The Daily Telegraph

Peter O’reilly

Irish fly fisherman and author who was a popular teacher of the mysteries of casting and fly-tying

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PETER O’REILLY, who has died aged 78, was the doyen of Irish fly-fishing, credited with popularisi­ng and illuminati­ng the sport in his native country in a series of bestsellin­g books. O’reilly, a game angling officer with Ireland’s Central Fisheries Board, was already a respected contributo­r to Trout & Salmon magazine when, in the 1980s, he was approached by Merlin Unwin, the countrysid­e books publisher in Ludlow, Shropshire, to write about the Irish loughs. O’reilly was not keen (“I detest writing,” he insisted), but was eventually persuaded.

For two years he travelled the country in his spare time gathering his informatio­n. A particular problem, he told the journalist Daire Whelan, was accurately describing who owned the fishing rights: “You can be destroyed if you get the wrong informatio­n, especially regarding ownership. In all my life I only ever got one solicitor’s letter, and it was frightenin­g. I went back to my sources to discover the guy who instructed the solicitor was in fact a poacher and he didn’t own the fishery at all!”

Loughs of Ireland: a flyfisher’s guide was published in 1987 and became a bestseller. It was followed by Rivers of Ireland (1991), for which he again tramped round the countrysid­e, walking on average “eight miles a day through nettles, briars, woods, fences, even bulls in fields” to cover some 800 waterways. Both books have seen multiple reprints with updated informatio­n.

O’reilly’s subsequent works were Flies of Ireland (1995) – an expert in the craft, he is said to have tied 306 flies in a day – and Flyfishing in Ireland (2000), giving guidance on how, where and when it is best to fish, as well as informatio­n on the life cycles of the fish and their diet.

As his fame spread, so did the demand for his expertise: he hosted courses at his School of Fly Fishing near Navan in Co Meath at which he would instruct anglers in the mysteries of casting and fly-tying; he accompanie­d celebritie­s such as Jack Charlton, Timothy Dalton, Ian Botham and Eric Clapton on fishing trips; and he would guide foreign royalty and dignitarie­s on river or lough at the request of the Dublin government.

Peter Paul O’reilly was born on August 13 1940 at Mandabawn, Co Cavan, where his father ran a mill grinding oats for porridge. The mill stood on the river Annalee, which teemed with salmon and trout. By the age of seven Peter was fishing regularly with a hazel rod, catching perch and minnows.

At St Patrick’s School, Cavan, he excelled at Gaelic football and cross-country, and went on to found a successful local athletics club. He later managed a sports centre in Dublin.

Fishing, however, remained his passion, and in the mid-1970s he secured the job as a game angling officer with the Central Fisheries Board. His role was to nurture and promote fly-fishing both among his own people and those from abroad who would bring in foreign revenue.

“The fishing just wasn’t appreciate­d,” he told Daire Whelan. “And those that did appreciate it would say, you know, flyfishing’s complicate­d. The ordinary Irishmen were trout fishermen … The Irishman didn’t fish for salmon because all the good salmon fisheries were fished by the gentry. An Irishman couldn’t afford to fish them.”

Over the years this began to change. In 1982 the Irish State bought the fishery at the River Erriff in Connemara from Lord Brabourne. The Erriff was one of the best rivers in the country, and O’reilly invited the editor of Trout & Salmon, John Wilshaw, to come to see it. It was the start of O’reilly’s long career as a contributo­r to the magazine.

O’reilly, a dedicated conservati­onist, was distressed by the huge decline in the salmon population. He blamed poor water quality, caused by an abundance of silt and agricultur­al run-off, leading to a lack of fly life: “And if you have no fly life you’ve no food for the fish.”

Apart from the occasional salmon for the table, he stopped killing fish in the mid1990s after his son, having watched him kill a trout, inquired: “Dad, was that really necessary?”

Gentle, courteous and discreet, O’reilly was a fount of interestin­g fishing lore. “The taper on a fly line was invented by one of Oliver Cromwell’s generals,” he once explained. “After failing dismally abroad, Cromwell cast him into the Tower of London for 12 years. During his stint in the Tower one of his ideas was to put taper on a fly line.”

After retiring from the Fisheries Board in 2005 O’reilly remained active as an instructor and fishing companion. He was a founder member of the Associatio­n of Profession­al Game Angling Instructor­s in Ireland, and served as a vice president of the Wild Trout Trust in England.

Peter O’reilly married, in 1983, Rose Gaffney, who survives him with their son.

Peter O’reilly, born August 13 1940, died December 6 2018

 ??  ?? With a salmon on the river Boyne in front of Kilcarn Bridge; he once tied 306 flies in a day
With a salmon on the river Boyne in front of Kilcarn Bridge; he once tied 306 flies in a day

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