willowhead wrote:This is my 22nd year fly fishing and i'm still a beginner absolutely..........hope i always will be. It's a lot more fun that way..........not that i have any way to compare it.
But that's the good part.....i don't measure my growth by fish caught. That would be stupid......for me. i'm just glad i transcended all that lame mentality of looking at it as a sport almost immediately.
Seems i fish less and less as the years go by.......but that's only been for bout the last 7/8 years or so.....soon to be corrected i pray, (not pary lol).....
Before i began all this tying at shows all over stuff..........i fished a lot more............it's time to go back to that. Funny how things go in cycles........
You mentioned how lucky we are..........i prefere to appreciate it as fortunate.........a matter of semantics perhaps.....but not for me.
GREAT tune, "But Not For Me".....
It is a shame that because the "industry" associated with the so called "sport" has expended so much energy force feeding an entire generation, trying to convince them that size and numbers is what it's all about, (not to metion that house in Montana and the Suburban you gotta have to go with it), we now end up with a can't see the forest for the trees situation. But that's Amerika for ya.
anyway.....thankx very much for the great thread........
Size and numbers from the point of view of greed is obviously not a great thing. However from my point of view they are vital to my enjoyment and I fully accept that your viewpoint, my viewpoint and someone elses may differ immensly.
To catch trout in large numbers from my local fishery consistently demands that you will have learned to find the trout, have learned where they will be at particular times of the day, times of the season. you will have learned their feeding patterns and the behaviour and timing of the hatches. You will have learned the skills to tie flys that work ( and plenty that don't
), you will have managed a reasonable degree of presentation, stealth and attention to detail.
In a nut shell you will have tuned into the river and its inhabitants.
To catch a reasonable number of the better trout will mean taking your skills to a much higher level. Attention to detail and steath will need to be religiously followed, presentation skills must be top drawer and patience is primary and off course a little luck will not go astray.
I do not catch many of the bigger trout but I enjoy the challenges it presents.
I love to say to myself, next time or next season.........I'll be ready.
Having said all that I recognise there is probably another and equally enjoyable level, a level where skills, catching or not catching really do not matter, the angler will be tuned into the river in a completely different way and enjoy the pleasures from simply being there.