July 25, 2008

Fly fishing History: Techniques

Dry Flies Vs. Nymphs

Halford and Skues
This Chalkstream Ain't Big Enough for the Both of Us

(continued)  1  2

Stalking Bonefish

With the full weight of the fishing world behind his dry­fly advocacy, it's no surprise Halford felt like his tail had been badly twisted when a young upstart on the Itchen they shared devised a method of fishing different from his and published a book about it.

Codified as it was, the dry-fly method had become one-dimensional. No longer did the method answer to specific problems that had once needed solving; rather, it extracted a slavish devotion from anglers. With its institutionalization, the upstream, imitative dry-fly method had developed to where it answered only its own demands for self-vilification. It was time for the sport to grow again, move beyond the gospel according to Halford.

It was G .E.M. Skues who appeared to champion the sunken fly, the nymph. And he did this on the same Itchen whose waters Halford had deemed approachable only through the moral and ethical superiority of the dry fly

Skues published his Minor Tactics of the Chalk Stream in 1910, three years before Halford published his last book (The Dry-Fly Mans Handbook). In it he described what we know today as nymph fishing.

Skues began his own brand of angling revolution as gently as can be imagined. He opens with ample credit to Halford, relating his early experiences with nymphing trout as though he chanced into the phenomenon purely by accident. As complimentary as he is of the dry-fly ideology, he plays it as though he were trying to be good but somehow the fates conspired against him to make him catch selective fish on a sunken fly instead.

"In those days, with 'Dry-Fly Fishing in Theory and Practice' at my fingers ends, I began with the prescription, 'Pink Wickham on 00 hook.'"

By his own admission, Skues felt that nymph fishing was simply another avenue to streamside success — not an exclusive approach, and it certainly required the accompaniment of good dry-fly technique.

Skues would have us believe he was a determined dry-fly man who accidently on several occasions, several years apart, happened to catch fish with a dead-drifted sunken fly, when the only hatch-matching pattern left in his book proved to be dressed with low-grade hen hackle: unfloatable, though he might try to put it dry over a bulging fish.

Shortly, though — in fact, by the time the first short chapter comes to an end and the second begins — we have Skues fishing and describing three stages of an aquatic insect hatch: The emergence of the nymphs, the dry-fly dun stage when trout feed on the surface, and the end of the hatch, when trout once again feed subsurface on the "broken submerged fly," as he puts it. This last stage we know now as the stillborns, or perhaps the spinnerfall, which will be discovered again in the last half of the twentieth century.

There's a symmetrical poetry to be found in Skues, in the description of how he fished a Greenwell's Glory to nymphing trout, creeling four of them before

“it seemed to fail of its effect, though the river was freely dot­ted with rings, and after wasting much time I tumbled to the situation, and changed to a floating No.1 Whitchurch — most effective of Yellow Duns — on a cipher hook. The effect was immediate, but I had put off too long, and when I looked up from basketing my third trout to the Whitchurch the rise had petered out. But I was not done yet. I changed to a Tups Indis­pensable dressed to sink, and, fishing upstream wet in likely runs and places, I made up my five brace before I knocked off for lunch.”

That's fishing a hatch!

John Waller Hills in A Summer on the Test places Skues in an interesting perspective. Hills himself, astute scholar of angling history that he was, throughout his angling career was immersed in his times, from about 1890 through the first decades of the twentieth century. His perspective is from the midst of the conflict that surrounded the storied chalkstreams. Hills also traced the history of fly fishing through the four landmarks we have been watching, and once the dry fly came on the scene, Hills had no more historical criteria to be filled. He had outlived his own history, which is always a concern when we try to find a continuum in our own experience with our history

“When, exactly twenty years ago, Mr. Skues wrote Minor Tactics of the Chalk Stream, he effected a revolution. The dry fly was at a height of its intolerant dictatorship, and the other method was discarded and ridiculed to such an extent that enthusiasts of the school of Halford regarded Mr. Skues as a dangerous heresiarch. Much water has flowed under the bridges since then, and in that water many are the trout which have been caught on a sunk fly which would not have fallen to a dry. More and more each year does nymph fishing become a part of the modern anglers equipment, and he who does not possess the art is gravely handicapped. And at the same time has come the realization that this art is both diffi­cult and delightful. It demands different qualities and it makes a different appeal, it opens a new field of observation and experiment, and it is as exacting a process as the other, for upon my word I find trout harder to catch under water than on top.”

