Tue Feb 01, 2011 3:23 pm
Wed Feb 02, 2011 1:47 am
Wed Feb 02, 2011 2:06 am
Wed Feb 02, 2011 12:50 pm
bigbadtom wrote:A very nice way to come back from the blank Al. Well done you two.![]()
![]()
Team Turner wrote:well done boys again.
FisherKing wrote:Good session guys well doneI'll have to sneak out myself again during the week for a cast
roger de dodger wrote:respectable session for a new markand a dogfish we dont see many of them about here in the cold weather
saving private brian wrote:well done ye 2 again.i bet ur glad u got a cast in because i dont think its too nice from 2mor on.well done
Beachbrat666 wrote:Looks like a nice mark, secret?![]()
ps:Nice mark = no rocks to break bones on
grady wrote:another great report lads well done nice session
gfkelly1969 wrote:great report al and its good to see that the new mark fished well for yourself and jordan
razor2 wrote:Fine load of fish there againwell done lads
Jayball10 wrote:Well done Al and Jordan. The definition on your camera is great! Great clarity in the colours of the fish and background.
tomgrey wrote:Well done, nice report and fine pics, nice and clear!
kaylemf wrote:well done, plenty of fish there!
eyesreilly wrote:50 fish between the two of yis, that a nice comeback from the blank Al, and well done to Jordan on the double coalie over 30cms.Thats a nice doggie, but put the codling at the start of the measure and dont be trying to stretch him to 23cms
, and theres not a teatowel in sight
![]()
![]()
chuckaroo wrote:another great report there Al. and great pictures too.
hey, i was at the other side of the bay during that time! was on my own and thought i'd give it a try but i just couldnt get myself warmed up!i cast out 2 rods and nothing for 30mins. then a series of tiny bits, non-stop. eventually i pulled in a wee coley. the tiny wee bites continued (im guessing from your report that they were small coley and/or whiting) but i didnt hook much. at this stage i headed to the car to THAW the hands and warm myself up. ended up sitting in the car for over half an hour with the heat on.
freezing night
![]()
came back down to the rods and reeled in a doggy. was pleased to see it. fished for a little more then packed up.
thats my report..
one of them nights, motivation wasnt there and just found it too cold (it was actually +5*C which isnt too bad!, but anyway).
so headed towards base lookin out for other anglers. saw people, which i now know to have been yourselves, from the main road.looks like yous had a much better session. nice1
thelegend wrote:great stuff big man and little man, busy session on a new mark, you be back i think , well done
rodbender wrote:Nice one lads. Well done.
kerrywez wrote:HI Al I have fished that spot many, many times in the past, it fishes far better at low water. I had a 10 Lbs cod from the wee pier and two specimen plaice, one 3 1/4 the other 3 10 ozs, both on the one day and within 1/2 an hour, it was in May because I remember the bike boys going to the NW practice, the cod was in October, as far as I can remember. It is a bit far from where I live now, but had many great days fishing there, I fished it the day of the hurricane and was up in the car park, casting along side the pier, got loads of good coalies and then went to the beach, behind the golf course, and got some small cod and more decent coalies there also, I am sure you will know where I mean I do not want to say where the beach is, as I am sure you do not want everyone fishing your new found mark. You had a good session there and must have been a happy chapie, not to mention Jordan. I would advise you to go there in mid April and see if there are any early plaice in, but May is the best month for them and at low water. The pic of the pier brought back many found memories to me, thanks for posting it.
Regards Wez
gerryl wrote:great report and pic's...count is like a small trawler...well done ye both.
Wed Feb 02, 2011 2:41 pm
Wed Feb 02, 2011 9:52 pm
kerrywez wrote:HI Al I have fished that spot many, many times in the past, it fishes far better at low water. I had a 10 Lbs cod from the wee pier and two specimen plaice, one 3 1/4 the other 3 10 ozs, both on the one day and within 1/2 an hour, it was in May because I remember the bike boys going to the NW practice, the cod was in October, as far as I can remember. It is a bit far from where I live now, but had many great days fishing there, I fished it the day of the hurricane and was up in the car park, casting along side the pier, got loads of good coalies and then went to the beach, behind the golf course, and got some small cod and more decent coalies there also, I am sure you will know where I mean I do not want to say where the beach is, as I am sure you do not want everyone fishing your new found mark. You had a good session there and must have been a happy chapie, not to mention Jordan. I would advise you to go there in mid April and see if there are any early plaice in, but May is the best month for them and at low water. The pic of the pier brought back many found memories to me, thanks for posting it.
