The River Moy System
Ireland has a number of great river
systems and of these, the Moy, which straddles counties Mayo and
Sligo, is one of the most productive. It is approximately one hundred
kilometers long and with its extensive tributaries, it drains a
catchment of over two thousand square kilometers. The system includes
great loughs such as Conn and Cullin but also many small lakes and
streams. For much of its course, the Moy flows through pastureland
hut the mountains of the watersheds which feed it are almost always
in view from its banks. The Nephin Beg range lines the western horizon
and the Ox mountains mark the eastern watershed.

The Moy has long been famous as
Ireland's premier salmon river and it offers a wide variety of quality
angling to suit all tastes and budgets. Most of the main Moy channel,
and some of its larger tributaries provide excellent spring salmon
and grilse fishingwith both fly and bait. Sea trout are also abundant
in the Moy and the dry fly fishing for brown trout can also be excellent.
Specimen
pike are also present in some of the many lakes within the Moy catchment,
which contains such a wide range of aquatic habitats.
The main Moy channel is deep and
up to forty meters wide in the middie and lower reaches. Huge numhers
of salmon are landed here each season. The average annual salmon
rod catch on the Moy over the last ten years is a staggering 7,362
fish. The famous Ridge Pool alone has produced up to 2,660 salmon
to rod and line in a single season.
The upper river has a different character and is more akin to a spate river
in parts. The fishing here can be superb and the pioneering angler can find
excellent salmon fishing in solitude.
The rich lowland limestone rivers and loughs are home to stocks of heavy,
fast-growing trout which are selective feeders and offer challenging sport. They
have hatches of mayfly, olives and many sedge species. The remote mountain
loughs and streams are populated by smaller free-rising trout which make up for
their size by their large numbers. The occasional bigger fish may also lurk in
the deeper pools.
The Moy estuary has large stocks of sea trout, some of which exceed four
pounds, and which can be caught on fly and bait. The lower heats around Ballina
and Foxford, and some locations on the upper river; also provide good sea trout
fishing late in the season.
In the east Mayo area, around Kiltimagh,
Knock and Manulla, the small limestone loughs are rich and productive.
Many contain excellent stocks of perch, pike, rudd and tench Although
the Moy catchment has never been renowned as a coarse fishery, parts
of it offer fine angling for these species in peaceful, rural surroundings.
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