Though Hills ceases to be useful, it is big of him to acknowledge the limits of his own historical outline. Coming this far with him has been enjoyable and instructive.

Minor Tactics even today reads smoothly, seducing with its easy theory and execution, and there is inspiration here for anyone who casts a fly. Surely it struck the anglers of the day the same way, for with its publication, the pendulum began to swing back away from the dry-fly purism that had swept Great Britain, heading towards a more balanced approach to our ever-evolving sport. It ushered in the model of the all­round angler that Francis Francis envisioned in 1867 when in A Book on Angling he wrote:

“Now, there are two ways of fly-fishing, viz. with the dry fly and with the wet fly. Some fishermen always use one plan, others almost as pertinaciously use the other. To use either of them invariably is wrong. Sometimes the one will be found to kill fast and sometimes the other.”

Skues had been fishing for well over 30 years, in the chalkstreams of England and throughout Europe, before he published Minor Tactics, so his studied informality and wonder at his pretended inadvertent discoveries must be seen as just that. Skues was far too bright and original a thinker otherwise to fool the reader for too long with his charade.

His second book, The Way of a Trout with a Fly, offered an expansion on the earlier, broad strokes taken in Minor Tactics 11 years before. The later work is a thorough compendium of chalkstream methods, including wet flies, dry flies, and nymphs, all theory and technique polished and gleaming, presented within the easy familiar style that makes Skues so enjoyable even today.

It's hard not to quote Skues, as his lucid, fluid passages echo a sensitivity, clarity of thought, and Victorian elegance that are irresistible.

Here's an essential, however, on the frontispiece of The Way of a Trout with a Fly.

“When the wise man laid it down that there were three things which were too wondeiful for him — yea, four which he knew not — he came to the climax with "the way of a man with a maid." Some future Solomon will end with a fifth — the way of a trout with a fly — for it combines the poise of the eagle in the air, the swift certainty of a serpent upon a rock, and the mystery of the way of a ship in the midst of the sea, with the incalculableness of the way of a man with a maid. Our aviators seem to be on their way towards a solution of the way of the eagle in the air. The mystery of the way of a ship in the midst of the sea has yielded all its secrets to the persistence of modern man, but the way of a man with a maid and the way of a trout with a fly remain with us to be a delight and a torment to thousands of generations yet unborn.”

By the time he published Nymph Fishing for Chalk Stream Trout, Skues had begun to take himself a bit too seriously. His earlier brilliance was tarnished in his last book, by his insistence on taking Halford to task on every point of disagreement. He cited chapter and verse, and carefully refuted each point — something that hardly needed to be done in 1932, when nymph fishing was well established and respected and Halford had been dead for a quarter century.

This is too bad, for before he lapsed into this pettiness, excusable though it may be, Skues contributed a great deal of original thought and instruction to our sport. By his own admission, Skues felt that nymph fishing was simply another avenue to streamside success — not an exclusive approach, and it certainly required the accompaniment of good dry-fly technique.

“The indications which tell your dry-fly angler when to strike are clear and unmistakable, but those which bid a wet-fly man raise his rod-point and draw in the steel are frequently so subtle, so evanescent and impalpable to the senses, that, when the bending rod assures him he has divined aright, he feels an ecstasy as though he had performed a miracle each time.”

Skues was not without his own prejudices, however. The British insistence on fishing to feeding trout was extant in his writings, and he makes a point of explaining that he maintained strong principles when it came to fishing the water. It was essential, Skues maintained, to cast to feeding fish, the nymph or dry fly, whichever most closely matched what the fish were feeding on. Fishing the water was just not done. It would surface later, in America, where boorish practices went unrecognized.

