A Reason To Fish - All About Fly Fishing
"There aren't much fish here since we dredged last year."
By Randy Kadish
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Other Articles By Randy Kadish
Land The Fly In The Water
Longer Hauling For Longer Distance
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The city workers never stopped me from going onto the old,
broken-down pier, though one had said, "There aren't much fish
here since we dredged last year."
I often sought comfort in those words. They told me not to
blame myself for catching only one striped bass after so many
months of trying.
So with little expectations, I again walked towards the end
of the seagull-inhabited pier. One by one the beautiful birds
spread their long, gray wings and soared away. I was sorry I
had frightened them from their home.
I continued on.
On the other side of the wide, fast-moving river, the
fluttering American flag told me that the wind blew from the
north, but not strongly. Since strong winds were the only thing
I didn't like about fishing, I was thankful.
I again checked the sky. The cloud cover started to leak
sunlight. I wondered if I should go with a floating or sinking
line.
I guessed sinking, knowing that it probably wouldn't
matter. I set up my nine-weight rod, tied on a White Deceiver,
then watched in awe as the seagulls gracefully glided down on
the other end of the pier.
I was glad they had returned and thought, if only I could
get my fly to land as gently.
I cast up river, about seventy feet.
Not bad, I thought. I stripped slowly, with pauses up to
five seconds.
Suddenly, as if a light switch was turned on, the sun
illuminated the gold and raspberry-red leaves of trees on the
far bank. Yes, I said to myself, autumn is always the prettiest
time to fish. But soon those trees will look like eerie,
mushroom-shaped spider webs. Soon it will be winter and too
cold to fish.
So why on this mild day, I wondered, am I the only one here?
Is it because, unlike most anglers, I really don't care about
catching fish?
If so, is there something wrong with me?
A small motor boat approached. A middle-aged couple was
aboard. They held hands.
I waved.
They waved back and smiled. "Any luck?" the man yelled
out.
I shook my head no, and thought of how I never felt alone
on the pier.
I again cast. My tight loop cut through the breeze. My
deceiver turned over and fluttered to the water.
Eighty feet, I proudly thought. Yes, maybe basking in the
satisfaction of making a good cast is what brought me to the
pier.
But is there something more?
I lowered my rod, pulled all the slack out of my line and
tried to repeat my beautiful cast. My back loop was tight.
When it finished unrolling, I slowly began my forward cast.
Perfect, I thought. I accelerated into my power snap. But I
hauled late. My front loop opened into a wide circle. My line
and fly died short, and piled on the water.
Disappointed, I quickly pulled the slack out of my line.
I resumed my regular retrieve, then realized, bad casts really
aren't so bad. Maybe a fish will still strike. Besides, my
next cast will be better.
Yes, to make better. How good it always feels, and how
easy to do when fishing. If only fixing my business had been
that way, but by the time I realized that the market had changed
it was too late.
And wasn't it also too late by the time mother realized
that her cough might be a sign of something really serious? By
then the latest medical breakthroughs couldn't stop her cancer
from eating away at her, from leaving her a living, breathing
skeleton, and leaving me feeling helpless, and furious at a God
who seemed so brutal, so cruel. Why did he cause so much pain
and suffering!?
I could never answer that question; so after mother passed
away I went fishing for the first time in years.
Surprisingly, the pain numbed; so the next day I went
again, and then for the next few years fishing was all I really
cared about.
Finally, slowly, my other interests--football, music,
history--returned, but none rivaled fishing on the pier, even if
I had on the wrong fly.
I stayed with the White Deceiver.
I caught my breath, then reminded myself to break my wrist
at the end of my back drift.
It worked! My fly shot almost ninety feet, then gently
touched down on the surface. I smiled and looked out into the
middle of the river. A flock of seagulls circled. Their sharp
chirps sounded amplified by the peaceful beauty around me.
I watched to see if they dived.
They didn't. Bait fish probably weren't around; so neither
were the striped bass.
I wasn't discouraged. So for the next few hours, as the
sky ripened into dusk pink, I cast again and again and retrieved
faster and faster, afraid that the sun would soon sink behind
the trees and roll up its flickering path that crossed the
grayish water and seemed to stop at my pier.
Slow down, I thought. Don't worry about the sun going
down. It will be here tomorrow, and so will I. And don't worry
about winter. Before long it will retreat and the bare trees
will again bloom with life, and then maybe the stripers will
return to the pier, but if they don't, will it really matter?
No, because out here nothing is broken, except fixable
casts.

