Hofsá
Hofsá is a river in Vopnafjörður in the Northeastern part of Iceland. It is 85 kilometres (53 mi) long and is a productive salmon river.
Salmon fishing
The average annual catch between 1974 and 2013 was 1,119 salmon. The maximum catch during that period was in 1992, when 2,239 salmon were caught. The minimum catch was only 141 salmon in 1980.[1] The average weight is usually between 3.0-3.5 kg. The exact number for 2013 was an impressive average of 3.1 kg.[2]
Hofsá has salmon for 30 km up from the river-mouth,[3] and trout for about 6 km. The salmon fishing season in Hofsá starts in early July, and ends in the middle of September.
Charles, Prince of Wales came to fish in Hofsá in his youth.[4][5]
gollark: Of course there are colemonads.
gollark: And lemigroups.
gollark: * lemonoids
gollark: Macron is to have:- monads- comonads- semigroups- monoids- functors- applicatives- profunctors- zygohistomorphic prepromorphisms
gollark: In any case, I prefer use of 128-bit UUIDs for my cows so that they can be randomly IDed independently.
References
- "Hofsa River and Sunnudalsa". angling.travel. Angling Travel. Archived from the original on 4 September 2015. Retrieved 5 September 2015.
- "Salmon Fishing Iceland - Catch Statistics 2013". angling.travel. Angling Travel. Archived from the original on 3 September 2015. Retrieved 5 September 2015.
- "Hofsá í Vopnafirði | Veiði og veiðileyfaupplýsingar". www.veidibok.is. Retrieved 2019-03-12.
- "Karl Bretaprins hafði dregið 27 laxa í gær" (in Icelandic). Dagblaðið. 1977-08-09. p. 24.
- "Karl prins í veiði". Morgunblaðið. 7 August 1988.
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