Blackwater Fly Fishing 

Doug Lock 

REFFIS   SGAIC   STANIC 

Salmon Fly Fishing Instructor & Guide

Fly Dressers Guild Chairman Alan Middleton & Doug September 08

 

From road to water    Irish Times 12.05.08

Doug Lock, who now lives in Fermoy, Co Cork, has fond memories of his time with bands like the Moody Blues and Motörhead.
Doug Lock , who now lives in Fermoy, Co Cork , has fond memories of his time with bands like the Moody Blues and Motörhead.
Photograph: Daragh Mac Sweeney

Doug Lock left life on the road and now teaches fly fishing in Co Cork, writes Olivia Kelleher

DOUG LOCK tended the guitar of Jimmy Page, served as tour manager to Motörhead and was a guitar technician to the Moody Blues. However, a bout of pneumonia led him to re-imagine his life and he now works as a salmon fly fishing instructor in Fermoy, Co Cork .

Lock (57) has never been a man for hedging his bets, but instead has embraced every opportunity which has come along in his varied and fascinating life.

He grew up in North Devon and had a passion for guitars from a very early age, receiving his first electric guitar when he was 15.

He soon became involved in the semi-professional circuit in Devon and Cornwall . A blues lover, Lock played numerous gigs in clubs in Germany before returning to London to perform with various bands.

When Lock was about 22 he played with a band called Bulldozer and they toured the length and breath of England .

One of the biggest thrills of his life was playing with the legendary Graham Bond of the Graham Bond Organisation.

Bond has long been thought of as being a founding father of the English rhythm and blues boom of the 1960s. Along with John Mayall and Alexis Korner, Bond was one of the great catalytic figures of 1960s rock in Britain .

"It was unbelievable. Suddenly little Old Lockie from Devon was playing with Graham Bond. Bond is the musicians' musician and I was delighted to have the opportunity to play alongside him."

At one stage Lock's career went a bit pear shaped and he ended up driving a truck for a period.

However, he bumped in to an old friend and he ended up working as a guitar technician with the Moody Blues at the same time as their album Long Distant Voyager reached number one in the US .

Lock has fond memories of his time with bands like the Moody Blues and Motörhead. Whilst with the Blues he stayed in a succession of five-star hotels all across America for months on end leading to many Spinal Tap moments.

"We would be in the same chain in the same type of room in a different city every night. You would wake up and wonder where the hell you were. I played every major city in the US when I worked as a technician. It was a great time."

After he worked with the Moody Blues, Lock became a tour manager with Motörhead and he also spent time as an employee of Frank Zappa and Steve Winwood.

"It was like Spinal Tap at times. Lemmy [from Motörhead] is a really nice bloke. But some bands on the circuit were incredible. A lot of it is boredom.

"Some people make it in the music industry and they become monsters. Just because they can. Many of the bands and their sessions musicians had no concept of geography. They would be saying can we stop and get a burger at the American fast food chain Wendy's, not really understanding why they couldn't do that in Europe . You just had to develop a gallows humour to cope."

Lock recalls getting a phone call in London on one occasion at 2am and being asked to fly out to work with Jimmy Page in the US .

By mid-afternoon the next day he had gone straight from Heathrow to Hartford in Connecticut , losing his bags along the way, and was preparing backstage.

"You're going to have to anticipate when I break a string," were the first words Jimmy Page said to him when he arrived.

Through all the madness of the music industry, Lock was grounded by his life-long partner, the aptly named Joy.

They met at a gig at the University of Salford when the pair were in their early 20s.

Joy was a career woman and never really minded that Lock was on the road for months at a time. The pair had a solid relationship and a sense of mutual respect.

The couple travelled to north Cork in the early 1990s and a bout of pneumonia made Lock reconsider his lucrative yet stressful career.

He bought a guesthouse outside Fermoy and it was an instant success.

After they finally got around to tying the knot, Joy was diagnosed with breast cancer. Tragically, after a brave battle she died.

A devastated Lock decided to stay on in Ireland and has worked for many years as a salmon fly fishing instructor.

It was an unlikely career change some would say, but Lock grew up in rural Devonshire and always had a love of fishing.

In fact he managed to fit in a bit of fishing while on tour in the US .

Lock was even part of a club called the Rock and Roll Fly Fishers. Eric Clapton joined the club one afternoon for a peaceful day's fishing.

Lock has numerous certificates proving his competency in relation to the teaching of fly fishing and has a booming business in his adopted home of Fermoy. He says he will never forget the crazy times he had on the road but he is very content with his quiet life in north Cork .

"I have been so fortunate really. Fishing was something I always did. I used to carry a rod around with me on tour and if I got an hour I would be out there fishing.

"I have always loved it and I really enjoy teaching. When I grew up in rural Devonshire you had to have an imagination. There was no X Box and you had to get out there and make your own fun. And I am still doing that in a way with the fishing."

 

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2008 & Proposed 2009 Regulations 

The Munster Blackwater has a quota of 7,787 tags for the 2008 season.

All the tidal tributaries have a zero quota which means there will be no draft netting downstream of them.

CONSERVATION OF SALMON AND SEA TROUT BYE-LAW NO. 829, 2007.

