Almost
every fly fisherman wants to be able to cast farther, and
easier. In salt water we are always confronted with the
wind--most of the time we are forced to throw into it or
at least sideways to it. The most efficient cast is one
where the loop size is very small. If the fisherman can
control the size of the loop, a major step toward making
longer and less effortless cast is the result. Fly casting differs
from all other kinds of casting (spin and plug) in a
special way. With all other methods of casting it is the
weight attached to the line end that pulls the line
toward the target. When you are fly casting, the exact
opposite is true. The fly line is in reality a long,
unrolling sinker, to which is often attached a
near-weightless fly. The rod bends as it is swept forward
toward the target, with the line relatively straight
behind the angler. When the rod stops, the line folds
over at the tip and begins unrolling toward the target in
what is described as a "loop".
The ability to control
the loop's size
is essential to good fly casting.
And the tighter the loop, the less
effort is required to throw
a longer cast.
The
hallmark of any good fly caster is that the caster has
the ability to throw any size loop desired. A really fine
caster appears to be casting, even a long line, without
effort. And, that is exactly what is happening. He or she
knows how to throw a small, tight loop. The ability of a
fly caster to throw a long line even into the wind, or
make an effortless cast of any kind, is mainly determined
by how tight a loop is thrown in the fly line during both
the back and forward casts.
An
oft-repeated and totally wrong statement is that large
line loops don't go anywhere when fly casting, because of
wind resistance against the line. Wind resistance has
little to do with the lack of distance obtained. Big
loops don't go anywhere because the energy of the cast is
being thrown around a curve or half circle. Small loops
are easier to throw a longer distance because most of the
energy is being concentrated in the target's direction.
One
of the laws that govern casting is that the line and the
fly are going to go in the direction that the rod tip
speeds up and stops at the very end of the cast--in back
or front. When a wide loop is thrown, not only is the
energy being thrown around a curving arc, but the tip of
the rod stops in a downward direction--throwing some of
the energy (and fly line) toward the water instead of the
desired direction. The reason why a good caster appears
not to be working when making long, or difficult casts is
that almost every bit of energy in the cast is being
directed at the target!
Making
a small loop is easy, once you understand the basics of a
cast. It is essential to realize that a backcast and a
forward cast are governed by the same laws of physics.
What makes a back cast go well, is exactly what makes a
forward cast travel well. There are two parts or segments
to any back or forward cast. During the first portion of
the cast every thing is made ready, so that during the
final brief portion of the cast, the line and fly can be
directed in back or front of the angler.
To
make any cast, the angler must get the end of the line
moving, before the fly can be propelled backwards or
forward. If a longer cast is needed it is best to start
with the rod tip low, almost pointing at the fly. Remove
all slack before starting the cast. Make sure the line
end is moving and that all line has been lifted from the
water before attempting to throw the line behind you.
Failure to get all the line off the water before making
the cast will create problems. The ripping of the line
from the surface also often frightens any nearby fish,
and it steals energy from the caster that would otherwise
be used to throw the line.
With
any cast, either behind or in front of the angler, the
first segment is moving the rod through a fairly long
arc. This draws all slack from the line, gets the line
end moving, and readies the rod to deliver the fly. The
second stage is what I call a speed up and stop. This is
an exceedingly brief acceleration of the rod tip,
combined with a very sudden stop, that occurs in the very
last few inches of rod movement.
Here's
the key to making both a tight loop back and front. Move
the rod to get the line end in motion and in the very few
last inches of movement, accelerate rapidly and stop the
the rod tip abruptly in the direction you want the line
to go.
THE
SHORTER THE DISTANCE THAT THE ROD TIP TRAVELS DURING THE
RAPID ACCELERATION PERIOD, AND THE FASTER THAT YOU STOP
THE ROD AT THE END OF THAT SHORT DISTANCE, THE TIGHTER
THE LOOP. AND--THE QUICKER THE ROD TIP MOVES THROUGH THE
SHORT DISTANCE, AND THE MORE ABRUPTLY THE STOP--THE
FARTHER THE CAST WILL TRAVEL.
