Ye Gods, what does it take to catch a fish
ONce again the wind followed me around the reservoir, no fish were catch and only seen towards the end. a great deal of small flies in the surface film at the windblown side, nothing eating them though. Pretty much had a go at everything, but mainly concentrated on bloodworm and a black buzezer, although suffers alot of tangles when used together. Does seem like a credible brown trout fishery though, the people there spoke highly of it and it is largly unknown. When the weather calms down i will investigate this more seriously. It is largly surrounded by peat, i don't know if this will effect the aquatic life makeup at all.
Ponts of interest: i meet the straid fishery manager today at killylane, he recommended dungonnell in the summer.
Also just noticed that killylane is ment to be disabled accessable. I didn't think this was the case at all.
Friday, 7 March 2008
5th march, killylane
Labels:
brown trout,
fly fishing,
flyfishing,
ireland,
killylane,
northern,
peat,
reservoir,
straid
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
2 comments:
Thank you for the post, pretty helpful info.
Thanks so much for this post. A combination of advice that I've heard before but always bears repeating; plus new tips that I really ought to consider
Post a Comment