The World's Greatest Angler
by Jim Fergus
"Those who are
considered to be the world's great anglers would consider
much of the fishing he does unglamorous."
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The greatest anglers are
sometimes known to very few people.
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I have a friend named Barney who is one of the world's
great anglers. He will never be recognized or acknowledged
as such -- except by me -- because he's an unassuming
fellow. Those who are considered to be the world's great
anglers would consider much of the fishing he does
unglamorous.
You would never catch Barney, for instance, at a fancy
bonefish camp in the Bahamas, fishing for tarpon in Costa
Rica, or trout in New Zealand. You would be far more likely
to find him on a suburban pond near his home in south
Florida, fishing for bass or panfish. You might on occasion
find him out in the ocean thereabouts fishing for kingfish
or dolphin.
In this regard Barney is more of an everyman angler. That
is not to say that Barney doesn't travel to fish, or that he
doesn't fly fish when the opportunity presents itself.
Indeed, a large measure of being one of the world's great
anglers is versatility, the ability to adapt to different
styles and techniques. Barney has that ability in
spades.
I have fished with him in many different kinds of water,
from sea to creek, for many different species, from sailfish
to shell crackers and, somehow, he almost always catches
more fish than anyone else does. He is mysterious and
unobtrusive, as he never seems to be doing anything
particularly different.
Although Barney is by no means a stylish fly caster, and
although trout fishing is not his true forte -- in his
heart, he's a bass fisherman -- on any given day, I'd put
him up against any trout fisherman on any river. On more
than one occasion on various western trout rivers, I've seen
him outfish his guide. He simply has that ineffable ability
to read water and think like a fish -- the true earmarks of
the great angler.
On Idaho's Wood River, I once watched as Barney fished
behind another angler. This fellow was clearly an
experienced fly fisherman, had all the right gear, was an
exquisite caster, and worked the pools with thorough
precision. He tried several different flies, from nymphs to
dries, but with only modest success. Now and then he caught
a fish, but he really had to work for them.
Barney was trying to be polite and not follow too closely
on his heels, but when the fellow got finished with each
respective pool and moved on to the next, after a short
waiting period, Barney would begin to fish the vacated
pool.
He wasn't nearly as fine a caster as the other man, but
he started catching fish immediately. Indeed, he caught four
or five trout out of each pool that the man had just worked
so thoroughly minutes before. Big trout, too.
Now, I should just mention that Barney has a secret fly
to which he attributes his success on western rivers. I will
not speak in print the actual name of this fly. Suffice it
to say that -- like Barney himself -- the fly is a
distinctly unstylish affair that looks like it might be more
suitable for catching panfish or bass, rather than trout. In
fact, many fly fishing purists wouldn't be caught dead with
such a thing in their fly box.
After listening to Barney laud the praises of this
particular fly, I last year tied one of the monstrosities on
the end of my leader in front of an Orvis-endorsed guide in
Colorado. He looked at me aghast, as if I had just impaled a
large nightcrawler on my hook.
"I would never fish with a fly like that," he
sniffed.
"Oh yeah?" I answered, "That's just what the guides in
Idaho said the first time they saw my friend Barney using
this fly. Then he outfished them all. One day he caught over
a hundred trout on the Lost River -- three times as many as
his guide."
"Pretty soon word was out and all the guides were
secretly bumming these flies off Barney," I said. "He had
dozens of them. In fact, it was the only fly in his box; he
had it in two colors and all different sizes. Trust me,
you'll be begging me for one of these flies before the day
is out."
But I must admit that my bravado of that day
notwithstanding, Barney's ugly fly has never produced for me
nearly as prolifically as it does for him -- yet another
confirmation that his angling skills are a more elusive and
complicated matter than merely having the right fly.
This day on the Wood River, for instance, as Barney
fished behind the expert angler ahead of him, I was content
to sit on the bank and watch as he caught fish after fish.
He fished that fly with virtuoso versatility, breaking all
the rules of traditional fly fishing in the process.
He fished it dry, he fished it wet, he dead-drifted it,
he dragged it against the current, and he skittered it
across the surface of the pools like a bass plug. That
particular technique elicited savage attacks from the trout,
as if even they were offended at the trespass of this
hideous creature in their river.
By the third or fourth pool the fellow ahead of him, who
couldn't help but notice all the fish that Barney was
catching in water that he had just fished, finally quit,
exiting the river in clear disgust. I could tell from the
dirty looks he gave us that he thought Barney was cheating,
maybe using salmon eggs or some other kind of bait.
As if to confirm his suspicions, the man couldn't leave
the river without stopping to watch Barney fish for a
moment. He sidled back along the bank to where I sat
watching. Perhaps he hoped, as I always did, to pick up a
few pointers, to identify and commit to memory -- once and
for all -- the mysterious techniques that comprised Barney's
rare talent.
"What is he using?" the man asked me, and I told him.
Then, as if on cue, Barney hooked into a particularly fat
rainbow that doubled his rod and tore line from his reel.
Now the man no longer looked angry, but genuinely
puzzled.
"Don't worry about it," I assured him, "It's not just the
fly. This man just happens to be the world's greatest
angler."
Copyright © 1999 Jim Fergus. All
rights reserved.
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