Archive for Irish Angling Forum Irish Angling Forum is dedicated towards Game, Sea, and Coarse fishing in Ireland. It is built on the contributions of its forum members. We welcome all anglers to join the forum, to discuss about fishing and enjoy their stay.
 


       Irish Angling Forum Forum Index -> Rivers
bwlodge

The 2008 Salmon Season On the Blackwater Lodge Fishery.

It’s Summertime – and the Fishing ain’t Easy!
The 2008 Season on Blackwater Lodge Salmon Fishery on Ireland's Cork Blackwater.


Adapting a line from George Gershwin’s famous song,  Lodge proprietor Ian Powell looks at
the catch statistics and explains how changing tactics helped to ensure great catches.


Fishery Records Tumble in 2008!
2008 will be etched in our memories as three long-standing all-time records were beaten this year.

August Catch
The first was the total catch for August which was 422 of which 209 were released.
The record had stood since 1992 and was 377.

One Day Catch
The second was the total catch for one day, which we broke on September 13 when no less than 55 salmon were caught for the day – 26 of which were released alive. The previous best day was 52 in August, 1992.

First Ever Salmon Caught
The third was the number of anglers who caught their first salmon.
This was 61 which beat the previous best of 52 in 1998.
The number of first salmon caught expressed as a %age of the total rod days for the season  
was also the highest ever recorded at 3.25, beating the previous record of 2.9 in 1992.

Season Summary
2008 was actually a very good season. The total number of salmon caught was 1,024.  
Of these, 527 were released alive.
This was the second highest total recorded in the last 10 years, and the eighth highest since 1986 (23 years).

There were so many stories of great experiences on the river this year that we could never recount them all.
The highlight was probably the Van de Laar party from Holland who had just one day fishing guided by Glenda Powell.  None had ever salmon fished before and four of them had never even fished. Starting fishing at almost mid-day, every single one of them had caught their first salmon by 3pm., two of them had caught two each & even the driver who was chauffeuring them for the day had caught one as well!

Then there was Fay Voysey-Moore & her son James from Devon who were here for a week in September. Neither had ever caught a salmon before, though were quite experienced anglers. It was Fay’s dream to come to Ireland to catch a salmon. And she did – 11 fish to 12 pounds for Fay and 10 for James. Her dream came true in style!

Table 1. Catch Statistics by Month  1986 – 2008
This gives the actual numbers of fish caught by month, plus a number of averages.
                      YEAR    Feb.    Mar.    Apr.    May    June    July     Aug.     Sept.    TOTAL
                      1986      19        13       23        6        48        87      207       347         750
                      1987        7        20       14      20        43        81        74       120         379
                      1988      10        18       17      43      293      383      315       409      1,488
                      1989      13        35       48      35      255      135      265       370      1,165
                      1990      13        28       22      31        76        34        54         97         365
                      1991        6          7       18      40        57        75        39         86         328
                      1992        1          6         8      33      145      222      377       590      1,511
                      1993      15        18       26      53      255      280      150       367      1,164
                      1994        8        14       23      82      255      130      147       218         878
                      1995        2        23       23      28      191      117        44       190         619
                      1996        3        14       15      72      210      163      276      333      1,086
                      1997        -        13          8       24    184      140       138      326         833
                      1998        1          3       10      25      160      296      268      352      1,115
                      1999        3        15       17      41      129        79      173      266         723
                      2000        1          3       12      51      215      264      130      283         958
                      2001        2        Closed F&M   31      160      118      208      254         773
                      2002        2          4         6        9      132      137      197      282         769
                      2003        3        13         9      49        80      162        94       143        553
                      2004      14          8       22      23        49        86      353      524      1,079
                      2005        5          6         6      29        70      114      108      309         647
                      2006        1        17       38      39        50        61        47       407        660
                      2007        1          5       12        8        43      115      273      333         804

Average 1986-2007        6        13       17     35      141      149      179      300         848
     10YA 1998-2007        3          7       13      31     109      143      185      315         808
     10YA 1999-2008        4          8       14      30       95      125      201      322         799
       5YA 2003-2007        5        10       17      30       58      108      175      343         749
       5YA 2004-2008        5          8       18      24       47        99      241      398         843

