Archive for Tenkara Philosophy

My “One Only” Fly

My “One Only” Fly . . .

Three variations of my "one only" fly pattern: Deer Hair and White Thread; Deer Hair and Orange Floss; Deer Hair and Gray Wool. (photo taken 02 28 2013)

Three variations of my “one only” fly pattern: Deer Hair and White Thread; Deer Hair and Orange Floss; Deer Hair and Gray Wool. (photo taken 02 28 2013)

The pattern that has best served me well and best represents my tying philosophy is a simple hybrid of a soft hackle and micro streamer. I use a wet fly nymph hook in sizes 10 through 14, thread and floss or knitting wool for the body, and a sparse hackle of natural deer hair. These combinations carry the same silhouette: one short in the body and long in the wing. Very effective when twitched in still water, or hung in a stream’s current, I would choose this style as my “one only” tenkara fly if pressed to do so. The pattern has worked consistently in pond environments for panfish and has always helped me hook chubs, fallfish, and trout along coldwater freestone streams.

The General Recipe:

Hook: standard wet fly nymph, size 10-14
Thread: 6/0 thread
Body: 6/0 thread; floss; or baby ull knitting wool
Hackle: natural deer hair; or Hungarian partridge

– rPs 02 28 2013

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Winter Light

Winter Light . . .

My art supplies assembled around the sitter; an Amano Kebari. (photo taken 01 29 2012)

My art supplies assembled around the sitter; an Amano Kebari. (photo taken 01 29 2012)

The art studio replaces the trout stream and bass pond when the white skies of winter fill my Manhattan rooms with a pale light perfect for my drawing method. Today is such a day. I assemble my materials on the floor, assume the zazen position, and commence to document the fly pattern and the unique shape of its shadow during the given illustration session. The result, if I am successful, shall be a unique portrait. Today’s sitter: the Amano Kebari . . .

 

– rPs 01 29 2012

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A Few Hours on Christmas Eve

A Few Hours on Christmas Eve . . .

Exposed tree roots create an inviting target for tenkara casts during the winter months. (photo taken 12 24 2012)

Exposed tree roots create an inviting target for tenkara casts during the winter months. (photo taken 12 24 2012)

My 2012 fishing year, my first tenkara season, ended along the same water where it began: French Creek in southeastern Pennsylvania. My Christmas Eve had been planned from early afternoon onward – situated at the in-laws, gift wrapping, attending services, dining on a meal of seven fishes – which offered me one last free morning of trout fishing if I wanted it.

I did.

Silently I departed from a slumbering house after coffee and a cinnamon roll. Outside, the damp December air filled my lungs and legs with awakening. Frost crusted the grass as a thin overcast filled the still sky. Snow was in the evening forecast. The solunar table predicted a Major between nine and eleven a.m. Perhaps a few little caddis, as well as a few following Salmo trutta, might brave the morning calm along with me.

French Creek, just a few downhill minutes away on foot, flowed clear and low. Large knots of exposed oak and London plane tree roots broke the opposite bank every few dozen yards. These tangles can always provide some depth and holding lies where delineated pool and riffle structures are not present. A small Pheasant Tail nymph shortly found itself drifting by these pretzel patterns of wood.

My casts were smooth and hypnotizing. Chatty crows flew by and chickadees made friendly calls from nearby branches. One polite slate blue and white nuthatch appeared on a nearby tree trunk and softly said: “Hen. Hen. Hen.” in a way that resembled advice on where to cast.

The big take of the outing came soon after, slowly, more of a stop in the flow that felt at first like a flexible snag. A tree branch, submerged, must have hooked up with the pattern, I assumed. My response was a kind of lackadaisical pull back. The resistance pulled forth. When the back and forth symmetry abruptly turned into asymmetric animation, I realized the other end held a fish. A flash of bronze and silver flashed from below and then I was snapped off a decent brown trout. I was not used to the new 6x tippet material I had employed, or maybe my knot had frayed on a root.

Upstream called to me then. One large flat pool with some depth lay a few dozen yards above the bridge just in view through the brown web of bare trees. I hiked up to it, passed beneath the span on a narrow band of frozen mud. I then faced my athletic challenge of the day. I had to climb along a scree of red siltstone that is near impossible to navigate when the full growth of summer is present. I angled myself parallel to the steep side so a slip would simply land me hard onto the loose rock rather than on a neck breaker of a tumble into frigid water below. Tenacious thorned vine branches nagged at me as well, but I made it, climbing down to the water on a natural staircase of the red rock beside which a sapling bannister stood.