Do
not drop the rod tip immediately after the stop or you
will open the loop because the rod tip will drag the
bottom of the loop downward. Accelerate the rod tip over
the desired distance in the direction that you want the
line to go, and then after the stop if you tilt the rod
ever so slightly downward you can prevent a tailing loop.
Remember,
at the beginning of a back or forward cast, sweep the rod
forward slowly to get the line moving Then accelerate
over the shortest distance you can and come to a quick
stop. If you do, you'll be throwing tight loops.
Once
you understand the function of the distance you that
accelerate the tip at the end of the cast, combined with
a quick stop, you can then make any size loop desired.
And, the shorter the distance you accelerate and the
faster you move the rod tip and stop--the tighter the
loop and the longer the cast will be. What is also
difficult for all but expert casters to realize is that a
tiny motion of the hand gripping the rod, is a much
longer movement at the rod tip. Try this experiment to
understand this. Hold the fly rod parallel and wave the
rod back and forth. Look at the front of the rod grip and
move it back and forth only two inches. Then, look at the
tip. If the front of the grip moves two inches, the rod
tip is probably traveling 6 or 8 feet. What this exercise
illustrates is that when you want to make a very tight
loop, that only the briefest of motions is required at
the rod hand.
Almost
no one appreciates how short the distance that the rod
moves to create a small loop. It might be interesting to
try a simple experiment. Put about 30 feet of line
outside the rod tip and then begin false casting. You can
quickly see that the shorter the distance you make the
rod tip move during the speed up and stop at the end of
the cast, the tighter the loop becomes. Most people make
the speed up and stop stroke by flexing the wrist. If you
want an illuminating casting illustration, try making a
series of speed up and stops by flexing the wrist, Then,
do the same thing using only the forearm. You will
instantly see that the more you move the wrist the larger
will be the line loops. So, the less wrist you use the
tighter the loop you can throw. Since the quick stop is
vital to long distance casting, you will also learn that
you can stop the rod much faster with the forearm than
you can with a wrist motion.
There
are fishing situations where a tight loop is not always
desirable. When casting with sinking lines, or when using
heavily weighted flies, or very short leaders, better
casting results with a more open loop. Once you
understand that the distance the rod tip moves on the
speed up and stop determines loop size, you can then
alter the length of the stroke to get the desired loop
size.
The
tight loop alone will not obtain you distance. It simply
allows the angler to concentrate most of the every of the
cast in the correct direction. You have four factors that
occur when you form a loop: (1) The line will go in the
direction that the rod tip speeds up and stops at the end
of the cast. (2) The size of the loop is determined by
the distance that the rod tip travels rapidly during the
speed up and stop at the end of the cast. (3 & 4)
HAVE TO BE EXPLAINED TOGETHER. How fast the rod tip
travels over that speed up and stop distance, and how
quickly the rod tip stops, determine how far the cast
will travel.
The
faster that the rod tip travels and quicker it stops, the
farther the line will go on. This is easy to demonstrate.
Make a forward cast and try to make a very short speed up
and stop, which will form a tight loop. On the first
cast, move that brief distance, but don't go too fast and
don't stop too sudden. You will see a small loop form
that travels slowly and not very far. Then, make another
cast, try to exactly duplicate the length of speed up and
stop distance so that you form the same size loop as the
first cast. But, on this second cast, make the tip travel
faster and halt quicker over the speed up and stop--the
loop will be the same size--but the line will go much
farther. Finally, repeat the operation, but this time,
move the rod tip over the same distance, but as fast as
you can and stop it as sudden as possible and you will
find the line loop the same size, but the cast will
really travel a longer distance.
So,
if you want to become a more efficient fly caster and
throw this long distance, penetrate the wind and get
heavy flies to fish you need to do the following. For
both the back and forward cast, move the rod tip a fairly
long distance to get the line straight and the rod
flexed. Then, do four things: Speed up and stop over the
shortest distance you possibly can. Move the rod tip as
fast as you can and stop it as quickly as you can. And,
make sure that the rod tip travels in the direction you
want the fly line to go on both the back and the forward
cast.


|