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Catherine McGinty, 28 Sep
An absolutely beautiful new book has joined the pantheon of quality
literature highlighting Derryâs rich and varied social history.
[INS: :INS]
The contemporary iteration of Edward Clarkson Heaneyâs 1947 pamphlet
âFly-Fishing for Trout and Salmon on the Faughanâ was launched in
August.
Clarkson Heaneyâs gem, a pristine copy of which can change hands for as
much as ÂŁ1,000 these days, was ârevisitedâ by Gerry Quinn of River
Faughan Anglers.
Gerry Quinn with Mayor Patricia Logue at the launch in the Guildhall.
At the launch in the Guildhall, Gerry described the year and a halfâs
work as a âlabour of loveâ.
He added: âWe looked at the history of fishing and back through the
characters who fished the Faughan. Reminiscing. It was almost like a
reacquaintance with old friends.
âI kind of brought people together and I think reproduced a book that
will last, and will bring Clarkie Heaney to a new generation of
people.â
Over a cuppa in Creggan Country Park, Gerryâs home-from-home, he
revealed Clarkie Heaneyâs original book had come from a series of
articles printed in the Londonderry Standard over the previous two
years.
âIt was a small pamphlet type publication, quite well known among
Faughan anglers and the wider angling community,â said Gerry. âIt is a
very interesting wee book. It contains a lot of anecdotes and a lot of
good advice and information about how to catch trout and salmon in the
Faughan and elsewhere. It has a lot of really good information about
the flies he used.â
The ânewâ âFly-Fishing for Trout and Salmon on the Faughan is dedicated
to Heather Diamond, who sadly died in a house fire in March 2021.
Heather Diamond the 'face' of Faughan Anglers.
Gerry explained: âTwo years ago, our friend and colleague, Heather
Diamond, who was office manager for the River Faughan Anglers, died.
Heather was the face of the Faughan anglers and a good friend. We
probably have never got over what happened to Heather.
âA lot of our stuff was lost in the house fire. We had to build up our
databases again and start from scratch with our membership and find new
ways of relating to the public and selling permits again. We had the
added difficulty of it being during covid as well.
âAfter Heatherâs death, we were looking for ways of commemorating her.
Thereâs a nice bench at Eglinton, which was put up by her friends. She
taught Zumba and aerobics and all sorts throughout the North West.
âI came up with the idea of republishing Clarkson Heaneyâs book in
Heatherâs memory. I investigated the provenance of the book and
established there was no copyright, no issue in republishing, so we
began putting together the ânewâ book,â said Gerry.
The book was practically rewritten because the text was very dense,
very tight, almost inaccessible. It was reproduced with the help of
Colmcille Press, an Independent Publishing House Based in Derry.
Quick to acknowledge all of those involved in the updated publication,
Gerry said: âEmmett McCourt, who is an author in his own right and a
chef, helped with the biographical element in researching Clarkson
Heaneyâs family.
âEmmett found a grandson and subsequently we found wider connections as
well. We were able to flesh out what we already knew about Edward
Clarkson Heaney. We integrated Clarkieâs book into a wider publication
using Emmettâs biographical material.
âWe were very fortunate in that we got original artwork by Paul
Gallagher, which really makes the book. Paul is a Faughan angler as
well. His artwork is superlative. It is throughout the book and it
really sets the book off.
âWe also in our ranks have some really great fly tiers. Clarkson
Heaneyâs original old style salmon flies were reproduced by Peter
Canning and Kilian McDaid tied up Clarkson Heaneyâs brown trout spiders
and white trout flies.
âMark McLoon tied Clarkson Heaneyâs signature fly, the Black Spider,
which was the pseudonym under which he wrote. Mark also did photography
which is superlative. Mark knew what he was doing,â said Gerry.
Paul Slevin also tied us up some contemporary flies which are
juxtaposed between the old and the new in the book.
âWe have a whole set of contemporaries all of which have very detailed
instructions on how to tie them.
âWe have also included Emmettâs story of how my father (Jamesie Quinn)
had given him a fly, âJamesieâs Fenianâ, with which he caught his first
salmon In the Faughan. We have a couple of my fatherâs flies in the
book as well: âJamesieâs Copperâ and âJamesieâs Gold Shrimp.
âWe have also looked back at the history of the Faughan Anglers. I have
a lot of minutes of old meetings. We have some stuff going back quite a
long time, some very interesting material, so we have reproduced some
of that.
âWe have an array of cups as well, which were presented in angling
competitions and we have done a bit of investigation into those. For
instance, we have the John McGavigan Cup, and we did a bit of work
around that. There is the Bob Whitters Memorial Cup and, thanks to
Robert Murtland, one of our older Faughan Anglers, we got a good bit
of biographical information about Bob. I would have known Bob from
fishing the Faughan. He used to go out on the bus so Robert was able to
fill in some of the details and also reflect back on his memories of
fishing the Faughan over very, very many years.
âWe have also got the Jim Ramsey Cup, which was presented by his family
and the John G Gill Cup, about which we could find very little
information. So, we have a piece about the cups and the people
involved, the people who won the cups.â
Gerry also drew on his father Jamesieâs diary.
âThrough that there is a reflection of my fatherâs involvement with the
Faughan Anglers, from his first appointment to the committee, to
becoming vice chairman and then chairman; the subsequent to the
dissolution of the River Faughan Anglers Association; and the creation
of the River Faughan Anglers Limited as a company, of which Jamesie
was the first chairman.â
He added: âWe have also got his reflection back on how the river
fished, what he used to catch, and how much he and my brotherâs used to
catch. Looking back, it is amazing how prolific the river was.
âMy fatherâs diary also gives snapshots of what was happening on the
river, so there are also recordings of times of drought there, when
there were no fish as well as references to some years when there was
an abundance of salmon.
âSo we have a historical record in a sense, which is very good for
those looking back today. We have Clarkie Heaneyâs recollections going
back as far as 1935, when he was involved in Faughan Anglers of the day
and we have a continuum of memory and reflection and recollection from
1935 comprising Clarkie Heaneyâs written notes, from the 1940s and my
fatherâs diary, which goes up to 2013.
âWe also have a photographic recollection of how things were and how
things are now. And all this in memory of Heather. It is our tribute to
Heather.â
Published by Cholmcille Press, âFly-Fishing for Trout and Salmon on the
Faughan Revisitedâ can be purchased at Creggan Country Park and Rod and
Line, Clarendon Street.