- Fly fishing
- Fly casting
- Fly tying
The emphasis over the three days whilst not strictly placed on bass fishing is firmly based in the techniques used to catch them on the fly in Ireland. This of course also means if you wanted to catch stripers in the USA the workshops and the information will transfer to a large extent. Aspects of the workshops will also transfer to species like sea trout and pollack. Experts in each of the disciplines will present across their relevant areas.
The timing of the event will coincide with a superb sequence of tides for the Wexford coast during October of 2016. Places are strictly limited to nine people. Groups of three will be facilitated through two workshops on each discipline over the three day period. I invite you to consider a few days before or after the workshops to meet and fish casually along the Wexford coast.
Fly fishing from my new Boston Whaler will also feature as an option for those interested and we may incorporate this into the workshops.
Further details will become available before Christmas 2015.
Photo courtesy Leighton Walsh
I wasn’t very happy at first. The line kept tangling, I kept missing my finger grip and shoot, my loops were wide open and hopelessly ineffective. I thought this was going to be easy, ‘100’-00″ casts in no time’ they said, plus with the added benefit of half the effort. It was mid November 2014 and I was learning to fish and cast a DH 11′-0″ surf fly-fishing rod. I found myself expending considerably more than half the effort for not nearly going half as far! This was not to be confused with a wish to cast further, I don’t need to be quantified by distance casting prowess, but this project was about energy conservation more effective presentation and a personal search for better ‘fishing’.
Spending time during 2012 and 2013 researching the equipment available I was looking for something very specific – I didn’t want a really long DH rod, I didn’t want to cast very heavy lines, I didn’t want to Spey cast nor did I want to fish a switch rod. I certainly didn’t want to loose any of the fun that heavy gear would impose on the fish. I wanted a DH rod to cast overhead with medium / light lines plus the added benefits of the DH technique in reasonable to tough fishing conditions. I wanted the gear to match the average size of fish I regularly encounter on the coast, probably three to seven pounds, when I’m lucky!
Its a minefield out there, weights and grains and headlengths and casting techniques and leaders and options, and then of course the reality, who was fishing on the Irish coast for bass using these techniques? All of this stuff is for another post, a damp day during winter.
I decided after much time and effort that my choice would be the Beulah DH #5/6 I have this rod and I combine it with the Rio Outbound short #8 weighing in a 330 grains for the 30 ft head. I also use the Rio InTouch Striper Intermediate #9 also weighing in at 330 grains on this rod. The benefit here was that my single handed lines transferred across to the DH handed rod, the InTouch was a new investment.
The important thing for me was that the lines were medium / light and so was the rod and Beulah make these rods for Overhead casting techniques on the coast. Everything fitted.
You may have already noticed the minefield sentence above containing the parameters #5/6 #8 #9 all for the same rod – the key here is grain weight, more later, trust me.
The line that spends most of the time on the rod is the Beulah Serum 300 the two lines above give me a little more weight if I need it. All lines are spooled on two Danielssons L5W series.
I spent most of last Winter and into early Spring of a Saturday or Sunday morning, an hour each time, practicing the cast. Somewhere around late February it came together and I eventually gained control – effortlessly, it was true after-all. Through spring and into summer I went to sea and during July I found my way and started catching fish. I was fishing better and better.
A Sunday morning in Cork harbour, late August, confirmed to me only what I had previously dreamt of. Drifting Andy Elliotts flies onto fish that held in a current, I learned so much in 75 minutes its hard now to comprehend that it happened and would mean so much.
Autumn was simply one of those times given to me by fishing that I can never forget
And now I cant help but think of anything else and the places where I want to go, places where I know I can sometimes see jumping terrified bait in the air, places where I will cast and fish with this gear probably for the rest of my bass fishing life.
Flies are buzzing round my head
Vultures circling the dead
Picking up every last crumb
The big fish eat the little ones
The big fish eat the little ones
Not my problem, give me some
You can try the best you can
If you try the best you can
The best you can is good enough
Radiohead – Optimistic
When I put my foot up to step forward I knew immediately I was going to slip. I slipped on seaweed two hundred yards from the shoreline, seaweed forced up a long gully to spray onto the surrounding rocks and grass like the blown leaves of October. Now my reel grates after three quarters of a turn, the butt section of my Beulah DH displays a sequence of deep scratches and my waders are leaking at the shin and knee. I hadn’t started fishing yet, I was just getting there.
The last and the first of the tide is a time that’s a favourite of mine. With the fly over weed and rock in very shallow water it’s never easy, even with the weedless versions, but I felt I knew what I was looking for and this was the right place perhaps, the fall I could have done without but instinct urged me on. Sometimes self motivation and belief is something you need to dig deep to find and today was one of those days.
I imagine occasionally that I read of the discovery of new cave art having been found in the mountains of a distant desert. When that discovery is made I have no doubt that the art will display figures fly casting to fish, its inevitable! And surely nothing else can connect you as an angler more simply, more deeply, more primitively to the fish than the ‘bow and arrow’ that you wield as rod and fly, and the realisation that will suddenly pierce your soul with the knowledge that its going to happen . That you are making it happen in a ‘way’ like no other
Travelling home in the failing light, I’m happy and content. Like many people, I’m facing into another challenging week of work. I am lucky too and once again re-charged by instinct and the knowledge of realising what is really important. Where real life and meaning can be found and where long concerted effort will be rewarded is where I want to spend time.
Two fish, two hours – 79 cm’s and 81 cm’s – white deceiver type pattern on 1/0 from Andy Elliott at chasingsilver flies.
I tried the best I could today, my best was good enough.

I awoke today and found
the frost perched on the town
It hovered in a frozen sky
then it gobbled summer down
When the sun turns traitor cold
and all the trees are shivering in a naked row
I get the urge for going
But I never seem to go
I get the urge for going
When the meadow grass is turning brown
Summertime is falling down and winter is closing in
Joni Mitchell – Urge for going
I’m guessing that angling for bass has always been such a special experience for me that all I want now is to preserve that personal sense of being both challenged and excited whenever I fish for them.
Saltwater fly fishing for bass with the current methods I use is difficult. I don’t catch many fish, I don’t fish as frequently, I don’t cover much ground but I do know this, no other method comes even close to providing me with a similar sense as to what I felt when wandering the empty coast, bass fishing as an excited happy teenager.
Fishing with mono, a toby and a nine foot spinning rod, what did I know then?
What do I know now?
































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