Characters in the stream
We've all seen them--Characters. Fellow
flyfishers
who have given us pause--either because they inspire us,
humor us . . . or cause us to run the other way. The following is a collection of
people I've seen or fished with who strike me as interesting fishing characters (some bizarre, a
few possibly insane). None of these characters remotely
resemble you or me, keep in mind. And it is not relevant that some of them catch
more fish than you or me. That's not the point. The point is . . . well, I'm not
sure what the point is, but follow along anyway.
The Entomologist This one knows bugs. All bugs.
Doesn't even have to make up bug names. Can pronounce the scientific names of
all bugs, as evidenced by his pointing out that you cannot pronounce any of them
correctly. Has one fly box for every species of midge, caddis, and
stonefly. Two for mayflies. Three for spinners. His six "summer boxes" have
dozens of grasshoppers with three colors of legs, ants in three shades of
cinnamon, locusts (in preparation for the 17th year hatch) and billions of
beetles. He has no Wooly Buggers. Often seen peering into small streams,
exploring two-inch fingerlings with the same excitement as the Rambo type (see below)
fighting a 38-inch steelhead. Sometimes dons scuba gear in two inches of water,
getting animated about little pink eggs. Has an uncanny knack of pulling fish
out of any water, including city creeks. He can pull a 12-inch brook trout out
of your bathtub.
The Connected Crowd This is the
walkie-talkie/shortwave flyfisher, possibly touting a GPS and mapping software
on his car laptop or palm-sized digital assistance. If he doesn't have a fly
on a line, he is researching fly fishing online, and has his browser's favorites
set to every flyfishing and insect database in existence. Where spotted: steelhead
streams. He needs a worthy adversary. This one has the stalking skills of a
sniper, that's why he brings a friend as a spotter with a walkie-talkie.
Some may even be shortwave pirates on the lam, occasionally seen throwing dipoles
in trees, launching their thoughts over USB and FM, watching their 6 for the
FCC.
Rambo with a Fly Rod A very courageous
trouting warrior. He has fished where no man has fished before. Has his
proven steelhead flies pinned into the wall above his bed, to "impress the
girls." Has been known to follow a small drainage for four days with a 50 pound
pack on his back, with a compass or GPS in one hand and a fly rod in the other,
catching 18-inch indigenous cutthroat trout, the color of which has never been
seen before. Doesn't even have to lie as he sucks all
the air out of the club house proclaiming his gift to flyfishing godliness.
When not in the mountains, is sometimes seen with the Connected Crowd.
Average Joe This one has just started out
fly fishing 10 years ago, dropped the sport for five years, and is picking it up
again, and again, and again each season. Has 6 types of flies, but fishes
with only a Royal Wulff, but is beginning to think about bead-head nymphs. Will
dutifully listen to anything you have to save about fishing, but won't
understand anything you have to say about fishing. Will automatically assume
you are a better fisherman and worth listening to because . . . well . . .
you're the one doing all the talking and he is nice enough to not tell you to shut up.
The Terminator Has the cunning of backyard
cat. Tee shirt reads, "I practice catch and kill." Bumper sticker reads "My other
car is pan-fried fish." Fish is food--no ifs, ands or buts. One thing is certain:
this one is getting plenty of Omega-3 fatty acids and will outlive you or me. He
wants big fish, really big fish, and catches them with one of five flies: black
woolly bugger, red woolly bugger, brown woolly bugger, olive woolly bugger, and
a yellow woolly bugger. Could easily beat the crap out of 12 Entomologists.
Sometimes seen with the Rambo type. Show him a chironomid and he'll punch you.
Mention that he should try an Ephemerella pattern, and he'll beat you up,
thinking you just called him a homosexual.
No Fish Guy This is the person who is dutiful
about all aspects of the sport. Practices casting on occasion, studies bugs to
an extent, buys reasonable flies, kicked over a rock once to
see what was underneath and then decided what he saw resembled bugs in books but nothing he or anyone else
has ever tied. Catches small fish, but seems happy anyway. Also known as most
everybody.
The Old Man This man fished with Theodore
Gordon, so he says. He probably has. He ties Bumblepuppies, Tup Indispensables
and Cock-y-bundhu patterns just for laughs and shows them to the "chironomid
kids", as he calls the young kids on his once favorite lake, which he'll constantly tell
you was His lake until flyfishers started becoming more numerous than the
midges. Being resourceful with materials at hand when need be, he has been known
to tie with dog hair, but mainly ties with starling wings and bizarre parts of
mammals and birds from English parts of the world. Sometimes found
crouching next to a stream tossing ancient flies to a trout named George, who
has been caught and released hundreds of times with the old man's flies. The fish will soon die of old age or boredom.
The Agnostic For him there are no fish here,
no fish there, no fish anywhere. When confronted with an unsuccessful day of
fishing, he assumes the fish weren't present. Sometimes suspects winter kill or
human intervention. If it's true that 10 percent of the fishermen are catching 90 percent of
the trout, then the Agnostic assumes the remaining 90 percent of the fishermen are catching not much
more than nothing (and probably using attractors). Disturbingly familiar person.
Though not to be confused with you or me.