                      2008        5       4        14     22        21     117      422     419     1,024


We can conclude from this:
- within the lottery that is spring fishing, catches appear to be holding their own.
 Our gut feeling would be that the spring run is improving slowly, but other factors such as
 number of rods fishing and river conditions belie this fact.
- there is a continuing downward trend in number of fish caught in May & June.
 Here again, number of anglers plays a very significant part. Decimation of the grilse run by the nets discouraged
 a large percentage of visiting anglers. Obviously, we are expecting a resurgence of grilse now the nets are gone -
 but with these fish being predominantly 1/1 (one river & one sea year), we will have to wait until 2010 for the
 progeny of the 2007 run to return.

Grilse and autumn fish
- It was blatantly obvious in 2008 that grilse run was even later, and in fact peaked at the end of August.
 This helps to explain not only the good catch figures for August and September, but also the very poor ones
 for June, which was   when one would normally have expected these fish to run.
- Over time, there is a definite improvement in catches, especially in the latter part of the season.
 The 5YA & 10YA figures for August & September are growing steadily. However, this year, the majority of the fish caught in September were not autumn fish. Not withstanding the high water levels throughout the summer, we only started to see our fresh autumn run fish making an appearance in the lower beats on the last two days of the season.
One angler on Beat 3 caught six sea-liced fish all on fly on the last day.
Obviously, catch statistics are affected by not only the number of  salmon returning to run the river, but also the rainfall & river height, plus of course the number of anglers actually fishing.

In order to see the trends in recent years, here are a couple of tables of statistics.

Size of Fish

Table 3: Average Size of Fish by Month.
                            Year        Feb   Mar   Apr   May   June   July   Aug   Sept     Total

10YA 1997-2006 (Nets)        7.3    7.5    7.6     7.9     5.1     4.2    4.7      5.6       5.3
   5YA 2002-2006 (Nets)       7.8    8.4    8.0     8.3     5.6     4.5    4.8      5.6      5.6
                            2007         6.3    7.6    9.6     8.0     6.9     5.7    5.9      6.2      6.2
                            2008         7.5    8.8    8.4     7.3     8.0     6.0    5.2      5.7      5.7
       % change cf: 10YA            3     17     11      -7       57     43     10         2        7
        % change cf:   5YA           -4      5       5    -12        43     34       9        2       2
      % change cf:  2007          19    16    -13      -9       16       5    -12        -8       -8

The above table shows that the average size of the fish in June & July increased even further in 2008 relative to 2007 and the averages for the previous years. In August & September, it was still above the 5YA & 10YA up to 2006 when the nets still operated, but fell below the 2007 figures. This was due the late grilse and autumn runs

Weather and River Conditions
We thought that 2007 was a wet summer, but there was actually 54% more rain fell in 2008 compared with 2007.  

Table 4:  Summer Rainfall in mm for 2007/8
         Year     July     August     September     Total

        2008      113          98               91              302
        2007      106          56               34              196

This obviously reflected even more in the river height.

Table 5: Average River Height in cms by Month for Recent years
                       Year    Jan   Feb   Mar   Apr   May   June  July  Aug  Sept

                        2008    168    89     84     49     35      39    113     98    91
                        2007    135   121   122    35     29      35      61     56    36
Average  2004-2006    121     75     73    66     59      39      30     39    58
                        2006    127     57     76    60     83      42      25     21    61
                        2005    130     74     56    74     53      40      33     27    37
                        2004    105     93     87    64     41      34      31     68    75

During early summer & the backend, we can observe the following trends:
- Lower levels in April, May & June for the last 2 years.
- Very much higher levels in July, August & September this year.
- In 2007, the levels were higher than normal in July & August, but not to the same degree.
This explains why last year, we had such excellent results on the fly in August & September, as the river came down to a lovely fly height during this period.  Unfortunately, this wasn’t the case in 2008, as the water level was just too high at this time for good fly-fishing.

