VESTED INTERESTS
by Bob
Scammell, Canadian Fly Fishing Editor
A fishing vest is a sleeveless garment
with mazes of pockets and pouches in which fly fisherman can hopelessly
misplace the multitudes of items they do not need anyway. It was one of
the early inventions of the young Lee Wulff, who died in 1991. Several
years before he died I had the opportunity to thank the great one
himself, not only because of the way the vest permits the fly fisherman
to keep both hands free, but because we sociologists of angling can tell
more than we really need to know about a person from the kind of vest he
has, its condition, and what he loses in those pockets.
It is an industry secret that all fishing
vests are made by a single anti-fishing misanthrope in Hong Kong. The
vests are then shipped to the u.s.a., where the label is put on and the
price tripled before they are shipped hither and yon, even to Japan. It
is only a matter of time until the label inside the collar will be
replaced by the big manufacturer’s logo on the back of every vest.
Yuppie perfection will be attained when every wearer is obliged to
advertise precisely who it is imported this ridiculous garment.
Just for starters, almost every fishing
vest you see is made of such shiny, almost white cloth, that it is one
of the better fish repellents, ranking with those clunking stream cleats
and the white, “Tilley” hat. Should you accidentally stumble upon a
human wearing a camouflage vest and hat, blended into the underbrush and
impersonating an old stump, beware! Check your location! You have either
bumped into the late Charlie Brooks, West Yellowstone angling author of
consummate skill and cunning, or you have stumbled upon the rare, canny
old veteran still among us here on terra firma who has the money to get
his vests custom made, or the time to get them artfully aged, faded and
soiled in camouflage like patches.
All fishing vests that have been worn
even once will be heavily soiled in the vicinity of one particular
pocket: the one used to store the fly dope (not the insect repellent)
the dry fly floatant. Fly floatant illustrates the prime principle of
marketing to fly fisherman: take a common substance the world produces
in abundance, divide it up into minuscule quantities, give it a dumb
name (“fink” for example” multiply its price a thousand fold and
sell it like hot ... no ... like dope to addicts. Better yet, sell it in
a container cunningly designed to leak under all conditions and
positions and you will sell even more of it. All of the technology of
the industry is now concentrated on the tendency of some floatants to
solidify below 95 degrees F. If they could make it remain liquid and
leaking day and night, profits would double or triple.
Should you encounter a stream any human
wearing a fishing vest without the filthy stain on that one pocket, he
is either a land surveyor, a timber cruiser or the only non purist in
the world who does not either fish only the dry fly, or claim to. In
this latter case, the whole vest may be full of fly sinkant, another
dumb name, noxious substance, (“Dunk” or “Dink”) divided,
subdivided, priced multiplied, etc. as with floatant, but for some
reason the manufacturers have not yet perfected a container that will
faithfully and reliably leak sinkant.
Small quantities of substances more
expensive per ounce even than single malt whiskey, both to make floating
flies sink and sinking flies float will be lost somewhere in virtually
every vest worn by any fisherman. But that fact in no way exhausts the
propensity of fly fishermen to guzzle snake oil. A caution: to blame the
manufacturers and dealers would be as unjust as to blame the snake for
the product rendered from its mortal remains. Caveat emptor! of
yourself! Exhibit “A”, somewhere, in a growing number of fishing
vests, will be a tiny container of a new wonder substance to take the
shine off a new leader and, also, to make floating flies sink. Its dumb
name? “Mud.” Something found in natural abundance and free along
every trout stream I have ever frequented anywhere in the world. My case
against the dope trade to fly dopes and other substance abusers not only
rests, it is prostrate.
The sociologist neither experienced with
anglers nor, God forbid, one himself, could be forgiven for expecting
that somewhere in any fly fisherman’s vest there will be two flies:
one floating fly so the owner can buy sinkant, yea, even Mud, and one
sinking fly so the owner can properly develop the stain on that one
pocket of the vest, the badge of the Fink addict. You can rest assured
that any native fly fisher will have two flies. There will be one on the
leader, as local wisdom insists that the best lure for Rocky Mountain
Whitefish is a wet fly “sweetened” by a maggot. There will be a
second fly somewhere in that vest, tackle box or creel in case the first
is lost. If the second is lost? No problem, the nearest Bait and Jig
Boutique is only $5 worth or gas away and they sell Japanese wet flies
for 29 cents. But if what we have is a real, unsweetened fly fisherman,
there will be hundreds, thousands, maybe even millions of flies in boxes
and bottles everywhere in that vest.
All those flies are tickets to gamble
against the “theory of selectivity,” invented by outdoors writers, a
game with more combinations and permutations than Lotto 6/49. These
writers credit the trout with the palate of a professional wine taster,
the eyesight of a bonefish guide and the intelligence of an Einstein.
For a long while I believed that the writers produced this tripe because
the quarry would not be worthy of the fishing, or the writing about it,
if not imbued with super-human qualities. But gradually, as I get to
know more and more angling writers, I have come, sadly, to suspect the
theory of selectivity may have something to do with the simple fact that
so many of them are also in the business of peddling fly dope and flies,
or, worse, books on aquatic entomology.
