Thomas McGuane, an internationally
famous outdoor writer and novelist, wrote in "Live Water"
(Meadow Run Press, 1996):
“In a perfect
world, fishing with split shot on the leader wouldn't be fly fishing at all.
Neither would monofilament nymphing and maybe even shooting heads. Lee Wulff
said that the fish is entitled to the sanctuary of deep water. That's where
most of us used to set the bar in trout fishing. We fished on top and tried to devise ways of catching big fish that
way, fishing at night, fishing with greater stealth, hunting remote places that
rarely saw an angler.”
John Gierach, a modern writer on
the subject of fly fishing and the author of many books, wrote in "Good
Flies" (Lyons Press, 2002):
“I still do my
share of dredging with weight on the leader – sometimes lots of weight, as much
as it takes – but in the past few years I’ve tried to do it more sparingly. If
there’s anything wrong with this kind of nymph fishing, it’s that it can be too
effective. Lee Wulff once said that trout deserve the sanctuary of deep water,
and I can’t help thinking about that every time I nip three split shot onto my
leader and dredge up a fish that might have started rising in an hour or two if
I’d left him alone. Maybe there was a time when this didn’t make too much
difference, but with the crowds you now see on popular rivers – not to mention
the beat-up trout you sometimes catch – maybe the idea of letting the fish
hide, rest, or feed undisturbed from time to time is worth thinking about.”
So, the concept of providing fast water sanctuaries for trout is neither new, nor logically unsound as
a practice beneficial to the growth and preservation of large trout. How this could be implemented in today's angling environment to the satisfaction of most fishermen is the subject of the next post.
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