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| YOU
ARE HERE > SPORT AND LEISURE - INTRODUCTION
- ANGLING
- FRESHWATER FISHING |
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Freshwater
Fishing
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| Here
you can find out all about the best places to Freshwater Fish
as well as a comprehensive list of all the best Places to Stay
for your Perfect fishing holiday in Ireland. Some of the information
here has been kindly supplied by Bord Fáilte. Use the Links
below for more information. |
| Inshore
fishing both fly, river and from small boats, especially during
the months from May to September, is a growing trend. There
is no better means of appreciating the intimate connection between
the life of Irish coastal communities and the sea, than to fish
from a small boat equivalent in size to the craft that almost
all Irish fishermen used until recent times. Many visiting anglers
bring their own purpose-built 14 - 18 foot boats to a growing
number of centres where guidance on where to go, and on safety
issues is available.
Irish
shore angling is among the best in Europe. Almost every type
of shore fishing may be done, for a very wide range of species,
throughout the year.
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Coarse
Angling
Ireland has some of the cleanest and most lightly-fished freshwaters
in Europe. The Irish landscape is one of small fields and
wild peat bogs, littered with loughs of all sizes and drained
by many rivers; there are over 7,000 miles of riverbank for
the coarse angler. The scale of these waters varies dramatically.
Two of the biggest rivers, the Shannon and the Erne, each
comprise huge systems. The Shannon contains in its course
several massive loughs, such as lough Ree which is eighteen
miles long. The Erne also spreads into big networks of loughs,
like Lough Oughter in County Cavan. But apart from these systems
there are innumerable smaller rivers and loughs. What all
of the waters, big and small have in common is their richness
and their wealth of fish life.
Irish
inland waters have retained their pristine quality. Ireland
has never had a significant degree of heavy industry, and
its inland towns are mainly small. It is still possible to
find yourself in a corner of an Irish lough, sheltered by
dense reedbeds in ten feet of clear water and to feel that
you are the first person ever to have fished that particular
place.
This
peace can be found on any one of the many types of Irish water.
There are the big rivers, such as the Shannon, but there are
also medium sized rivers like the Barrow. There are deep loughs
dark with peat stain and there are crystal clear waters, such
as Lough Annaghmore in County Roscommon, where you may see
the fish take your bait. Some of the biggest loughs are rugged
and wild when stirred by the westerly winds which sweep over
Ireland. But there are also small quiet loughs and miles of
canal sheltered by stands of mature trees where the most delicate
styles of angling can be practised in perfect peace. Irish
coarse fishing offers this solitude and tranquility and it
can also offer companionship to those who like to fish in
company. But above all it offers superb fishing.
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Game
Angling
The essence of game angling is the pursuit of native fish
in wild places; Ireland offers a unique opportunity to experience
such fishing. Salmon, trout and sea-trout are native species
with an honoured place in Irish culture. And Ireland's loughs
and rivers have preserved their character in a landscape which
has changed very little over the centuries. The angler on
lough Mask, one of the great western limestone loughs, witnesses
a timeless scene looking across the waves to mountain ranges
which ripple into infinity on the skyline.
This
sense of place, which is one of the pleasures of fishing in
Ireland can be experienced in different ways on the many types
of Irish river and lough. Lough Mask is like an inland sea,
but there are also countless small loughs where the lone angler
can fish in sheltered solitude. Major rivers like the Munster
Blackwater in the south offer sport with salmon and scenery
on a grand scale while a more intimate experience can be enjoyed
on the minor limestone trout streams such as those which wind
through the green pastures of County Meath. But while Irish
game angling is a sport of varied landscapes and many seasons,
it has one abiding virtue; it still offers an authentic angling
experience in a world where this is increasingly rare.
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