In my “slush” pile, I have a superb
article called “The Petit Jury,” in which I argue that a “jury”
or only six fly patterns will cover any angler for better than 90
percent. of all the conditions he will encounter on any water in North
America. Proudly, I once told a writer, tackle dealer friend about this
article. When he recovered consciousness, he excused himself to make a
few phone calls. This article, somehow, has never been published, but
has earned me in “kill fees” ten times what it would bring if ever
printed, even in one of the “big three” of the hook and bullet
press. The article is like a banking card: any time I’m broke, I stick
it in the slot, sometimes to a publisher who has already paid me “kill
fees” for it. No matter, back it comes with a kill fee. I wonder who
my writer, dealer friend had to phone so badly that he had to do it even
after being so suddenly sick like that? My final word on the millions of
flies in the vest of a real fly fisherman is this: fly fishing itself is
founded on the capacity for self delusion of a beautiful, wild creature
with a brain the size of a pea; the fly fishing “industry” is based
likewise on the similar capacity of the beautiful dopes addicted to fly
fishing.
The vest of any real fly fisherman will
likely contain more glassine envelopes than a dope-peddler’s stash,
but these will contain leaders; there will also be dozens of tiny spools
of material to construct sill more leaders. Leaders and their design are
subjects fraught with more depressing formulae and schools of thought
than nuclear physics. There is the very rare school that believes most
trout just do not care, that therefore the best squeeze through the eye
of the hook. But there is a warning : if you spot a person astream who
appears to be pulling cobwebs from the sky, rolling them up and
measuring thin air with a $600 micrometer, and muttering darkly in
mathematics, take my advice and leave. This person is of the
psychopathic school of leader design, which believes if it is strong
enough to hold any fish, then it is too thick to fool him in the first
place. These maniacs strive always for the longest, strongest, thinnest
leader, and are revolted by the very feel of trout in the hand; thus,
they never have use for net or creel as they specialize in the thirty
foot release.
There will probably be no room in that
vest to lose anything else, after dope, leaders, tippets and flies are
stowed. Researchers will then have to study what is hung on the vest and
about the person of the subject. If there is a thermometer prominently
displayed, for example, what you have is a person who does not even know
the best time to go fishing is when the boss or Herself says he can go.
Most people who own water thermometers either do not know how to use
them, or cannot remember the best temperature ranges for the various
species of trout. You should always let your fly, leader and line trail
downstream as you knell for the minute or so necessary to get a reading.
If you get a fish on that dragging fly, it is definitely the right time
to go fishing. If you do not get a thermometer fish, you can carry on
fishing against all odds, or you can use your thermometer to see if it
is time to drink the beer yet.
There may be a set of forceps clipped
onto some protuberance of the vest. This device is an ambiguous sign. It
can mean that the wearer fully intends to release the fish should he
ever manage to catch one. On the other hand, he could be a lost
urologist, and you should back up against the nearest cliff and clap
your hands over your privates. If the forceps are distinguished by that
dull sheen, that patina of heavy use, it means only that this is one of
those boneheads who habitually fishes in the company of his bird dog and
that bonehead is back in the bush looking for yet another porcupine to
eat, so his master can ply those forceps once again: pulling quills.
Other ambiguous signs are the presence or
absence of nets and creels, both of which have become controversial
since catch and release became politically correct. Clearly, the old
fashioned wicker creel is passé, the only purpose of such an antique
being as obvious as that of the crematoria at Dachau. Some people can
get away with a small canvas creel. If challenged, the owner will swear
he only uses it to carry out the litter abandoned by other anglers. Even
much beloved Charlie Brooks was held in suspicion in some quarters
because he favoured a huge canvas water bag with the top cut off and a
shoulder strap added. One day I went on a safari with Charlie to the
third Barn Hole on the Madison and recalled, after I regained
consciousness, that he could transport and cool en route in the desert
no less than a flat “24” of what it was he carried in that creel.
Dimly I recall Charlie saying: “If you can carry them out empty, you
can carry them in full.” But then, Charlie never could be serious
about equipment, or a cliché.
Nets are optional. Strangely, the most
crazed fish releasers who completely reject creels find nets acceptable,
especially if they are very tiny, hand sculpted and cost more than a Van
Gogh original. If the reason given for wearing one of these things is
that it makes it easier to release fish, you know you are talking to a
very modern fly fisherman. Those cheap aluminum nets hung from a rubber
cord around the neck are out, for a very practical reason: if you look
closely at habitual users, they will have no front teeth, the result of
having turned around to see where the net was tangled in the bush just
as it wasn’t anymore. That, and not to release fish, is the reason
such persons now carry the lethal thing stuffed down the waders.
Actually, while in England for the World
Fly Fishing Championship, I learned to favour those marvelous Norwegian
folding nets that the British have to conjure like a silk hanky from the
sleeve of their tweed jackets, because the Brits do not favour fishing
vests at all. With the extension handle of these folders, they can net
any fish out there at the farthest end of their cast that is even
thinking about taking their fly.
Certainly you will hear no British angler
going on about the use of these nets in releasing fish, a practice they
regarded as bad form and even a tad vulgar, like breaking wind anywhere,
let alone in your own waders, which is why the Brits don’t wear them
much, either. But then you do not need to judge British anglers by what
they wear or use, they all have to be upper class, or at least stinking
rich to be fishing in the first place ....
From Bob Scammell's excellent book Good
Old Guys, Alibis and Outright Lies.
Copyright: Big-Ray Publication, Inc. |