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Fly Fishing with Doug Macnair: By Way of Introduction©
I am delighted to bring you my thoughts, ideas and concepts
regarding my favorite sport, the gentle art of fly fishing.
Before beginning, however, I thought it advisable to provide
you an overview of how I intend to handle this column and,
more importantly, a little insight into my thinking.
In addition to being a student of fly fishing, I am also
a student of Gestalt psychology. Applied to fly fishing, the
premises of this school of thought fit well. Broadly speaking,
a gestalt is a configuration of physical and psychological
phenomena so integrated as to become a functional unit not
derivable from the simple sum of its parts. In fly fishing,
I think of it this way: the hardware -- the rods, reels, lines,
leaders and tippets -- taken together can be greater than
the simple sum of the parts, especially when matched to the
fly fisher. Said another way, I believe a skillfully conceived
and crafted fly fishing system can perform magic deeds when
tailored to the fly fishers hands and his or her individual
differences. This notion of the fly fishing gestalt will permeate
the column with successive discussions focusing on the parts
of the "whole" and how they relate to you, the fly
fisher. Over the weeks to come, look forward to treatments
covering lines, leaders, tippets, knots, rods and reels.
Im confident you will find new thoughts and ideas on
these pages as we go forward. Some of you will agree with
what I have to say and some of you will not. Besides addressing
fly fishing using a holistic approach, you may or may not
like the idea that I will become gender specific in attempting
to cope with the rather well documented physiological differences
between men and women. However, whether you are male or female,
I think the content will stand you in good stead if you decide
to commit to the sport, and if already committed, add to your
depth of knowledge.
As for me, I was captured by the sport of fishing when I
was about eight years old. Its hard for me to believe
that well over fifty years have passed downstream since I
caught my first fish. Getting started was difficult: My Mother
thought fishing was insidiously stupid and my Dad was overseas
serving in WWII. Who then were my teachers? The answer is:
Field & Stream, Sports Afield and Outdoor
Life. Every month I bought all three for about $1.05 (a
measly 35¢ apiece in those days) and read each one cover
to cover at least three times.
In time, I became a proficient fisher as I passed though
lifes stages. Occasionally while demonstrating my mastery
of rod & reel, I would accidentally catch a fish. Finally
the day came when I ended up with a fly rod in my hands and
found that I caught even more fish. While I still enjoy bait
casting, spinning and surf casting with ultra-light, the fly
rod became my personal challenge and my first love. Catching
fish, of course is the best way to amortize the cost of your
equipment. My wife asked that I mention a fish dinner at our
home is rather inexpensive, especially since Ive managed
to reduce the "per pound" cost from $1,477.98 to
$378.83.
So much for my background. And now that you know everything
about me, let me hasten to add Ive arrived - at last,
I have become an "Iswas."
Becoming an Iswas simplifies life. An Iswas speaks incisively.
As an Iswas, you can "truthspeak" without regard
to whether-or-not the person you are speaking to wants to
hear the truth. Being a simple Iswas, I believe clear thinking
requires blowing away the smoke surrounding any subject. And
fly fishing, for the good or the bad, always seems to have
a bit of smoke hanging around. Some call it "mystique."
Others call it "embellishing the truth." Still others
refer to it using a term describing the large pile of digestive
residue Texas Bulls leave behind.
Whatever its called, fly fishing has had more than
its share of short terms. The "mystique" has served
the purpose of keeping people from participating in the sport
because they anticipate: (1) the so-called high cost, (2)
the requirement for "innate" expertise (whatever
that is), and/or (3) the "impossible" technical
difficulty associated with the sport. Here is an example of
embellishing the truth - Its a little tongue-in-cheek
story about the great trophy trout that lurks beneath
the huge boulder in the tiny little creek.
"With his tiny rod, a wispy 6-foot 1-weight, Hermann
Smuck made his final cast. It was effortless - for Herms
technique embodied his recently perfected "triple-toe
barefoot haul." The Gossamer Thread Tippet, some 45
feet in length, followed the thin line subscribing a perfectly
formed loop. Hermann could barely see the fly, a number
64 Black Wasp, tied to the tippets end. Upward and
outward the fly soared moving majestically as if blown along
by a soft gentle breeze. Farther and farther it carried
until finally it began its decent to the target, an oak
leaf floating some 245 feet away. The tiny fly settled softly
to the water through a small hole in the leaf. Hermann's
accuracy was right-on as usual. He twitched the fly once.
. . twice. . .then the water exploded! Throughout the valley
Hermanns cry of excitement echoed, "Fish ON!".
Of course there is no such thing as a gossamer thread tippet,
much less one 45 feet in length. There is also no such thing
as a #64 Black Wasp, at least until some fly tier reads this.
Even then, tying it will be a feat. A #64 would be so tiny,
I dont think my weary old eyes could see it even if
it was lying in the palm of my hand under a magnifying glass.
Finally, the triple-toe haul is yet to be developed, and no
one can cast a rig similar to the one described above anywhere
near 245 feet. Its simply impossible.
What follows is the better part of a book (minus a few chapters).
As you peruse these articles in the weeks to come, I hope
you enjoy them informative, instructional, and entertaining.
In the end, and with your support, I would like nothing more
than to publish these works in their entirety as a book a
wistfully call, Fly Fishing for the Rest of Us. You
should find the product updates well worth your time and,
perhaps, a savings in money.
Whats to be first in the order of battle? If you guessed
its to be All About Lines, you are correct.
What follows? How about these:
- Of Tippets, Leaders, and Knots
- Folk Tales & Fly Rods
- The Fly Reel - Fact & Fantasy
- Assembling the System (Several Parts)
- Assembling the System - Putting It all Together
- Accoutrements
- To Catch a Fish
- Minding Your Manners
© Copyright: Douglas G. Macnair, 1997 - 2000.
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