Nervous Water: Variations on a Theme of Fly Fishing
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Acclaimed fly fisher and author Steve Raymond has contemplated these issues in numerous articles and essays published in many magazines. Nervous Water is the collection of many of these reflections, detailing thirty-four variations on the theme of fly fishing. Tackling such topics as the very definition of fly fishing itself and how to dress for fishing, these variations form a selective opinionated chronicle of the trends, developments, and changes in fly fishing from the 1960s to the present. Steve Raymond also discusses some of the pioneers of the sport and the fish that make it all possible.
Nervous Water is a book for everyone who loves fly fishing and all those who enjoy looking beneath the surface.
Skyhorse Publishing is proud to publish a broad range of books for fishermen. Our books for anglers include titles that focus on fly fishing, bait fishing, fly-casting, spin casting, deep sea fishing, and surf fishing. Our books offer both practical advice on tackle, techniques, knots, and more, as well as lyrical prose on fishing for bass, trout, salmon, crappie, baitfish, catfish, and more. While not every title we publish becomes a New York Times bestseller or a national bestseller, we are committed to publishing books on subjects that are sometimes overlooked by other publishers and to authors whose work might not otherwise find a home.
Steve Raymond
Steve Raymond is the author of, Rivers of the Heart, Nervous Water, The Year of the Trout, and many more. He was the winner of the Roderick Haig-Brown Award for significant contributions to angling literature, as well as the editor of "The Flyfisher" and "Fly Fishing in Salt Waters" After a thirty-year career as editor and manager at the Seattle Times, he retired and now lives in Clinton, Washington.
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Nervous Water - Steve Raymond
PREFACE
Nervous water: Sometimes it’s nothing more than a fleeting crease or wrinkle on the surface of a lake or stream, or a small patch of salt water that looks almost as if it’s shivering. But wise anglers know such subtle surface movements are nearly always signs of fish stirring down below.
The sport of fly fishing is like that. It has a reputation for being a tranquil, contemplative sport—a calm, quiet, innocent recreation,
in Izaak Walton’s words—but something is nearly always going on down below: constant currents of new thought and theory, a relentless drive to develop new technologies, an ongoing muted chorus of debate. Just as nervous water betrays the presence of moving fish, subtle ripples and distortions in the usually smooth outward fabric of fly fishing are often evidence of important things happening down below.
I have been involved in fly fishing as both participant and observer for more than half a century. During that time there have been many changes in the sport: a huge increase in its popularity, amazing progress in its technology, an unprecedented growth of its literature and a dramatic evolution in anglers’ attitudes. Nobody could live through such a period without forming some pointed conclusions about whether all these changes have been healthy for the sport, and I have probably formed more than my share.
Many of these observations have been voiced in presentations to various gatherings of fly fishers over the years. Others were expressed in articles or essays published in numerous magazines, including The Flyfisher, Sports Illustrated, FlyFishing (later Western FlyFishing), and FlyFisherman. These articles and essays have considered many topics, some important (such as the very definition of fly fishing itself), and some trivial (such as how, or even whether, to dress for fishing).
Now, for the first time, many of these works have been collected in a single book—thirty-four variations on a theme of fly fishing. Together they form a selective, opinionated chronicle of trends, developments and changes in fly fishing from the 1960s to the present, plus a look back at some pioneers of the sport—and the fish that make it all possible.
Most of these pieces have been updated, expanded or otherwise revised or edited for publication in this book; several others appear here for the first time. With two exceptions, all are true or based on fact. The exceptions use fiction as a device to make a point more effectively; they should be obvious to readers, but just in case they aren’t, they are identified in the Author’s Notes
section at the back of the book. That section also lists the forum or publication where each work first appeared.
Most of these pieces were written just for fun and are not intended to be taken very seriously, but some have a serious underlying message—which brings us back to the nervous water
theme: Anglers should always study surface clues to understand what’s happening down below. That’s also true for some of the essays in this book, and it’s another reason why Nervous Water seemed an apt title.
I enjoyed writing these pieces. I hope you will enjoy reading them.
—Steve Raymond
Clinton, Washington
BOOKS BY STEVE RAYMOND
Kamloops: An Angler’s Study of the Kamloops Trout
The Year of the Angler
The Year of the Trout
Backcasts: A History of the Washington Fly Fishing Club 1939-1989
Steelhead Country
The Estuary Flyfisher
Rivers of the Heart
Blue Upright
Part One
A CALM, QUIET, INNOCENT RECREATION
Brown trout are fond of lying in shady spots. Rainbow trout, on the other hand, like to lie in bright sunshine. Trout fishermen are never fussy about where they lie. Listen for them in your neighborhood tackle shop.
