Coming Back to New Water

I only lived in Pennsylvania for seven years. But the quantity and quality of the angling I squeezed in during grad school and my first career was remarkable. Primarily focusing on spring creeks, with the overwhelming majority  of the time on three in particular, I can’t fathom how many  days of my life were spent stalking Keystone trout.

While I’ve logged more hours fly fishing in Pennsylvania than in any other state, the list of different streams I’ve fished in Virginia is the longest by far. Driving down either side of the Shenandoah National Park, there are memories linked to countless trailheads and bridge-side parking spots. There are plenty of brook trout creeks south of the park and, further west, in the George Washington and Jefferson National Forests that I have spent time on. I have ticked a lot of larger rivers and spring creeks off my Old Dominion list, but the mountain streams have worn the soles off of multiple pairs of wading boots.

There was the fishing that occurred alongside the outings when a friend and I performed amateur biological surveys with the blessing of the Department of the Interior. Often these days started in the dark and ended in the dark. Multiple times have I been fishing a stream with the strong, sneaking suspicion that I had been there before.  In all likelihood, I was in the same pool that I had stood in a decade or more before.

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Time in a Bottle

You’re never going to look back, excited about the mornings you slept in.

It will never be the half-way, B- for effort fishing that you’ll remember. It will always be the mornings when the coffee couldn’t come soon enough. The times when you had to wait and watch the minutes tick by before you could make that first legal cast. All the uncomfortable nights in reclined seats and makeshift campsites. It is the times that you worked for it, that you went for it, that you felt like you earned it.

Those times are the times that will come up first as you remember last season. The moments you still talk about years and decades from now.

Are there pragmatic benefits? Absolutely. Pressured waters fish much better for those who get to the coveted runs first. More hours on the river translate into more opportunities. Hiking further and deeper puts you places others won’t or can’t go. Again: you’ll be happy you fished with a bit more of an intense edge.

But there is more to it than that.

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Podcast Ep. 280: Fly Fishing Accusations, XXVIII

This installation of “fly fishing accusations” is all about dogmatic opinions.

Included are convictions regarding:

  • wading boot soles
  • angling literature
  • the exclusivity claims of Christianity

Does that last one sound like it might not fit  in with the others? Well, if the feedback I received from a recent article is any indication: it certainly does.

Enjoy, and don’t hesitate to reach out with your questions, comments, or accusations.

Listen to the episode below, or on your favorite podcast app.

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Spoils of the Hunt

I love fly fishing. I also love books. I don’t have to work very hard to convince myself, or anyone else for that matter, that  these two things  go together  quite well.

There are many new and good books out there. Hopefully they are available at your local fly shop; they are definitively within reach online. But the latest and most noteworthy only represents a small fraction of the catalog of angling literature. There are plenty of classics that are not in print. And there are countless quality volumes that have faded to relative obscurity.

More exciting, and potentially more of a deal than online shopping, is stalking the stacks of a used book store.

On vacation, I took my wife out to lunch and a small-town secondhand book safari. Three destinations were on the list, and they each yielded up trophies for the shelves at home.

Check out some images from my hunt, as well as a description of my spoils, below:

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Why Go Back to The Basics?

The resounding success of the recent Casting Across Fly Fishing Podcast episodes entitled Cast1 has reminded me how important it is to communicate and consume the most essential aspects of fly fishing.

This initial 9-part  series was curated for those interested in fly fishing and those who may have recently started. But early on, it became clear that there was a tremendous value to angling veterans as well. The basics of fly fishing, like the basics of any hobby or profession, are the fundamentals upon which everything else is built. So if you’re just getting out the blueprints, or you’re living on the top floor in comfort, you ought to appreciate – and maybe even inspect – the foundation.

Here are reasons why you, or anyone else, should go back to the basics of fly fishing… regardless of your experience:

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Podcast Ep. 279: [Cast1] Your Next Step in Fly Fishing

The initial Cast1 podcast series is wrapping up this week. The response to the first batch of episodes has been great, and I promise that there will be more podcasts along these lines in the future.

Today’s episode presents you with some next steps. Whether you’re  just  getting into fly fishing or you’ve been on the water, rod in hand, for decades, I believe that this advice is equally valid.

As always, feel free to reach out with podcast topics or any other questions, comments, or accusations.

Listen to the episode below, or on your favorite podcast app.

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More Fly Rod FAQs

For most fly anglers, the most exciting piece of gear to shop for and purchase is the rod. Any conscientious buyer will understandably go through a relatively rigorous process of determining what to trust with his money and his prospective fish.

In my years writing Casting Across, teaching casting, guiding, and selling rods, questions about selecting rods have made up over half of the inquiries I’ve answered. I’m continuing this series of articles by looking at five more fly rod questions I’ve handled quite a few times in the past few decades.

You can check out the list of previous questions/answers, and check out the latest batch below:

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Cracked: Opening a Book Tearing Down Dams

Virtually anyone who looks at the big picture of our nation’s waterways will see that the infatuation with dams of all shapes and sizes was significantly  inflated. Whether it be giant structures that cut salmon off from hundreds of miles of spawning habitat or a small concrete abutment that  led to flooding, the overuse of dams has revealed their limitations.

Cracked: The Future of Dams in a Hot, Chaotic World by Steven Hawley seeks to address the issue of dams and dam removal head-on.  The book chronicles what led the United States to adopt so many dams, what had spurred the movement to tear them down, and stories of various levels of success.

A significant work backed with palpable passion, the book is definitely thought provoking and suitable to the conservation conversations that are happening right now. Read some specific thoughts on Cracked below:

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Podcast Ep. 278: [Cast1] The Culture of Fly Fishing

Is fly fishing just you, a rod, and a fish?

In one sense, it is. But in a much broader, more realistic way of thinking about things it certainly is not. There are a lot more people doing what you do, and being a part of that culture is not only unavoidable but enriching.

Today I cover some important subject matter in the periphery of the fly fishing image. Things like literature and conservation aren’t directly in the cast+bug=trout equation, but they have been, are, and will be what makes fly fishing what it is.

Whether you’ve been angling forever or just getting started, it is worth thinking about how you’re part of a community of people who happen to like chasing fish with long rods.

Listen to the episode below, or on your favorite podcast app.

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Rusty Flybox: Staying Alive

Maybe you’ve never had a fly fishing injury. But there is a good chance that if you’ve had an injury, it has impacted your fly fishing.

Today I’m sharing three articles that deal with a relatively obscure, but certainly important, aspect of fly fishing. Physical health is a necessary part of fly fishing. While you don’t need to be a performance athlete to be skilled at casting or finding fish, there are real benefits to having a baseline of fitness. Here are the three things I’m sharing today:

  • Sometimes you need to not fish today so that you can be healthy when the time comes to fish tomorrow.
  • There might be a day when you’re forced to stop fishing… so appreciate what you can do when you can do it.
  • Consider taking steps to prepare yourself a little bit now to set up a future full of fishing.

Click on the picture or title for each article below to be taken to the  full post:

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