The Shop Guy This person has the finest
flies, all tied by people who don't fish and who live in
countries not easily pronounced. Easily recognized by the plethora of clothes
and gear more expensive than the cheap stuff you have. Sometimes donning the
latest design in fly vest/bag combinations complete with hydration system and
possibly a radio, if not a GPS. Knows the cfs of every river and creek within a
thousand miles. By definition, shop people are very nice people, but like many,
won't shut up. Can sometimes be seen with the Connected Crowd.
The Woolly Bugger Guy Has only one fly box.
Doesn't like the fact that 90 percent of the fish are caught by 10 percent of
the flyfishers, and plans to do something about this with Woolly Buggers. Ten
percent of the flyfishers are getting really pissed.
The Paranoid Schizophrenic He keeps a gun in
his waders because, after all, "there are some strange people out here."
After giving you a cautious glance, if he decides you aren't the enemy,
he'll talk your head off. Commiserate with him on all issues, or you're fish
bait.
The Well-Traveled Angler This one has been on
every stream in every continent on the earth. He has fished in more places with
unpronounceable names than you can find in an atlas or online. "Then there was the wild
anadromous brook trout in Lake Abacikerizeryz on the northern ridge of the Ural
mountains in Russia. You won't find that place even on the internet." He would rather
talk your ear raw than fish. A great fisherman. Just ask him.
The Beginner After talking to the
Shop Guy,
this one appears on the stream with half-a-shop worth of gear: Gortex hat, coat,
gloves, vest, underwear; fly rods named after exotic metals and polymers and
geometric shapes; boots that actually fit well and don a podiatrist's
endorsement; flies beautifully tied (unlike the crap you and I tie) by people in
countries who are in the news a little too often for vague political reasons.
Sometimes seen fighting a fish bigger than you and I will ever hope to catch,
running up and down the river like he has just stuck the devil. Damn
it.
Little Girls and Boys Will stand on the edge
of a lake as patient as a young tree. Staring at a metronome would be more
stimulating than looking at them casting. For kids, fly fishing is fly casting,
especially false casting. Don't giggle too much. With enough time,
they will eventually catch a big fish on the most technical water in three
states. Of course, they will love to learn more about flyfishing from you. Act intelligent around them. Someday, if not now, they will become better
than you in most ways that are important.
The Other Guy Stands in the middle of the
stream, not fishing. Not doing anything. Just staring at the edge of the stream.
Looks around more than fishes. Bends down on occasion. If you are lucky, you'll
see him raise his arm for a single cast toward a crease in the current only he,
the fish and a nearby rock know about, and then catches the largest fish in
three states. He knows you're watching. He knows what fly you are going to use
before you do. The only reason you see him is that he probably allowed it.
Don't bother being like him. You can't.
The Liar Talks a lot. Fishes little. Needs
more friends than fish. You don't need friends. You need to fish.
The Drunken Flyfisher A member of the Liar
Crowd. Also a member of the Woolly Bugger Crowd. Has been seen with Rambo types.
They catch more and bigger fish than you and I do.
The Hummer Guy Can blaze a trail to
the last pristine lake in five states with a simple axle shift. Be careful, though;
he could also be a member of the Drunken Flyfisher, the Liar, the Rambo, or
the Wooly Bugger Crowds. Fishes with dry flies the size of a small bird. Catches
fish the size of a small whale.
The Girlfriend Doesn't have a clue how to impart the kind of
precise action to a fly that took you 15 years to learn. Doesn't understand
mayfly entomology. Thinks a spinner is something you do in the parking lot. A
nymph is something she'd rather not talk about. Catches more fish than you do.
Don't get her started on fly fishing. Has tendency to learn quicker than you
did, and manages to stay put long enough on the
edge of a stream and catch the fish you missed.
The Morally Superior Doesn't even fish.
Don't talk to him. When he asks why you hurt fish, tell him "I fish; therefore
I am." Be careful, though. He may be right. If a fish ever spoke one word to me,
I'd hang up my gear for life.
Former Presidents Write books that publishers
are obliged to publish--or else! Often seen with unseen dark figures. Don't walk
up to such people and ask how the fishing is going, or you'll be staring at a Glock.
The Flyfishing Worm Slinger Fishes with bait at
the end of a fly line. Easily spotted by his casting style, which consists of
a kind of lobbing stroke one would use to cast a tomato. Easily confused with
the Rambo type, but generally smaller in build. Don't get mad. Get even. Tie a
piece of red yarn on your hook and fish it like a worm. Tell yourself it's a
leech if this bothers you.
The Elated One Sees poetry in everything. Irony
is afoot. The rising fish and the bent supplicant branches are messages only he
can decipher. Just say Hello and walk on. Or introduce him to the Terminator.
The e-Bay flyfisher Approaches the sport a
little more carefully, knowing that anything bought on e-Bay will be cheap and
of the highest quality, even if it never arrives. A frugal bargain hunter on
e-bay will typically own the most expensive equipment but somehow still look
uncomfortable in his new trappings, sort of like a hobo trying to look
well-heeled in an Armani that he found rooted in a dumpster.
Any resemblance of the above to actual people you've met is
entirely possible, but probably coincidental and imaginary. --Toney J. Sisk
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