—MILFORD STANLEY
POLTROON (DAVE BASCOM),
HOW TO FISH GOOD, 1971
Some consider fly fishing a chance for lifestyle
dressing, others wear only the drabbest, oldest clothes they can find.
—NICK LYONS, A FLYFISHER’S WORLD, 1996
BY THE BOOK
North American trout and salmon waters fairly bristle with fly rods these days, thanks largely to the ever-increasing number of fly-fishing schools sponsored by tackle manufacturers, angling clubs and sporting-goods shops. Such schools have brought expert casting instruction within range of almost everyone, which is quite a contrast with the way things used to be. There was a time, not so very long ago, when many would-be fly fishers learned casting the hard way—by teaching themselves.
I know, because I was one of them. My only help was a book about casting. It was filled with photos and diagrams that made the whole thing look easy, and it inspired me to go out and purchase a new fly rod, plus matching line and reel, and set out to learn to cast.
Not having any water conveniently at hand, and feeling the self-consciousness of a beginner, I chose an empty pasture as a place to start. It was a cold, snowy weekend in February when I first went out in the pasture. The hay had been cut in late summer, leaving a sharp stubble that was now frozen and sticking up through the snow, but I didn’t consider the consequences this might have for my new fly line. I was too intent on learning.
Consulting diagrams in the book, which I had brought along for handy reference, I soon learned that fly casting is a two-handed proposition: One hand holds the rod while the other keeps tension on the line. This means both hands are engaged simultaneously doing very different things. It’s a little like trying to pat yourself on the head with one hand while rubbing your tummy with the other.
Getting the hang of that was difficult enough, but the real problem was what to do with the book. With both hands occupied there was no convenient way to hold it, and the snow would ruin it if I put it on the ground. I tried clutching it between my knees or sticking it inside my belt, but both were uncomfortable. I finally discovered I could hold it precariously by sandwiching it between my ribs and the elbow of my casting arm, although my casting motion was somewhat inhibited as a result.
(Later I was interested to learn that a traditional British method of casting instruction calls for the student to place a book under his casting arm and hold it there by pressing it against his side. This is supposed to teach him to keep his elbow close to his side, which the British apparently consider good form, but I wonder if the tradition wasn’t really started by someone who learned to cast the same way I did—from a book he literally couldn’t put down.)
All that first day I flailed away in the pasture, pausing only to refer to the book or to pick away at the knots that formed in my line and quickly froze. The cold seeped through my shoes and soon my feet were numb, but I didn’t mind—perhaps because I was preoccupied with the pain in my casting arm, where the sharp corners of the book were wearing away the skin of my biceps.
Progress was slow and by the time winter darkness fell in the afternoon it was all I could do to get out twenty-five feet of line, and then only about once in every three or four tries. But my initial feeling of discouragement went away just as soon as I was able to thaw out my feet in front of a woodstove.
Next morning I started out with renewed determination and results came more rapidly. By early afternoon I had made a long cast of forty-five feet and was hitting forty feet with fair consistency. The knots and tangles were less frequent and I no longer felt the need to consult the book so often. But then, just as I was starting to gain confidence, my casts started falling short again. No matter how hard I tried, forty feet suddenly seemed an impossible distance. Something obviously was wrong.
I stopped then to take a close look at my new fly line, and the cause of my difficulty was immediately apparent. Hours of beating on the frozen stubble had worn away the finish on the line, reducing it to a long length of fuzz. It was like trying to cast a forty-foot caterpillar. Fortunately, the line was a double taper, the kind you can switch around after one end has worn out and use the other. When I did that, forty-foot casts became possible again.
The book described many different casts—backhand casts, negative and positive curves, switch casts, change-of-direction casts and others. At the outset, I felt I had to learn them all in order to be a proficient fisherman. But after two days of struggling in the pasture, I decided that being able to deposit a fly on the water in front of me, with the line between the fly and my rod more or less straight, was enough to start with.
For about ten days after that first weekend I suffered a bad cold and a sore arm, but as soon as the ill effects wore off I resumed practicing, looking forward to the mid April opening of trout season when I could test my new skill in earnest. Finally the big day came and I drove to a swampy lake that was reputed to hold some large brook trout.
Small flies were hovering over the surface of the lake and when I got out of the car several of them promptly settled on my hands and neck and bit me. Following the traditional fly fisherman’s precept of matching the hatch,
I selected a size 16 Mosquito pattern and tied it to the end of my leader. Then I launched my cartop boat and began rowing slowly along the shoreline, watching for signs of a feeding fish.
After a while I saw the dorsal fin of a large trout gently cleave the calm surface, leaving an impressive ripple in its wake. Conveniently, it was only about forty feet away.
