The 35 miles of Co Galway's Lough Corrib offer fishing for salmon, trout and sea-trout. Photograph by Charles Rangeley-Wilson.
By Charles Rangeley-Wilson
Monday, 15 September 2008
When Charles Rangeley-Wilson was a boy, he spent his summers fishing the far-flung loughs of
Co Kerry for trout. Sneakily, via their stomachs, hes passed his love of lake-angling to his children. Now they join him on Loch Affric to catch and cook lunch.
Were four in a boat five if you include Coral, the German wire-haired at the prow, sniffing the breeze sculling along the shoreline of Loch Affric, picking a mazy route over headlands, into bays and close in against fallen trees or ancient fence-lines. The day has cleared and stilled to open a parallel universe beneath us. The sky, a childs version of itself too blue, clouds just too white and fluffy meets its tea-stained hyper-reality at the lochs vanishing point and a heavy heat presses down, sandwiching us between. Iona trails a finger through the mirror surface. Vicky is all but asleep at Corals feet. As the poet Louis said, We aint got no ambition. In fact weve composed a gone fishin ditty of our own, a little mantra were using now and again to charm the fishes of Loch Affric.
It aint Gershwin. It doesnt even scan that well. But it works. Pretty much every time we hit the final couplet one or other of the rods trailing flies out back jangles into life. Or that is how it seems. Its hard to tell cause and effect apart when the loch is so full of hungry fish. They kiss the surface, and tell messages from that other dimension, all over the place. This is perfect fishing for kids. The cast is all but done for them, so long as I keep rowing. And for some reason Ive never understood I mean when does a hatching midge pupa skim along the surface like a toy boat? its lethal.
But the ditty contains a hint of dishonesty and the fish that its lying to are the ones that seem reluctant to bite. If we did catch the biggest fish wed put it back. And all the little dinks, of which weve had a half-dozen, were putting them back. But the pan fish, theyre staying aboard or at least enough of them to make a sensible lunch.
Thats the thing about a healthy loch with decent spawning burns you can guiltlessly rap a few trout on the head, cook them when theyre so fresh they curl up like the paper from a fortune cookie and remember the time before it all got complicated, when fishing was fun because you got to eat your catch. Last year I sowed what may prove to be the seeds of a passion for fishing in my children by cooking a sea-trout on a fire made from driftwood on rocks by the shore. They scoffed the smoke-wreathed flesh of the fish about 10 minutes after I caught it and voted it the best thing theyd ever tasted except for chocolate. Now they want more. I row on.
Pinned to the wall above my desk is the Suirbhéireacht Ordanáis No 20 Dingle Bay map I bought as a teenager on one of my summer hols in Co Kerry. Its there to remind me of the place where I learnt all of this myself: a necklace of loughs that curl back into the mountains above Lough Currane the foothills, I suppose, of Mcgillycuddys Reeks.
There are several of these lough chains all within the same catchment. The first one I ever explored I would have fished with a worm and a spinner. Simon and I were dropped by his dad at the top of Cahernageeha mountain above Caherdaniel. We crossed a peat bog and a 1,500ft ridge before climbing down a 700ft drop to Coomrooanig Lough and the nameless puddle above it. We probably had a Mars Bar, a cheese sandwich and an apple. We drank from the lough. If the weather closed in we had instructions to go out the far end, downhill towards Lough Currane. Otherwise wed come back over the top and walk back to the telephone box in Caherdaniel.
ABOVE TOOREENBOG LOUGH
In fact, wed have been happy up there for a week. The lough was full of trout and we caught tons of them. Only the biggest were pan-sized, but we kept at least a half-dozen of those and took them home for supper. I think I did a sketch of them laid out on a plate. They were pale, sandy fish and they tasted just fab, especially with Irish soda bread and scrambled eggs.
The following summer we found the chain on the northern side of Currane above Lough Derriana, the one from this map. Derriana is a big lough and Curranes sea-trout ran into it. But they couldnt get up the near-vertical drop of the stream that drained Tooreenbog Lough. So the fishing there was free to anyone who asked the farmer nicely. We had the impression that we were the only ones. We saw no footprints other than our own and mountain goats. Wed turn our back on Derriana and follow a little stream into the valley above. Flat ground at first, a peat bog crossed by fences giving way to a moraine of mossy, hollow land strewn with boulders, the stream coming and going, above ground, below it, the lough for ever over the next brow until finally we reached it.
THREE FLIES, THREE FISH TO THE CAST
Tooreenbog was, in most lights, an almost melancholic body of water but at its head was a waterfall that seemed to invite an exploration of what lay beyond. The valley curled away, its end beyond sight, but with some sort of siren call about the place. We heard it and followed and found over each ridge a new lough, each smaller than the last, each pocked with rising trout and dripping with silence, until we reached the end, a sheer wall of rock 500ft high, split by a waterfall dropping off the plateau above to vaporise against fern-covered rocks below. The final lough was pressed up hard against this slope and its windless surface reflected the place like glass.
The valley was magical. Even boys hell bent on eating every trout that swam could appreciate that. We always came back with a dozen pan fish. In a year of trying I doubt wed have dented the stocks. It is a cliché of rose-tinted memory, but it was true: with a team of three flies you could bet on three fish to the cast below the waterfall in Tooreenbog.
Things arent quite as busy on Affric. The day has ground to a halt against buffers of still air. Only the occasional pulse of breeze lifts the noise of a waterfall from up on the hill to lay it down again across the surface of the loch and vanish. That and the rhythmic glopping of the oars are the only sounds. Even the little fish have gone. Our promised scorched-trout picnic might consist of sandwiches and crisps. I crank up the outboard for a 20-minute blast to the western end where a bigger stream comes in off the southern shore, filtering whatever nutrients are up there on the hill into a reedy bay. I slide the boat in against the shoreline, tether its rope under a boulder and grabbing the nearest fly rod head straight to the mouth of the burn. Here the dark water stirs into lines of foam and bubbles, pushing a current 10yd out into the bay, that falters and curls back slowly. A good trout hits the top dropper right up against the rocks by the burn, another where the current gives out. Now we have two fish for lunch, neither caught by the kids. Its time for the big guns.
In the tackle shop on the way up I gave them the choice of a few flies and a spinner each. Patrick took my advice and went for the black Mepps with red spots. Iona didnt and got a bright silver thing with red calfs tail trailing out the back. We moved on to the beach, teaming up with Rod, Alison, a littler Patrick and Oliver who had been fishing the northern shore with no more luck than us on the pan fish front.
It could have been the weather a moodier drift of clouds and wind stirred over us and lifted the oppressive blanket but that alone would have accounted for a more even distribution of the catch. Only Ionas rod, with its Liberace spinner, bent over again and again, each time to the best part of a pound of trout, until four lay on the sand behind her, like some small fraction of a Galilean miracle dropped down beside a loch in Scotland. We had our lunch and the sacred spinner of Affric became legend.
Even in the distinctly chilly wind of Scotland...
Eye dominance: 20/20 vision is not essential to be a goood shot - but ... Read more
The Italian Fabarm Beta 3T side-by-side is a gun with a conventional a... Read more
Do you practise with your all-rounder all summer but find yourself wit... Read more
Subscribe today, have every issue delivered to your door and save money on the cover price.
The Glorious 10th Summer Party will get you in the mood for the 12th... Read more
The Home Affairs Select Committee has set up an inquiry in the wake of... Read more
Subscribe today, have every issue delivered to your door and save money on the cover price.
Comments