by ldr » June 22nd, 2016, 7:38 pm
I just got home from a couple weeks trailering with friends through Wyoming and Eastern Idaho. Spent one day fishing with a friend who summers in his house in Island Park. We fished the Henrys Fork together. He describes himself as a “purist,” and he fishes dry flies almost exclusively. The exception would be swinging a single wet fly when the moment seems right. He casts beautiful loops, and he knows how to delay the onset of drag. I’m sure when conditions favor his fly fishing preferences, he is very successful.
The day we fished together, I started fishing dry patterns, too. We saw rising fish, but the multiple hatches made it difficult to identify the preferred bug du jour. I don’t think there was one. After a few hours of casting practice, I added a caddis dropper, and caught a couple fish, a brown and a rainbow. As the day progressed, the wind started to howl, and I went, according to my friend, to the dark side (2 nymphs), and I caught a few more fish. Tim celebrated each fish I caught, but he chose to prospect and to cast to rising fish. He had a couple refusals, but no fish, and he enjoyed himself through the entire effort. When it was all over, he said he would probably fish the same water the following day.
You see, Tim loves casting to rising fish. I really believe that he is a “fisher” first and “catcher” second. He fits the model described by BrownBear. Tim has fished for years. He is an expert in so many ways, and now he has chosen to catch fish on his terms. Evolution are devolution, don’t know and don’t care. Tim is avid, and it doesn’t matter if he catches fish. It matters that he finds success on his own terms. Maybe that will be me someday…or maybe not.
"You can observe a lot just by watching." Yogi Berra