Glenarm Breakwater 22 Oct
Moderators: donal domeney, saltydog
Glenarm Breakwater 22 Oct
People: Sean, Conor and me
Duration: 1000 - 1800
Tide:1359 HT
Weather: Good all day!!! - No rain, no wind
Bait:Rag, mack and sandeels
Rigs: pulleys, paternosters and single hook bombers. Also 1ox pollack lure
Results: 7 species - 20ish fish
Report:Good morning all,
My bro, nephew and I tried a new mark yesterday and some new tactics which resulted in a great day.
First of all the weather was very pleasant, no rain, no wind and no coats/hats needed all day.
We have been meaning to give the Breakwater at Glenarm a bash for some time now so we located here yesterday from 1000 to 1800.
We brought along our big rods and mainly fished with pulley rigs and single hook bombers ***be aware that this mark can be a bit of a tackle graveyard - best to use rottom bottom links*** we also recently purchased a coulple of 11' spinning rods and we used these along with 1oz lures.
The species count was high -
Mackerel x 1 at 1.5lbs
LSD x 1 @ 2lbs
Pollack - several, biggest was about 1.5-2lbs (pic to follow)
Coalies - several, but small
Cod x 1 very small
Flounder x 1 very surprised to see this over rough ground
Ballan Wrasse x 1 @ 6ozish
And the fish that made the day was a 7lb Salmon out of the harbour - no joking lads!!
We spotted it cruising around the harbour and tried to get him with bait and spinners, I finally hooked him with a silver/blue lure but I was suspicious about his lazy movement - this became clear when we got him out of the water - he was badly diseased and decayed all over his body. We reckoned that he had been up the river to spawn and had came back down the river where he was destined to die. We had a look, took a pic and put him back in the water but I'd be certain there were only a few hours life left in the big lad.
Using the lures from the rocks was great fun and we landed lots of pollack and coalies, we were targetting the pollack mainly but we only managed small ones - I think the larger fish had gone shopping for the day leaving the smaller one to look after themselves.
There were a few other lads fishing too and they caught lots of LSD's, Pollack and Coalies.
A great day was had by one and all and as the saying goes - you learn something new everyday - yesterday I learned that I am not a wee lad anymore and that rock-hopping is not as easy as it was 15 years ago - my legs, thighs, arms and back all ache today - I feel like I was subject to a paramilitary beating :shock:
We will defo be back to this mark.
GG
Duration: 1000 - 1800
Tide:1359 HT
Weather: Good all day!!! - No rain, no wind
Bait:Rag, mack and sandeels
Rigs: pulleys, paternosters and single hook bombers. Also 1ox pollack lure
Results: 7 species - 20ish fish
Report:Good morning all,
My bro, nephew and I tried a new mark yesterday and some new tactics which resulted in a great day.
First of all the weather was very pleasant, no rain, no wind and no coats/hats needed all day.
We have been meaning to give the Breakwater at Glenarm a bash for some time now so we located here yesterday from 1000 to 1800.
We brought along our big rods and mainly fished with pulley rigs and single hook bombers ***be aware that this mark can be a bit of a tackle graveyard - best to use rottom bottom links*** we also recently purchased a coulple of 11' spinning rods and we used these along with 1oz lures.
The species count was high -
Mackerel x 1 at 1.5lbs
LSD x 1 @ 2lbs
Pollack - several, biggest was about 1.5-2lbs (pic to follow)
Coalies - several, but small
Cod x 1 very small
Flounder x 1 very surprised to see this over rough ground
Ballan Wrasse x 1 @ 6ozish
And the fish that made the day was a 7lb Salmon out of the harbour - no joking lads!!
We spotted it cruising around the harbour and tried to get him with bait and spinners, I finally hooked him with a silver/blue lure but I was suspicious about his lazy movement - this became clear when we got him out of the water - he was badly diseased and decayed all over his body. We reckoned that he had been up the river to spawn and had came back down the river where he was destined to die. We had a look, took a pic and put him back in the water but I'd be certain there were only a few hours life left in the big lad.
Using the lures from the rocks was great fun and we landed lots of pollack and coalies, we were targetting the pollack mainly but we only managed small ones - I think the larger fish had gone shopping for the day leaving the smaller one to look after themselves.
There were a few other lads fishing too and they caught lots of LSD's, Pollack and Coalies.
A great day was had by one and all and as the saying goes - you learn something new everyday - yesterday I learned that I am not a wee lad anymore and that rock-hopping is not as easy as it was 15 years ago - my legs, thighs, arms and back all ache today - I feel like I was subject to a paramilitary beating :shock:
We will defo be back to this mark.
GG
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- SAI Megalodon!
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Hi Gav - sounds strange about the salmon. October is way too early for it to be spawning, most don't spawn til around Christmas. Even the trout haven't started spawning yet and they are at least a month earlier than the salmon. More likely the fish never made it as far as the river, may have had a compromised immune system and had a fungal infection, have seen this with salmon before. When they come back the coast its a very stressful time as the body changes to adapt to fresh water and sometimes this causes the immune system to crash....
Its called fishing, not catching. If it was called catching it wouldn't be fishing!
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and the cages are not very far offshore here either!???? :? :roll:
wre you casting in towards the corner that you were in the rough ground?all the most productive fishing ive had at the breakwater has been on the clean ground with the only possible snags being the odd lobster pot?
wre you casting in towards the corner that you were in the rough ground?all the most productive fishing ive had at the breakwater has been on the clean ground with the only possible snags being the odd lobster pot?
Not the BigPhil from Irish Angler mag, I'm the original, i swear!!!!
Sandman wrote:Any idea if it was a wild salmon or a farmed one? Usually on the farmed ones the corners of the tail fins etc are all rounded from hitting the cages and other fish nipping them. Did it have any lice on it? Wouldn't put it past a fish farmer to chuck any diseased ones out of the cages.....
I've posted a pic of the salmon in the photos section - you can see for yourself what condition it was in.
GG
BigPhil wrote:and the cages are not very far offshore here either!???? :? :roll:
wre you casting in towards the corner that you were in the rough ground?all the most productive fishing ive had at the breakwater has been on the clean ground with the only possible snags being the odd lobster pot?
Hi Phil,
we were positioned to the right of the two blue lamposts in the car park directly in front of the Lime Works, if that's what you mean by the corner.
Where do you locate to get to the smooth ground and how far do you need to cast?
Thanks,
GG
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was a bit of a lucky one lol.
effectively it took a spun mackrel strip :D
baited up with a new mackrel strip for doggies, cast out and the reel birdied :( spent 5 mins sorting that, and then reeled in to re cast. was hit very very hard close in and line ran off the reel lol. never caught anything that fought like that one did lasted a good 2mins or so between it pulling and me trying to get down the wet rocks and not lose it.
effectively it took a spun mackrel strip :D
baited up with a new mackrel strip for doggies, cast out and the reel birdied :( spent 5 mins sorting that, and then reeled in to re cast. was hit very very hard close in and line ran off the reel lol. never caught anything that fought like that one did lasted a good 2mins or so between it pulling and me trying to get down the wet rocks and not lose it.
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walk over the concrete to the point where the it runs onto the rocks, just where the locked bridge comes up from the pontoon where the feeding boat for the salmon cages.cast over towards garron point, this will put you on the clean ground
Not the BigPhil from Irish Angler mag, I'm the original, i swear!!!!
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