East Coast Bream/Triggerfish
Moderator: donal domeney
East Coast Bream/Triggerfish
Are there any marks on the east coast where bream or triggerfish can be a realistic target?
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bream & triggerfish
a couple of years ago i caught a black bream on wicklow harbour just down the side of the wall on the seaward side on a little piece of rag. i taught this was rare, i never heard of a triggerfish being caught on the east coast but strange things have being happening in irish waters in the last ten years or so with global warming who knows what will happen in ten years from now maybe float fishing for tuna off wicklow harbour.
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Indomitable spirit - never giving up or wanting to give up.
http://www.adverts.ie/shops/east-coast-tackle/
http://www.eastcoasttackle.ie
East Coast Tackle
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Black Bream
Hi Frank24
Black Bream are definitely being caught around Wexford and Waterford from July onwards, with confirmed reports from the Safe in Rosslare and around Kilmore Quay (the small shingle strand to the east). Equally some of the charter boats have taken them on rough ground around the Saltee Islands. It appears that they are migrants coming in from the Bristol Channel and Cornwall/Devon areas. Triggerfish by contrast are almost exclusively caught on the west coast as they follow the Gulf Stream up from far warmer waters from July through to November (the ocean warms and cools a lot slower than the land). Both need small hooks and small baits, like ragworm or strips of squid, ideally on a long flowing trace. Triggerfish tend to feed near the surface, Bream far lower down, and both like rough ground, be it reefs, rocks or even Wicklow's harbour walls... nice one Paul, there's a lot of us out here that would like to match your achievement. :wink:
Hope this helps...
Black Bream are definitely being caught around Wexford and Waterford from July onwards, with confirmed reports from the Safe in Rosslare and around Kilmore Quay (the small shingle strand to the east). Equally some of the charter boats have taken them on rough ground around the Saltee Islands. It appears that they are migrants coming in from the Bristol Channel and Cornwall/Devon areas. Triggerfish by contrast are almost exclusively caught on the west coast as they follow the Gulf Stream up from far warmer waters from July through to November (the ocean warms and cools a lot slower than the land). Both need small hooks and small baits, like ragworm or strips of squid, ideally on a long flowing trace. Triggerfish tend to feed near the surface, Bream far lower down, and both like rough ground, be it reefs, rocks or even Wicklow's harbour walls... nice one Paul, there's a lot of us out here that would like to match your achievement. :wink:
Hope this helps...
Last edited by kieran on Fri Jun 25, 2004 9:20 am, edited 1 time in total.
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just down the side of the wall with a size 4 hook 5lb line and a couple of bb shot and a tiny peice of rag , i was trying to blood my 7yr old son at the time he was catching little pollock and small wrass and along came a black bream about 10in in lenght. i think it worked because i had to drag him back home after about 6hrs and nearly wipeing out the entire population of small fish on the east coast , all fish lived and went back alive. now i have created a monster and he is beating the living s##t out of me in every competition.Donagh wrote:On the extreme seaward side of wicklow old pier there's a reef close in. I presume you caught the bream between the kelp and the wall.
Donagh
Kstaff has always been the new black in my eyes anyway!!!!!!!
Indomitable spirit - never giving up or wanting to give up.
http://www.adverts.ie/shops/east-coast-tackle/
http://www.eastcoasttackle.ie
East Coast Tackle
Indomitable spirit - never giving up or wanting to give up.
http://www.adverts.ie/shops/east-coast-tackle/
http://www.eastcoasttackle.ie
East Coast Tackle
trigger fish
There was a trigger fish taken off the Breaches in Kilcoole about 10 years ago in one of our club competitions. This is the only one I have ever seen on the east coast. As reported earlier this year, I did see a black bream taken from Ballinamona in Wexford. The pier in Cahirciveen was full of triggers last year and boats fishing Barrow Harbour near Fenit took quite a few also.
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