- Henry David Thoreau
By nature, people are curious and problem solvers. Fly fishing provides us with the opportunity to satisfy our curiosity and to solve problems, which is a reason I was drawn to it. My curiosity led me to a degree in math and physics, which then led me into aerospace where designing things that had never been built before was a way of life. Then I retired. What to do with the curiosity and engineering skills I have developed? Fly fishing was my choice. I think to one degree or another this describes all fly fishers -- they are curious about their quarry and they enjoy the challenge of catching that quarry with a fly rod.
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Two Ruby Mountain Fly Fishers at Pyramid Lake's Pelican Rock |
As an example, I was fishing in Pyramid Lake when a character next to me was catching nearly all the fish. As I often quip, the best place to fish Pyramid Lake is on either side of me but this was ridiculous. He was using a typical Pyramid Lake rig -- sinking line, weighted leech on the bottom, and a Pyramid Lake Beetle on a 9" stinger about 18" above the beech. I was tossing a balanced leech about 8' under an indicator with my 6-wt switch rod.
My first thought was how can I duplicate that fishing technique with a small Spey. Well, it is not so easy. To be honest, I don't have a solution as I write this, but when I work it out there will be a blog entry. I do know that all the knots common to swinging flies with two-handed rods, for which the gear was designed, does not work well on lakes. We need something different. The integrated lines that could work are designed for a single-handed rod and thus don't have the tapers necessary for Spey casting. So it goes. What this all provides for me is an opportunity to scratch my creative/engineering urges by finding a suitable solution to this problem.
For those who might not know, Pyramid Lake is home to trophy-sized Lahontan Cutthroat and in fact is the only place you can catch these magnificent fish that weigh over 20 pounds. Pyramid Lake, located in the northwest corner of Nevada about 40 miles north of Reno, has a sand and gravel bottom with few snags. Creative people have invented an entire ecosystem of techniques, flies, and even ladders with chairs on them for fishing this unique lake, illustrating the point.
Spey techniques, which can be used with either single-handed or two-handed rods, can provide the angler with more tools to tackle the various fishing situations we encounter. Pyramid Lake is one. Small reservoirs and ponds, with trophy-sized trout, are another.
I may have buried my lead but that's OK. Spey casting provides useful capabilities for stillwater situations. Anglers who use them will be more successful.
- Spey casting keeps everything in front of the angler. Commonly this is expressed as being able to cast with obstructions behind the angler. This is true but they may not always be things on a bank. In smaller ponds when fishing with other anglers, one must check behind them before casting in the traditional way to avoid hooking somebody, which interferes with the joy of fishing. With a Spey cast, no worries, as all is in front of the angler. No worries except for somebody else hooking you.
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Two Ruby Mountain Fly Fishers in Small Reservoir |
- Change of direction. Spey casts were designed to swing flies in a river. With this technique, one casts between 45 and 90 degrees to the bank and then lets the fly drift in the current back to the bank. Once the fly is at the bank (on the dangle in the jargon) the next cast is made back out into the river. But changing direction can be useful for the fly fisher in Stillwater. I was fishing in Wildhorse one spring. I was using a single-handed rod but I can execute Spey casts with it. I was fishing a leech under an indicator when a big guy porpoising along caught my eye. It was off moving along to the right side of my little pontoon boat. I made a single motion Spey cast to change my direction and put the leech out in front of that fish and began to strip it. Fortune smiled on me as that bad boy came and got it. Without the Spey cast, I probably would not have caught that fish.
- Length. As I mentioned in the Curses of the Long Cast, casting long can be a curse of Spey casting. But it is nice to have the distance when you see a trout rising a ways from your boat. If that distance isn't available, then the fish may move on before you have your boat maneuvered to a place to make the cast.
- Practice. The closest salmon/steelhead swinging water for me is a five-hour drive. Using a trout Spey for fishing my local waters gives me a way to maintain and improve my two-handed casting skills, keeping me ready for that trip to a big river.
- Fun. Ed Ward, one of the Skagit masters, talks about fishing goals. First, you want to catch fish; then you want to catch lots of fish; then you want to catch bit fish; then you want to catch lots of big fish. After this journey, Ed discovered it wasn't catching the fish he was after. He now says he wants to be out fishing, as long as it is with a two-handed rod. That is the deal that makes the challenge of mastering a two-handed rod worthwhile.
Great intro and explanation(s). Will love to follow how this develops, your discoveries, etc.
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