If you don't count hours of watching videos, I've self taught myself how to do various spey casts. I've had some in person help, but no official cast lessons. Not being one of the gifted types, I spend/spent a lot of time trying to be proficient. I hit a road block on a particular cast, and for the first time, I decided to get some professional help........for spey casting. I chose an instructor that I felt could best teach me this one particular cast.
FYI, the cast is called single spey. It's been the most difficult fly cast I've ever tried to learn. Simon Gawesworth(Rio Flyline)confirms it's the most difficult cast to learn in his Modern Spey Casting video. For the few spey junkies on the forum, the rod is a 14' 8wt Meiser, and the line is a 7/8, Nextcast Winter Autority 70(62' head).
The lesson only lasted an hour, but I can't even begin to measure what I gained in that short time. Not going into the boring details, but now I can accurately diagnose some of my faults, and have the tools to fix them. Prior to the lesson, I was clueless, and continued with the bad technique. I stayed on the river after the lesson and fished the run. No hookups, but my casting was much more consistent, and I was able to make adjustments to fix flubbed casts. It was well worth the time and $$ it took to travel for the lesson.
Classroom
Pencil & paper
Pre lesson meal(combustible)
Trip notes.
The 4th of July weekend on an urban river is an interesting study of alcohol and it's effects on human behavior.
The 4th of July weekend is not a good weekend to take a road trip.
Meat bees can fly into the tops of Simms wet wading socks.
Multiple meat bee stings/bites are painful, and have a lasting, pain, swelling and itch effect. Day 3 and no relief.
Ballast Point Sculpin is really good beer!
briansII