A natural staircase of red siltstone along French Creek. (photo taken 12 24 2012)

A natural staircase of red siltstone along French Creek. (photo taken 12 24 2012)

While I scanned for risers and contemplated the water’s sound and motion simultaneously, I heard rhythmical wind sounding from above. A great blue heron passed overhead with an audible flap of broad wings. Its prehistoric profile approached a series of power lines that stretched across the creek about twenty yards farther up. One of the cables must have been strung a few feet higher than the others. The big bird had to add an extra jump to clear the hump. Loud croaks followed, an ornery sound reminding me of any other pissed off commuter faced with an unexpected obstacle.

No risers appeared as the clock continued toward noon. I tipped my leader with a Gold-Ribbed Hare’s Ear nymph and swung it a few dozen times. No takers. I was pleased, though, to have had a few hours before the holiday that were removed from structured stress and inserted instead into the random natural world of wind in the ears and water before the eyes and the thought that my fly attached to a tenkara rod might present me with a Christmas gift of a trout. As it happened, I received a present even more grand – one of presence, pure and uncomplicated – one of happiness.

The view as I departed French Creek for the final time in 2012. (photo taken 12 24 2012)

The view as I departed French Creek for the final time in 2012. (photo taken 12 24 2012)

Yes, Happy Holidays.

— rPs 12 29 2012

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More Than Catching

More Than Catching . . .

The Mianus River in southwest Connecticut. (photo taken 06 24 2012)

A Tenkara Road Trip

After a busy month engrossed in a new day job (as an associate at a fly shop), I at last got away at the beginning of summer to fish just outside the limits of New York City. I stayed with a fishing buddy who lives in Stamford, Connecticut, and together we fished both the salt and a stream, for both striped bass and the trout. The latter allowed me to take tenkara equipment and technique into its most suited environment – a forested trout stream.

The Mianus River is, for most of its length, a freestone creek just twenty or so feet in width. The winding flow is somewhat shallow with a cobbled bottom and a scattering of smooth granite boulders that project out into the current, creating many inviting pools and pockets. The Mianus chapter of Trout Unlimited has done a lot of good work here, and because the river flows through three separate parks, there is plenty of tree shade to keep the water cool and plenty of public water to fish.

Tenkara technique is well-suited for upstream presentation in close quarters. (photo taken 06 24 2012)

The trout residing here proved to be very wary, sipping my fly patterns sparingly and so lightly as to leave barely a dimple on the surface film. The fish appeared educated, too. If a size 16 Blue Wing Olive invoked a rise once, it would not do so twice. Only a generic size 18 Tan Deer Hair Caddis lured more than one half-hearted look from a Salmo trutta.  Of the five rises I enjoyed during my morning outing, only one managed to connect with the hook long enough to be felt on my limber twelve-foot Ebisu.

I learned much about tenkara during this road trip. I found that hiking, stopping, fishing, and then moving on to do it all again, was much easier without a reel. The telescoping nature of the rod and the simple slipknot attachment of the level line to the braided lilian permitted quick set up and take down in the narrow spaces between the tangled branches along the stream bank. Casting the longer rod sideways, over the water, allowed me to present patterns upstream much more easily than with a conventional fly rod and reel. Many potential midstream snags and hookups with tree fish were averted as a result.

An Achilles’ Heel

Many, but not all, snags. I did learn that tenkara has an Achilles’ heel, and snag removal is it. When one gets caught under a rock or onto a green branch, a snag can often be released with conventional gear, first by winding in the line until the fly meets the rod tip, followed by a gentle tug or two. Tenkara does not allow for this option so, if a snag occurs, one must wade out to the offending stone, or climb the tree. If that proves to be physically impossible, fly and some tippet will be usually lost.

One specific weakness does not overwhelm the general strengths tenkara offers in the realms of mobility and ease of use in wilderness environments. And while I did not land a trout on this quick trip, I did glean another insight from the tenkara way; its inherent ability, through simplicity, to reveal that fishing is more than catching. The sport is also a window onto experiencing, and living, outdoor life in full, in the moment.

Tired, but happy, after a tenkara road trip full of trees. (photo taken by Walt Neary on 06 24 2012)

– rPs 06 25 2012

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A Tenkara Fly Code

A Tenkara Fly Code . . .