Table 6: %age Fly-caught Fish by Month & Year
             Year   Feb.   March   April   May   June   July   August   Sept.   Total

             10YA     2         22        17      21       23        31        16       11       17
             2007     8         29        67      63       48        20        38       37       36

% Change for 285        31      304     192     111      -36      136     234     109
2007 cf 10YA

             2008    40        25        71       14      10        38         8        19       18

Whilst we had a high percentage of fly-caught fish in July 2008, this was definitely not the case in August and September, when fly-fishing was virtually impossible.

Table 7: Average River Height by Month in cms
                       Year    Jan   Feb   Mar   Apr   May  June  July  Aug  Sept

                       2008     168    89     84    49     35      39    113    98     91
                       2007     135  121   122    35     29      35      61    56     36
Average 2004-2006     121    75     73    66     59      39     30     39     58
                       2006     127    57     76    60     83      42     25     21     61
                       2005     130    74     56    74     53      40     33     27     37
                       2004     105    93     87    64     41      34     31     68     75

This shows that the river level throughout the summer in 2008 was way above normal.
The figures for 2007 were not nearly so high, which explains the difference in the number of fly-caught fish.

The extremely prolonged wet period required a change in our thinking – we had to re-write the fishing handbook,
so to speak. Normally, we would say that fly-fishing was best below 0.65m on the gauge, and spinning best below about 0.80m on the gauge. At heights greater than 1.10-1.20m, we would have not considered it worthwhile going out,  as the water was just too damn high.  

Fishing is a wonderful sport, and woe betide anyone who thinks he knows it all!
Fortunately, we were not so dogmatic, and persisted fishing in what we would have thought previously were impossible conditions. We were helped by having a new style spinner in stock in our shop – the French-made Silver Bullet – which fished superbly well in these high water conditions.

It was with a black & silver 22g one of these with a very large blade that I hooked a huge fish on August 13th. last.
I had refilled my spinning reel with 19lb. nylon just before leaving, and fished our Beat No. 5 - Inchinleama – on the lower river. In the early afternoon, I hooked a very large fish which I played for 25 minutes before the spinner came out! Four other anglers witnessed the event. The fish was reckoned to be in the 20-30lb class - that's fishing!

But what about the fly in high water – I hear you say?

Not quite such an easy proposition as  much of the river is best fly-fished by wading – which becomes next to impossible at gauge heights of 0.65m or more.  We are however, looking to the future on this, and hope to be doing far more fishing with Shooting Head Lines, which lend themselves much better to sunk line high water bank fishing.

Courses:
Glenda ran a course on Shooting heads last February with her fellow Loop No. 1 Pro Team colleague Thomas Bergren from Sweden with great success, and they are planning a further two in the first week of February 2009. Contact the Lodge if you’d like to book a place.


Looking forward to 2009 and beyond……………………

The 2008 season started badly when we were given the news day before the 2008 season opened  that a spring quota and brown tag system would be in operation up to May 12 on the Blackwater. This put off a lot of (Irish) anglers from taking out their licences in the spring. The administration of the system blatantly didn’t work, and we are assured by the CEO of the Southern Board that it will not be in existence for 2009.
It’s about time that those in charge came to their senses, and made a change to our season.
If we genuinely wish to preserve spring salmon, the best way to do it is to delay the start of the season until March.
The bag limit per day also needs to be revised. The grilse running in June & July need to be conserved, so a bag limit of one fish per day would make much more sense.  With the bulk of the salmon now running in August and September, this would be the better time to allow a 3 fish per day limit.
Serious consideration should also be given to changing the season to allow us to fish on into October.
Many rivers in the UK close much later. The number of anglers who fish in October and November would help to provide a great economic boost to an industry that has suffered greatly in the last eight years. The Blackwater has superb late runs of fresh fish which could well be exploited – even if it was on a fly only and perhaps catch and release basis for a trial period.
But for now, the rods are stored away, and we can but sit and wait to see what the powers that be will have in store for us for the coming season.

       Irish Angling Forum Forum Index -> Rivers
Page 1 of 1
Create your own free forum | Buy a domain to use with your forum