Regards Wez
Thu Feb 03, 2011 5:26 pm
chuckaroo wrote:kerrywez wrote:HI Al I have fished that spot many, many times in the past, it fishes far better at low water. I had a 10 Lbs cod from the wee pier and two specimen plaice, one 3 1/4 the other 3 10 ozs, both on the one day and within 1/2 an hour, it was in May because I remember the bike boys going to the NW practice, the cod was in October, as far as I can remember. It is a bit far from where I live now, but had many great days fishing there, I fished it the day of the hurricane and was up in the car park, casting along side the pier, got loads of good coalies and then went to the beach, behind the golf course, and got some small cod and more decent coalies there also, I am sure you will know where I mean I do not want to say where the beach is, as I am sure you do not want everyone fishing your new found mark. You had a good session there and must have been a happy chapie, not to mention Jordan. I would advise you to go there in mid April and see if there are any early plaice in, but May is the best month for them and at low water. The pic of the pier brought back many found memories to me, thanks for posting it.
Regards Wez
hi wez, just saw this post you put up. i know this area well to and have fished it all my life, i still regularly do..
those sound like some fantastic fish you caught from the pier! well done. i just wanted to ask WHEN you caught them i.e. what year?!? those size of fish from the shore (or even from boat!) are something of legends nowadays.
cheers
p.s. Al, I was not on the rocks next to the wee pier, i was over on the OTHER SIDE of the bay, on the ledges!
EDIT: sorry, i just read Al's response there (and your subsequent response), i hadnt seen it before i posted this....
its true, there are no fish left in this area! its a disaster! over-trawled. i heard all these stories from years ago too - throwing back 3 and 4 lbers becos thery were too small..... the biggest fish i caught all summer was a 2.5lb cod from a boat, but as Al says we persevere becos we love the sport and theres always that 'chance'
.
i would still like to know what year you caught these fish though, just out of interest. thanks
Thu Feb 03, 2011 6:59 pm
Thu Feb 03, 2011 9:42 pm
tight lines wrote:well done alan and jordan a great haul of fish there the coalies seemed to have dryed up down hear
Thu Feb 03, 2011 9:46 pm
Thu Feb 03, 2011 11:13 pm
Al and Jordan wrote:tight lines wrote:well done alan and jordan a great haul of fish there the coalies seemed to have dryed up down hear
cheers man. still plenty just under the pound mark up these parts. nothing that's gonna test you gear. but they do make for a busy session![]()
hi wez. that's the same story i've been told by other anglers who fished the area in the late 80's and into the early 90's. quality fish were the norm back then. but sadly now if you get a 2lb pollock it's the exception to the rule. only 4 or 5 years back the lads were regularly getting 4lb pollock from the ledges. but we were on a boat trip in red bay recently and bar 1 fish there was nothing over 3lb landed for an entire day's fishing between 9 lads. the biggest fish that day was a 4lb 8oz codling and the skipper was delighted with it as it was the best codling he'd had on the boat in a while from the area. like you already said the greed of some skippers in the commercial sector is shocking. they have no moral objection to killing 1 tonne of small juvenile fish in the effort to get 1 box of sellable fish. absolute disgrace the way they target areas they know are nurseries for the next generation of stock![]()
![]()
Fri Feb 04, 2011 1:11 am
Fri Feb 04, 2011 11:12 am
junior conger wrote:well done lads you caught a nice few fish
kerrywez wrote:I fully backed Hugh's big fish fight, but he did not tell the full story it was by far too much on the side of the trawlermen
kerrywez wrote:I hope that this might generate some debate and I am sorry for hijacking you very well written thread Al,
cathalger wrote:Hi Al, Wez,
Have been reading your posts on this thread. I first got out in the boat in Redbay in my early teens in the late 80's. There were good cod to be had and they werent hard to find. Everyone around here has heard of the cod banks and various people had different ideas of where the 'cod banks' were, or should I say where the best cod banks were. The fact was you could drift with feathers and pirks anywhere off Garron point or Layde and youd find them, even if you had no marks or no idea of specific banks. It was a summer and autumn season out in the boat, cod was all that people went out for, it was handy fishin and no one looked beyond them, as you have already mentioned wez. Could be frustrating when the mackerel were so thick you couldnt get a pirk of any weight to drop fast enough to get through the mackerel just to try to get down to where the cod were. That could go on for a full session, you just couldntr get down to the cod.
When I was first taken out 20 years ago we hit a succesion of 5-8 lb cod on the first trip. It was great but it was the norm and we probably took it for granted at times. But even then we (the younger ones) were told that this was nothing, you should have seen what it used to be like. I know people who have had 20 and 30lb plus cod in this bay as recently as the 80's. My best was only 10 0r 11lb but I hooked far bigger fish, I mean really big. I lost a massive fish over the head of a jammed reel and an ancient trace of featherswhich snapped. People will probably balk at the idea of anglers taking boxes of cod home but it had been done since time began with no detriment to fish stocks and it was the done thing, the cod came in May or June and the mackerel came in July with massive numbers appearing in August. You took what you could catch and they came back next year. Anglers did not cause the collapse, regardless of how biast that may sound in todays climate of p.c.ness and conservation awareness. Commercial overfishing is to blame, full stop, the angling was sustainable. History proved it. The decline did not happen with all the angling pressure people could muster through the decades.
My bro was lucky as recently as 98 when he had a 10lber two evenings in a row just off the Cushendun end of Layde shore.
