stevecrow74 wrote:any more posts about courtown.... i'll be fishing there through the summer.. so i want to keep an eye on how it fishes and where to fish... :lol: :lol: :lol:
I'm in riverchapel (2 mins from courtown) but believe it or not, i've never fished there :shock: All my fishing is further south.
If you're interested in bass ...
I'd recommend you head 10 minutes south on the coast road. Try Roney Point (go down the road, head north along the beach 1/4 mile, fish into the channel towards roney island, avoid the seals).
Going south on the road again towartds Ballygerrett, Dunamore can produce at times, but I've not fished it much.
Just before you get to Ballygarrett, Glascarraig can be either very good or very bad.
Taking the left turn in Ballygarrett takes you to Cahore. You might be tempted to fish off the pier, but I wouldn't. Traditional spots are the rocks behind the castle but this hasn't produced so much in recent times. I have my own personal rock there so you'll have to get a license to fish on that :) The south beach at cahore produces small to medium bass at night. Fish in very close (if yo think you're too close, then you're about right) with light gear a running ledger and rag. Heading south along the beach from cahore, pretty much anywhere should produce bass and flats. Shortly after high tide works best.
2 miles couth of cahore along the beach is Ballinoulart. (If you google for it, it's supposed to be a popular naturist spot, but I can't say I've noticed). It's _always_ windy here (hence the wind farm, which you can see for miles) but produces bass and flats, even during the day. Where the road comes out at Ballinoulart is now a popular compo spot.
If you keep going south, you're into morriscastle, ballyconnigar, knocknasillogue, ballyvaldon, blackwater, etc. and I'll defer to the people here who know more about those spots than me.
I haven't been fishing for a couple of weeks so haven't tried these spots out since the bass started arriving. I hear there are some bass moving in the area now, although probably not as many as recent years.
Jonathan