This month we celebrate the 50th anniversary of the
founding of the Athy and District Anglers Club.
It was the late Jimmy Higgins who reported in the Leinster Leader on
Saturday, 20th June 1959:- ‘Into existence on Thursday of last week
came Athy and District Anglers Club. The
idea of the Club originated with Mr. Tom Donohoe of St. Joseph’s Terrace,
Athy. With the assistance of another
noted Athy angler, Mr. Chris Burley, St. Joseph’s Terrace and others, he
organised last Thursday’s meeting. Over
40 local anglers attended and enthusiastically formed the Club.’
The South Kildare notes in the same paper also reported on the prize
winners in Castledermot’s An Tostal, but pride of place went to the report
headed, ‘Athy has Anglers Club’ which
noted that Athy’s new postmaster, Mr. Wilf Meredith, was elected Chairman of
the Club, with Harry Hegarty as Club Secretary and Pat Mulhall of the
Barrowbridge House as Treasurer. The
first Committee comprised Walter Hurley, Ted O’Rourke, Albert Duthie, Willie
Webb, Joe Alcock, P. Kavanagh and Christy Dunne.
Within a year the new club had 119 members and at the following
year’s A.G.M. Tom Donohoe’s part in setting up the Club was recognised with his
election as the Club’s first President.
Christy Dunne became the Club’s second Chairman, while Harry Hegarty and
Pat Mulhall swopped positions with the Barrow Bridge publican, taking over as
Club Secretary. The previous year’s
committee was augmented with the election of local Solicitor, Tadgh Brennan.
Athy and District Anglers Club manages the fishing on the River
Barrow between Vicarstown and the Three Counties at Maganey – a twelve mile
stretch offering pike, trout, eels, salmon, perch, bream, rudd and roach. It has restocked the river on four or five occasions,
the last time being in 1995 when thousands of young trout were released into
the River Barrow and the Moneen.
The lure of fishing is something which completely escapes me, even
though I am married to a woman whose early years were spent on a Connemara
fishery. She is an expert fisherwoman
but I’m afraid the thought of spending hours on end gazing into pools or rivers
in the hope of catching a fish at the end of a hook holds no appeal whatsoever
for me.
John Shaughnessy who is currently P.R.O. for Athy and District
Anglers Club speaks of the soothing experience of fishing early in the morning,
especially on the River Barrow. ‘It is just peaceful and relaxing to sit
down beside a river or lake’ he says, admitting that he gets up ‘at ungodly hours of the morning’ to
start his days fishing.
It is a pastime he shares with 92 other members of the local Fishing
Club and the Club which once boasted almost 400 members is continuing to encourage
new members to join. The Club organises
11 fishing competitions throughout the year, starting with a coarse fishing competition
in April. Several of those competitions
have been named to honour deceased members of the Club. Pike fishing competitions are held between
September and December and three of these competitions are for cups honouring
past members Mick Leonard, P.J. Byrne and Liam Kane. The McStay Cup and the Hughes Cup, named in
memory of Tom McStay and Ted Hughes, are presented for trout fishing competitions
held on Acalla Lake in County Galway to where the Club members travel to
compete in May and June each year. The
trout season on the River Barrow starts on 17th March and continues
until October and I am assured that despite a falloff in the quality and
quantity of trout in the River Barrow in recent years there is still a lot of
good fishing to be had on the stretch of the river managed by Athy and District
Anglers Club.
Surprisingly, well to me at least, there are few female members of
the Club, even though one would imagine fishing to be an activity which could
easily cross the gender barriers. Why, I
asked, were there so few female members?
The explanation when it came seemed unconvincing, posing as it did a
female distaste for putting worms on the end of hooks. In any event female members are more than
welcome to join Athy and District Anglers Club.
Indeed new members are always sought and fishing classes can be arranged
courtesy of Club members for anyone wishing to embark on a new leisurely
pastime.
One of the greatest concerns affecting the well ordered life of the
local fisherman is the amount of illegal fishing currently taking place on the
River Barrow. Sad to relate that foreign
nationals are apparently engaged in netting fish and in doing so are driving
fish stock levels to a seriously low level.
During 2008 the Club, with the active cooperation of the Inland Fishery
Board, applied for the appointment of river wardens to patrol the local river
and monitor fishing activity. The
wardens, ten in number, were nominated by the Athy Anglers Club and duly
approved by order of the District Court.
They are empowered to seize fishing gear and equipment used in
connection with illegal fishing. It is
hoped that due vigilance will help to conserve fish stocks in the River Barrow
and ensure an adequate stock of fish into the future for fishermen and women in
the local river.
The current officers of the Club are President, Nicky Cahill, whom I
believe is the longest serving member, Chairperson Declan Day, Secretary
Christopher Pender and Treasurer Mark Kane.
The P.R.O. is John Shaughnessy who tells me that the current committee
comprises Jimmy Mullins, Ger Cullen, Jamie Fitzsimons, Paddy O’Brien, Gerry Sheehan,
Franz Caffrey, Paddy O’Rourke and Adrian Hyland. The Club’s 50th anniversary
celebrations takes place in Athy’s town library on Thursday, 18th
June at 7.30 p.m. when an exhibition of photographs and fishing equipment, old
and new, will be on display. The
photograph accompanying this article shows the members of the Club on a fishing
trip to Ballyjamesduff in or around 1984.
Can anyone give me the names of the happy fishermen captured on film
that day?
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