If you would like more information about this article or wish to arrange a guided day’s angling on this lake, please feel free to contact me.

Damien Willis +353(0)868012546

E-mail info@loughfishingbuddies.com

A Very tough week on Lough Sheelin with high winds blowing form the south and south west. Although plenty of May Fly are still hatching along with a good showing of sedges, very few fish are actively feeding on the surface, rising only once to the odd fly. Day time temperatures have not helped either, reaching only the low to mid teen’s. The unsettled weather is due to continue well into next week. The lake itself is very coloured from Sally Island to Curadonna Point which is located on the eastern shores of Lough Sheelin. The best area’s to fish is the south western end of the lough from the Carrick reeds to Sporting rock as the water is less coloured.

If you would like more information about this article, please feel free to contact me.

Damien Willis +353(0)868012546

E-mail info@loughfishingbuddies.com

On the Spent – Lough Sheelin

A good week on Lough Sheelin with plenty of May Fly-making an apperance on the lake – Fish in excess of 6lbs were caught and released by loughfishingbuddie Daniel Levy - Visiting anglers from Belgium and the UK also enjoyed the spoils with some fine wild brown trout up to the 3lb mark. The wind on Sheelin had played some tricks blowing North West to west then switching to the South and finally blowing up to  a strong South West on Monday, however our experience and knowledge proved to be invaluable in determining day to day timing and location of hatches, which in turn lead to locating the prime areas for fly fishing through out the day and evening. Pictured above are some fine examples of what can be caught on Lough Sheelin. Why not log onto you tube and type in loughfishingbuddies – select the 3rd movie and see the results for your self.

Loughfishingbuddies operate a catch and release policy.

If you would like more information about this article or wish to arrange a guided days fly fishing on Lough Sheelin, please fell free to contact me.

Damien Willis +353(0)868012546

E-mail info@loughfishingbuddies.co

Good fishing reports again this past week on sheelin –  The May fly now in its 6th day has shown some promising results with large trout up to the 7lb mark being taken by the well respected angler John Murphy – Mount Nugent Cavan.

May Fly

The Mayfly emerges from the water, goes through the transformation from nymph to fly, swarms, mates, and then lays its eggs and dies, all in the course of little more than an evening.In the 1600s both Charles Cotton and Issac Walton wrote on the subject promoting the use of Mayfly imitations. These insects have a technical name, (Ephemeridae), which translates into the phase, “lives but a day.” They emerge from their underwater world without mouthparts and therefore can’t eat. This is why they live only for a day. The May Flies eggs are deposited on or in water differently depending on the species. In some species the female will skim across the surface of the water in order to dislodge the eggs from her abdomen. Another species will fly across the waters surface and drop yellow or orange egg masses onto the waters surface. Once the egg lying has taken place the exhausted insect will often times fall onto the surface of the water only to be taken by fish that have observed it from below the waters surface. At a glance the Majority of Mayfly Species has three tails but there are some that only have two. These tails are visible throughout most of the developmental stages. 

All will have six legs with one sharp claw on each foot. In the adult the tail can be as long as the insect itself. There are generally 10 abdominal segments with moving gills along the sides of the insect. The Mayflies Life Cycle starts with adult female depositing her eggs in or on the water.The eggs then fall slowly onto the lake or river bottom and in time will develop into an aquatic insect called an immature nymph. These nymphs are classified into four basic groups: Burrowing, free-swimming, clinging and crawling. The Burrowing nymphs like areas that have a either slow or very calm current with a soft bottom made up of rich silt, fine sand, decayed organic debris and marl bottoms of pools, and quiet stretches of river and streams, as well as, the firm bottom of some lakes. The free-swimming nymphs will inhabit areas where there is plenty of natural structure such as, aquatic vegetation and heavy aggregate bottom areas. The Crawling nymphs will inhabit areas of moderate to fast current. Most species have weak legs and are very poor swimmers. They will inhabit the moderate currents among vegetation, gravel bottoms of the water. These Mayfly Nymphs can spend as much as two years Borrowing, Crawling, Clinging, and Swimming around the bottom of the water feeding on algae, organic matter and microscopic organisms.

In order to continue to grow this insect must from time to time, shed or molt the hard exoskeleton. Once the hard shell has been removed the insect will secrete a fluid from its epidermal cuticular membrane, which will harden into another exoskeleton in which the nymph can grow. The mayfly nymph will spend nearly 95% of its entire lifespan below the waters surface. When the Nymph reaches maturity it will transform into a ’sub-imago’. The sub-imago is what we see emerge or hatch from the Nymphs. They are not an adult but are fully winged. This insect is called a Dun and must go through one more molt before becoming fully fledged. When water reaches a temperature of 50 degrees F and maintains that temperature range for three consecutive days, there will be a Mayfly hatch. The Mayfly which is the holy grail of fly fishing makes its appearance in mid May and continues for approximately 4 to 6 weeks. It pays to have a skilled guide direction-finding you to the best drifts and sheltered bays. Local knowledge is invaluable in determining day to day timing and location of hatches, which in turn leads to locating the prime areas for spent gnat and murrough fishing in the late evening. A Book by Cavan man Patsy Deery called Irish Mayflies is available from most good book stores and will give you a very good idea of the many imitations of this Holy Grail of insect.

If you would like more information about this article, please feel free to contact me.

Damien Willis + 353(0) 868012546

e-mail info@loughfishingbuddies.com

Mount Falcon Lough Conn May 2011

Mount Falcon Estate is a luxury country hotel lying between Foxford and Ballina in County Mayo. It is comprised of the Mount Falcon Country House Hotel, Fisheries, Spa, Lodges, & Leisure centre, set on a 100 acre Estate. Mount Falcon Estate is a perfect hideaway for your luxury short break or holiday in the West of Ireland. Those who love fishing will be right at home here as Mount Falcon Fisheries offers 2 miles double bank private wild Atlantic Salmon fishing on the renowned River Moy and near by Lough’s Conn and Cullen. Irish legend tells of how Lough Conn was created when Fionn mac Cumhaill  was hunting with his dogs  called Conn and Cullin. They came across a wild boar. Finn and the dogs attempted to chase the boar, however as the wild boar ran,water poured from its feet. The two dogs ran ahead of Finn and eventually Conn was ahead of Cullin. Conn chased the boar for days until a lake appeared. The boar swam back to land but Conn was drowned. This happened again in the south to Cullin.

My lough fishing buddies friends joining me this year were non other than David Molloy, Daniel Levy and Matthew Penny. Our day started with some short fly casting lessons followed by some superb fishing on Lough Conn. The weather itself was good for the time of the year, however we were not so fortunate with the May Fly which were small in numbers. Top fly was an olive muddler which caught the most fish. Our Collective tally for the week was in excess of 120 fish the biggest being a shade under 2lbs and double that to the fly. Eating out was not a problem either – fresh fish – sirloin steak – fried chicken and champagne were all to be enjoyed on many of the shore lines of Conn. The wind did how ever blow a gale on two days in particular with waves in excess of eight feet – Bays that fished extremely well were CloUghan’s – Sandy Bay – Rinmore Point and the Abbey Shore line.

I would like to especially thank the Kelly Family of Kelly Boat hire and the staff at Mount Falcon for making our stay a very memorable occasion.

If you would like more information about this article, or wish to book a guided days fishing, please feel free to contact me.

Damien Willis +353(0)868012546

E-mail info@loughfishingbuddies.com