The vision of trout and the effect it has on the way in which they react to the fly and the angler; fly dressing; the importance of caddis hatches; the sinking and floating portions of the tippet — reading through Skues for the first time, if you have been fishing for any time at all, is like reading your most basic understandings of the sport reiterated from before the time you were born as an angler.

Most of what we use is here. Many of the things we have discovered for ourselves we find Skues discovered before us. And of course, the same magic we find in modern nymph method held Skues in its grasp. His instructions for the use of a marrow spoon to extract the contents of a trout's stomach and the inspection of said contents on a white china plate is an approach that would be with us for far too long into the twentieth century. It later reappeared as the trout stomach pump, which, while it yields sound information, is a bit intrusive to the minds of many anglers. It's a personal issue — but Skues was right there on top of it in his last book.

The mystery and subtlety in the way a trout took a nymph was a constant fascination to Skues:

“Oh, thrilling the rise at the lure that is dry,
When the slow trout comes up to the slaughter,
Yet rather would I
Have the turn at my fly,
The cunning brown wink under water.”

is just a single stanza of a poem that carries on like this for some eight double stanzas.

Before we move on there's a little matter of this man's name. Here's how Don Zahner chose to immortalize the unusual pronunciation:

“There was a nymph angler named Skues,
Whose doctrine brought nothing but 'phooeys.'
Now he fishes for haddock
From his tussocky paddock
To let the 'old boys' know just who he's.”

The groundwork of nymph-fishing theory laid by Skues was built upon by many, but principal among them was Frank Sawyer, the riverkeeper on the Avon north of Salisbury. Sawyer was widely recognized in Europe for his expertise in fishing small nymphs. It was Charles Ritz, son of the famous Swiss hotelier, who brought him to the world's attention — but we'll be meeting Ritz later in this history, from the other side of the Atlantic.

At this point it's a bit overdue that we pay a visit to North America, where already the traditions of fishing a new continent are well under way. To get in on the beginning of this, we have to move back a few steps in time, as the British angling tradition through the Skues years overlaps a period during which fly fishing was going through its own changes in the United States.

Far more important than a precise chronology of development is an understanding of the weft and weave of the fabric of tradition against which the excitement and adventure of North American fishing were played out.

On the beats of the Hampshire streams, the anglers even today fish to rising fish. Fishing the water is thought less than civilized. Getting in the water is deemed equally as boorish.

The British traditions were well established, and they were not without their own severe dogma. Many of the rules, especially the rules of the hallowed Hampshire waters, were not even a consideration to the Americans. The British tradition, where we leave it, made specific demands on the angler. Codes of conduct and expectations of behavior, concepts of propriety on the English chalkstreams are quite foreign to the American tradition.

Consider: On the beats of the Hampshire streams, the anglers even today fish to rising fish. Fishing the water is thought less than civilized. Getting in the water is deemed equally as boorish. Carefully manicured, the chalkstreams are absolutely never waded; rather, rising fish are fished from the bank once they have been observed feeding on the surface. The dry fly is used preferentially — even today it is a more aristocratic approach — and only when that brings no result is the upstream nymph brought into play

The British terminology "killing" a trout is not to be taken lightly It is generally accepted that once a trout is caught, it's groceries. Return a trout to the river and it becomes a bottom­feeder. As such it'll never be caught again, because anglers on these streams never fish on the bottom.

Glenn Law is an award-winning writer and editor who has served as editorial director for Falcon Books, as a columnist for American Angler, and as a writer for Saltwater Sportsman. He was for many years the editor-in-chief of Florida Sportsman magazine. His articles on fishing and other topics have appeared in many outdoors magazines as well as Men's Journal and Popular Mechanics. This article is excerpted as a chapter from Law's 2003 book A Concise History of Fly Fishing (The Lyons Press, 176 pages). Article copyright © 2003 The Lyons Press.



MidCurrent is an independent provider of fly fishing news, literature and advice. We are experienced anglers and guides who enjoy helping others learn. Want more information? You can send us an email here: info@midcurrent.com


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