Things changed through the 90's when a 5lb cod went from a nice fish to a great fish. Then a rare fish and today, they just aint there, I havent had a cod over 4lb in 5 years.
They arent there and very few people even try that type of drifting with feathers now. You might pick up a 3lb cod in 5 sessions. IE a waste of time. I only know that because an odd wee cod is still hit while fishing for mackerel.
At this stage it is a thing of the past. I know nature can bounce back but I will be amazed if I ever see the cod in redbay back to what they were even as recently as 95, 96. It was well worth doing then.
Where did you stay when here wez? Those big plaice Bobby used to get, I saw those caught off Limerick point every summer, fish up to 5lb until about 90. Theyre gone too. A pounder now is a bloody good one.
Cathal.
Fri Feb 04, 2011 5:30 pm
cathalger wrote:Hi Al, Wez,
Have been reading your posts on this thread. I first got out in the boat in Redbay in my early teens in the late 80's. There were good cod to be had and they werent hard to find. Everyone around here has heard of the cod banks and various people had different ideas of where the 'cod banks' were, or should I say where the best cod banks were. The fact was you could drift with feathers and pirks anywhere off Garron point or Layde and youd find them, even if you had no marks or no idea of specific banks. It was a summer and autumn season out in the boat, cod was all that people went out for, it was handy fishin and no one looked beyond them, as you have already mentioned wez. Could be frustrating when the mackerel were so thick you couldnt get a pirk of any weight to drop fast enough to get through the mackerel just to try to get down to where the cod were. That could go on for a full session, you just couldntr get down to the cod.
When I was first taken out 20 years ago we hit a succesion of 5-8 lb cod on the first trip. It was great but it was the norm and we probably took it for granted at times. But even then we (the younger ones) were told that this was nothing, you should have seen what it used to be like. I know people who have had 20 and 30lb plus cod in this bay as recently as the 80's. My best was only 10 0r 11lb but I hooked far bigger fish, I mean really big. I lost a massive fish over the head of a jammed reel and an ancient trace of featherswhich snapped. People will probably balk at the idea of anglers taking boxes of cod home but it had been done since time began with no detriment to fish stocks and it was the done thing, the cod came in May or June and the mackerel came in July with massive numbers appearing in August. You took what you could catch and they came back next year. Anglers did not cause the collapse, regardless of how biast that may sound in todays climate of p.c.ness and conservation awareness. Commercial overfishing is to blame, full stop, the angling was sustainable. History proved it. The decline did not happen with all the angling pressure people could muster through the decades.
My bro was lucky as recently as 98 when he had a 10lber two evenings in a row just off the Cushendun end of Layde shore.
Things changed through the 90's when a 5lb cod went from a nice fish to a great fish. Then a rare fish and today, they just aint there, I havent had a cod over 4lb in 5 years.
They arent there and very few people even try that type of drifting with feathers now. You might pick up a 3lb cod in 5 sessions. IE a waste of time. I only know that because an odd wee cod is still hit while fishing for mackerel.
At this stage it is a thing of the past. I know nature can bounce back but I will be amazed if I ever see the cod in redbay back to what they were even as recently as 95, 96. It was well worth doing then.
Where did you stay when here wez? Those big plaice Bobby used to get, I saw those caught off Limerick point every summer, fish up to 5lb until about 90. Theyre gone too. A pounder now is a bloody good one.
Cathal.
Fri Feb 04, 2011 8:37 pm
kerrywez wrote:People need to be told we must stop breeding too many offspring, if we do not then all the wars which have taken place in all of history will pale into insignificance compared to that which will come.
Fri Feb 04, 2011 10:51 pm
Fri Feb 04, 2011 11:54 pm
Al and Jordan wrote:junior conger wrote:well done lads you caught a nice few fish
cheers JC lets hope the weather lets us get a bash at them this weekend again
kerrywez wrote:I fully backed Hugh's big fish fight, but he did not tell the full story it was by far too much on the side of the trawlermen
did the same myself wez. but it did'nt show you them crying their eyes out when they high grade the catch. for those who don't know about this practice, it' when a boat catches it's quota for a certin species but later hits into a more valuable haul of the same species and dumps the earlier catch to keep the more valueable haul. for example filling your quota of cod when you got a haul 5 days into a trip of smaller less valueable fish say for instance 3lb - 5lb fish. but near the end of the trip hit into a haul of 10lb - 20lb cod. a common practice that the skippers don't like people to be aware of or talked about![]()
![]()
i think your right wez, i'll email HFW at river cottage and put up a seperate post to let you know what response if any i get back, if any![]()
i fully back the idea of eliminating discards but feel the programme was sugar coated for the masses and far from objective or impartial
kerrywez wrote:I hope that this might generate some debate and I am sorry for hijacking you very well written thread Al,
Sat Feb 05, 2011 12:11 am
Sat Feb 05, 2011 12:11 pm
Sat Feb 05, 2011 1:31 pm