|
|
|
REALITY CHECK Chip Chipman
Have you ever watched those TV fishing shows on weekends?
I mostly watch the fly fishing shows where they are fishing for trout.
I’m not into the bass fishing shows like “Fishin’ with Bubba and
Leroy”, in some swamp full of snakes and alligators.
On TV, it always looks perfect doesn’t it? There are one or two
participants on a beautiful and perhaps famous
stream with a guide. Their casts
are picture perfect- you never see a busted cast.
One huge fish after another are caught. Then there is the little ritual
where the guide holds the fish out of the water far to long and everyone says,
NICE FISH! Then the guide and the
catcher shake hands and the guide says, NICE JOB!
When they break at noon a gourmet lunch is prepared beside the stream. A
typical day on the trout stream? Not
mine. Not yours either I bet.
When I go fishing, things happen that you don’t see on those TV fly
fishing shows.
How often do you get your fly caught in a tree or bushes during the day?
If you wear anything besides chest waders, did you ever notice that you
somehow manage to wade over the tops of them, usually at the time of the year
when the water is at its coldest. Of
course you do this within the first few minutes of fishing and you have to walk
around the rest of the day making that squishy sound.
At the end of the day when you take your waders off, your feet are all
shriveled up and look about two sizes smaller.
You don’t see that on TV.
My gourmet lunch, if I didn’t forget it, is a peanut butter and jelly
sandwich, squashed nearly beyond recognition from having it jammed into a vest
pocket. Sometimes I get so involved in fishing I don’t even eat. It may be
weeks later that I will find that sandwich while searching through the dozen or
so pockets in my vest. Glad I
don’t take tuna fish.
No matter your level of competency with a fly rod some fluky things can
happen. A sudden gust of wind can
change the course of your fly line and the fly gets caught in your clothing.
When this happens it always is in a place where you can’t reach the
hook with either hand so you have to take that item of clothing off to free the
fly. I got a fly caught in just such a place while wearing a rain
jacket. It was pouring at the time. There are no sudden wind gusts and pouring
rain on TV fly fishing.
Did you ever slip and fall while wading a stream? I have seen that mishap
on several occasions and sometimes it is I. Those TV fishermen are sure-footed and never even get in a
situation where they are waving their arms around like a windmill trying to
maintain balance.
So if you are new at fly fishing and some of these misadventures occur,
don’t think you are the only one they happen to. No matter how long you have
been at this sport, these things will happen. The only difference between the TV
fly fisherman and the rest of us in the real world is that his mishaps are
edited out. The best we can hope
for is that nobody is watching. Chip Chipman is a flyfishing guide and lives in
Nutrioso, AZ. **This
story has been reprinted with permission from the author.
|
|
|