Thanks Noel, hopefully I will be in front of the camera more this year than behind it taking the pictures!!doggie3131 wrote:nice fish paula.good of you to concentrate on the camara work!!![]()
you will get yours soon i hope!
Besides, I am much more photogenic don’t ya think!
Thanks Stef. It was good to get out to a local mark.stefwest wrote:well done paula and norman great report and some nice fish there keep it up great to see
I am just back up from Co.Kerry fishing, which is the reason for the late reply, I haven’t been online much, too busy fishing.
MC wrote:feel sorry for youKERRY1 wrote:Thanks Martin. As u said there's always next time, and the time after that and the time after that for me to try and get oneMC wrote:nice report, pity you didnt hook any but there is always the next timeI met Jonny from the U.C.C on Saturday while out on my travels and got speaking to him briefly which was cool, it's always nice to put a face to a name.
Thanks ghostthe-ghost wrote:well done! first two are quite similar to a brown trout and third one looks like its been in the sea for a while as its lost its markings and became more silver.. nice fishin
Hi Cathal and thanks,cathalger wrote:Hi Paula,
Great report, great fishing too, well done. There is an interesting difference in your sea trout as the-ghost says. The first one looks a bit like a brownie but the tell tail (pardon the pun) black edge to the tail of a sea trout is clearly visible. The 2nd is very brownie looking, looks almost like a Lough Carra trout with its silver flanks and yellow tinges and fins, lovely condition that one. No 3 looks like a well mended kelt, extremely silver and lean.
Are there sea trout streams running into Strangford Lough, forgive my ignorance but not familiar with the lough, been there a couple of times but never fished it. Our biology teacher (a Mayo woman) used to organise bird watching day trips to Strangford lough when I was at school, thats really the only experience of the place I have. Fascinating place.
That looks like a good mullet in your avatar, what size was it? I hope to make a bit of mullet progress this season.
Cheers,
Cathal.
Strangford Lough comprises off many small rivers, streams and lagoons, areas with shallow water, deep pools and inlets and it’s those features and the way it’s made up that make it ideal for holding Seatrout. There’s over 100 miles of shoreline to explore but not all of it is easily accessible. There is a good mix of both fresh water and sea water within the Lough and as well as that, there is plenty of seaweed and kelp growing which makes it a perfect habitat and feeding ground for them too. There is fast moving tidal currents which oxygenate the water.
I have fished quite a few places in the Lough but there’s so many others I have yet to investigate and fish but I hope and plan to more this year.
For K2 and me the trout are purely to pass some time until the mullet arrive and when they do they provide us with a few months or so of great crack targeting them.
Thanks. The mullet in my avatar I caught last year from the Lough and it was the biggest one I have ever landed. Here’s a link to the report from last year: http://www.sea-angling-ireland.org/bull ... =3&t=29889
Have you fished for mullet before yourself? If you have then you will know how addictive they are but at the same time how frustrating! You need to have lots of patients and preservation because they drive you mad but they are great sport and when you do finally hook into one all the time effort you put in is worth it, the fight they give is fantastic! You know you have a fish on when you have hooked a mullet! If you haven’t targeted them before then I really would say to you give them a go, you’ll never look back.
You are more than welcome to join us sometime for a session over the summer if you are ever over in the direction of Strangford, just give me a shout beforehand, send me a PM and we can get something arranged. Good luck.
Thanks mate. It was a good to meet up with you again and get out fishing, it was a long winter waiting for the season to come around again. It was great to see your very own hand made fly working, pity you didn’t get landing your fish but with the way it leaped out of the water I am not surprised to got itself free! That’s the way it goes.pookie5488 wrote:Yes good to get out again good day and norman got a few good fish great to see. As for fly they were very hard to get on the feed loads of fish jumping to the fly a few hook ups very annoying but fun. Thought good chance to try a fly i been working on and first casts fish on proper it took a run turned into us jumped and that close was able to see fly come out of mouth...gutted but thats fishing for you. Home to vice to tie a few more lol
Now tie some more flies – not for you, for me. I am seriously thinking about giving this fly fishing a go, it looks great crack and when the mullet arrive they will give us some great sport on the fly rods. Roll on the summer, hopefully it’s a good one.
Thanks grady. Now all I have to do is get one myself. Going out today after work, fingers crossed.grady wrote:very well done Paula and Norman, good start, nice couple of trouts there
Thanks Paul. I’ll get a read at that link you gave me soon when I have abit more time. There seems to be a few fish about at the minute. Get yourself out with some of those newly tied flys you made, they should work a treat, they certainly look the part. Maybe see you about sometime. Good luck.Der Baron wrote:Guys, had some difficulty with this last year convincing some that what I had caught in the same river were in fact Seatrout, Kerry, Norman, well down, great catch! This river I know well, and I don't believe it holds brown trout of this size. The sea trout smolts released into it, every year are not indigenous, they may well be mixing with the natural strain, so that might explain the variances. Or have you ever seen a Salmon that has been in a river a while, they colour up, almost beyond recognition. This makes the Grilse hard to distinguish from a large sea trout. Here's an interesting debate on the same thing on another forum, just have a read, and make up your own mind.
http://www.flyforums.co.uk/sea-trout-fi ... out-4.html