With mounting excitement, I got to my feet and began switching the rod back and forth, working out line. At what I thought was just the right moment, I let go and threw hard at the spot where the trout had risen. Loops of line flew in a great blur and I was vaguely aware that something had gone terribly wrong. I wasn’t immediately sure what, however, because by then my eyes were tightly closed.
When I opened them again I could see the line on the water. It went straight out for about ten feet, then curved back on itself. I followed it with my eyes, back to the boat, up over the side, down onto the deck, twice around my shoe, then up my leg. At about knee level the line ended and the leader began. Tracing it with a finger, I followed the leader up the rest of my leg, past my belt, up to my chin, past my mouth—and into my left nostril.
Somewhere, inside my nose, was a size 16 dry fly.
Slowly, carefully, I put down the rod. Now I could feel the hackles of the tiny fly tickling the inside of my nostril, and I clenched my teeth and fought back a terrible urge to sneeze. Gingerly—very gingerly—I took hold of the leader, praying the hook hadn’t caught inside my nose. Still gritting my teeth, I gave the leader a gentle tug. The fly popped out cleanly.
After that I sat down, shook for a while, and wiped my watering eyes. The trout was long gone, of course, and as I recall I couldn’t get within forty feet of another all the rest of that day.
But on my next trip I caught a few trout, and the trip after that yielded a few more, and by the end of my first season as a fly caster I had reason to believe that no trout could feel safe if it came even within fifty feet of me. What’s more, I was even beginning to feel reasonably safe myself.
Now, after many decades of practice and experience, I can cast just about as far as I want and even hold my own with all those folks who went to school. And right about this point you probably expect the moral of the story—something about how being a self-taught caster builds character, teaches humility and inspires greater appreciation for the sport.
Well, you’re wrong. The moral is that if I had to do it all over again, I wouldn’t. I’d go to one of those schools instead.
SHOP SCENTS
To an angler, the fragrances of the finest bakeries or delicatessens are no more tantalizing than those of a good fly-fishing shop. The delicious smoky scent of fly-rod varnish, the satisfying redolence of the beeswax and pine pitch used on fly-tying thread, and even the whiff of mothballs, are every bit as appealing to a fly fisher as the aroma of a delicate pastry or a wedge of fine cheese.
For me, these and other familiar shop scents rekindle many bright memories, going all the way back to the shop in the small Northwest city where I was born. My father often took me there and I looked forward to those visits almost as much as I looked forward to going fishing itself.
The shop was large and dark and drafty, but it always had a strong smell of new leather from the belts and hunting boots on display. Along one wall was a heavy glass case, trimmed in wood, with sliding doors that opened only on the side where the clerks stood. The case held all kinds of gleaming treasures: handsome fly reels, shining steel knives, compasses in leather cases and large compartmented wooden trays brimming over with colorful trout flies. I spent many pleasant moments with my face pressed up against the side of that glass case, admiring its contents, listening to the quiet fishing talk of the men who always seemed to be present in the store, and breathing the rich, pungent smell of new leather.
When I was eight years old we moved to Yorktown, Virginia, a historic village too small to have a tackle shop. But it didn’t really need one because it had Tignor’s Store instead.
Tignor’s was locally famous for the astonishing quantity and variety of goods its owner had managed to cram into a small space. I liked it because it had the same leathery smell as the tackle shop back home, but there was something else, too—a sort of warm, musty smell that seemed to have been baked into the small building by years of Virginia sunshine.
Most of Tignor’s stock was in cardboard boxes—boxes of every size and shape, stacked from floor to ceiling against all four walls so that all the windows were covered and the only illumination was from a naked lightbulb hanging on a long cord. When you went to Tignor’s you didn’t go to look at the merchandise; you asked for what you wanted and Tignor would begin sorting and opening boxes until he found it, which he almost always did.
I don’t remember buying any fishing tackle there—although I have no doubt Tignor had some boxed away—but I do remember an urgent trip to Tignor’s to buy a tube of model-airplane cement, which I needed to complete some project. Tignor searched through many boxes until he found a small one that had never been opened. He slit open the paper seal and revealed tubes of model-airplane cement still in the same neat rows in which the manufacturer had packed them. I paid for one and rushed home, where I discovered on the first squeeze that the tube was as hard as a rock. It probably had been in Tignor’s store since before I was born.
That was another thing about Tignor’s: Although he nearly always had what you wanted, you could never be certain it was fresh.
Later, after I returned to the Northwest and began tying flies, I became a frequent patron of Patrick’s Fly Shop in Seattle. Established in 1946, for many years it was the only fly shop in the area and was a place where local fly fishers