The existing annual bag limit of 10 fish per angler for the 2008 season continues in rivers identified as being above their Conservation Limits. 

A daily bag limit of 3 fish from 12th May to 31st August subject to brown tag rules

A daily bag limit of 1 fish from 1st September to the end of the season. 

The Bye-law also provides for the use of single barbless hooks and prohibits the use of worms as bait once the specified number of fish have been caught in the specified periods.

A BLUE tag must be attached to any fish killed from 12th May to 31st September

Proposed regs for 2009

Blackwater ( Munster ) including Glenshelane and Finisk

4,433

 

 

Distribution of blue tags to anglers

4.         (1)        The holder of a salmon rod (annual) ordinary, juvenile or district licence shall be issued by a distributor on receipt of licence duty in respect of the period from -

 

(a)                1 January to 11 May, with 3 blue tags,

 

(b)        12 May to 31 August, with 4 blue tags, and

 

(c)        1 September to 30 September, with 3 blue tags.

 

 

            (2)        The holder of a salmon rod (twenty-one day) ordinary licence shall be issued by a distributor on receipt of licence duty in respect of the period from –

 

(a)        1 January to 11 May, with 3 blue tags,

 

(b)        12 May to 31 August, with 4 blue tags, and

 

(c)          1 September to 30 September, with 3 blue tags.

 

 

            (3)        The holder of a salmon rod (one-day) ordinary licence shall be issued by a distributor on receipt of licence duty in respect of the period from –

 

(a)        1 January to 11 May, with 1 blue tag,

 

(b)        12 May to 31 August, with 3 blue tags, and

 

(c)            1 September to 30 September, with 1 blue tag.

 

            (4)        The holder of a rod licence shall be issued with 1 blue tag in the period from 1 October to 12 October, for sea trout in rivers which are open under Bye-laws made under section 9 of the Principal Act.

 

            (5)        Notwithstanding the foregoing, holders of rod licences shall not be issued  with –

 

(a)        any blue tags for which there is no total allowable catch, or

 

(b)        a number of blue tags which is greater than the total allowable catch,

 

for a river mentioned in Schedule 2.

 

(6)       Any blue tag held by the holder of a rod licence which is lost or accidentally destroyed may be replaced by a distributor on presentation of a signed declaration of the loss or destruction made before an authorised officer who is satisfied that the tag is so lost or destroyed.

 

(7)               In this Regulation –

 

“blue tag” means a gill tag which is blue in colour, as described in Schedule 1, to be attached in accordance with Regulation 3 to a wild salmon or sea trout lawfully caught by rod and line;

 

“licence duty” means in relation to a licence, licence duty payable under section 68 of the Principal Act in respect of the licence;

 

“rod licence” means a licence referred to in this Regulation.

 

 

 

 

Rivers

Total Allowable Catch

 

Fishery district

 

 

 

 

 

(1)

River

 

 

 

 

 

(2)

Maximum number of tags that may be issued in respect of taking wild salmon or sea trout from river

 

(3)

 

Dublin

Dargle

0

Liffey

0

Vartry

0

 

Wexford

 

Slaney

0

 

Avoca

0

Owenavorragh

0

 

Waterford

Black Water

0

Barrow and Pollmounty

0

Nore

465

Suir including Clodiagh and Lingaun

0

Colligan

0

Corock R

0

Owenduff

0

Mahon

0

Tay

0

 

Lismore

Blackwater ( Munster ) including Glenshelane and Finisk

4,433

 

Bride

0

Lickey

0

Tourig

0

Womanagh

0

 

Cork

Owennacurra

78    

Lower Lee

2,156

Bandon

902

Ilen

278

Mealagh

176

Coomhola

134

Upper Lee

0

Glengarriff

75

Argideen

65

Owvane

77

Adrigole

0

 

Kerry

Roughty

1,270

Blackwater (Kerry)

756

Sneem

742

Waterville

786

Caragh

778

Laune including Cottoners

5,507

 

Owenmore R.

108

 

Croanshagh (Glanmore R. and L)

0

Sheen

73

Inney

76

Maine

0

Kealincha

0

Lough Fada

0

Owenshagh

0

Cloonee

0

Finnihy

0

Owenreagh

0

Emlaghmore

0

Carhan

0

Ferta

0

Behy

0

Emlagh

0

Owenascaul

0

Milltown

0

Feohanagh

0

Lee

0

Limerick

Feale including Galey and Brick

5,298

Mulkear

1,244

 

Maigue

0

Shannon River

0

Fergus

0

Deel

0

Owenagarney

0

Doonbeg

0

Skivaleen

0

Annageeragh

0

Inagh

0

Aughyvackeen

0

 

Galway

Corrib

3,985

Aille ( Galway )

0

 

Kilcolgan

0

Clarinbridge

0

Knock

0

Owenboliska R (Spiddal)

0

 

Connemara

Cashla

697

Screebe

174

Ballynahinch

1,296

L. Na Furnace

0

Erriff

716

Bundorragha

372

Common estuary[1]

995

Owenglin (Clifden)

411

Dawros

984

Culfin

0

Carrownisky

0

Bunowen

0

Owenwee (Belclare)

0

 

Bangor

Srahmore (Burrishoole)

170