A tenkara fly code selection, including, row one: Light Cahill, Elk Hair Caddis; Deer Hair and White, Grey Wool and White; Amano Kebari, Royal Coachman; row two: E-Z Pheasant Tail Nymph, Pheasant and Orange; Muddler Minnow, Silver Tinsel Bucktail. (photo taken 04 30 2012)

One of the most influential artificial fly theorists of the last century was Vincent Marinaro. He was born, raised, and fly fished in the same western and central Pennsylvania region where I lived the first forty years of my own life. Limestone spring creeks and their rich insect hatches fascinated him and his approach, which he documented in two major works: A Modern Dry Fly Code (1950) and In the Ring of the Rise (1976).

Marinaro’s theory of the fly as related in his Code centered on two premises: the first was that small patterns were more effective; the second was the wing was the thing, the part of the fly that really mattered given the upward perspective of a feeding trout. What has risen from his opinion, as well as those of Halford and Skues, Flick and Meck, and a long line of others, is a cornucopia of patterns that imitate a world of fish food items that live somewhere within the water column and the calendar year.

Tenkara has come in recent years to the forward perspective of some western anglers, carrying with it a more simplified overall approach. This philosophy applies as well to the fly pattern. Imitation in the tenkara code goes only as far as tying a fly that matches the general silhouette of “insect” or, even more generically, “forage’ . . .  The rest of the game is the fishing process, placing and manipulating a pattern to provide it life-giving allure. Thus, it is not surprising to find a tenkara angler who carries just one pattern in the box. Different sizes of the fly, perhaps or for sure, but still only one pattern.

I have contemplated the western match-the-hatch tradition and the tenkara one-fly philosophy and have settled on my personal compromise: A Tenkara Fly Code.

The basics are simple: a fly pattern that imitates an insect can be large or small, floating or sinking, light or dark. That stated, my fly box will hold eight (8) flies to imitate insects plus an additional two (2), a large and a small streamer, to imitate minnows and crayfish. Here is the breakdown:

2 light floating (one large, size 12; one small, size 16)

2 light sinking (one large, size 12; one small, size 16)

2 dark floating (one large, size 12; one small, size 16)

2 dark sinking (one large, size 12; one small, size 16)

2 streamers (one large, size 8; one small, size 12)

This approach assembles a manageable assortment of ten (10) flies total, which can be realized in a single large and small example of five basic patterns, or ten separate patterns, each individual fitting into one of the ten specific slots in the size department. This second approach offers a little more variety, thus flexibility, especially in the streamer category, which has a wider range of organisms to cover. A trip to a freestone stream could include a large Muddler Minnow to imitate sculpin and crayfish; a small tinsel bucktail to imitate shiners and other silvery minnows. A trip to a pond might require a Black Woolly Bugger to represent a leech; a Gray Ghost to simulate a smelt.

That’s a whip finish for me, for now. The fun part, applied fly pattern theory practiced along a stream or around a pond, comes next.

– rPs 04 30 2012

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The Answer: TENKARA

The Answer: TENKARA . . .

Curly-Leaf Pondweed poses the question: How to Fish? (photo taken 04 19 2012)

Classical Japanese painting has depicted fishermen throughout its history. One of these works, “Catching a Catfish with a Gourd”  – the illuminated poem rendered by the monk Taiko Josetsu in 1413 during the Muromachi period– is the most famous example  His visual rendition of a koan, a Zen question designed to enlighten the student on new ways of seeing, was in itself a revolution in Japan. The painting, full of mist and sparse bankside vegetation, is credited with establishing suiboku, the monochromatic ink style, as well as a deeper sense of space in the pictorial plane. The latter achievement was not unlike the technical experiments early Renaissance masters were tackling at the same time in Europe.

My first visit to Central Park’s ponds this season presented me with a similar question inspired by nature and the fishing situation. Harlem Meer, bordered by stands of willow and cattail just beginning to go green, appeared healthy and full of spring vigor on a crisp April morning. The pond also resembled a great soup bowl of salad greens. The plant responsible was curly-leaf pondweed, Potamogeton crispus, an aquarium plant that has escaped and thrived to the point where it now has a cosmopolitan (global) distribution.

The wind was negligible, the pond calm, water clarity and visibility excellent. Several species of fish were cruising within the narrow water column between the top of the weed beds and the surface. Nymphs, legs kicking from curly leaf to curly leaf, were being hunted and surely consumed. I spotted several avoiding the strike zone by milling about the Meer’s edge. No fish were rising, but numerous swirls indicated active subsurface feeding.

Casts would have to be more than delicate in this situation. A sinking fly of any type or size would surely foul in the plants after just a brief one or two count.

The Question: How to Catch a Fish in a Meer Full of Pondweed?

The Answer: TENKARA

The physical characteristics of the tenkara level line turned out to be the solution to the fishing problem, that being: How to fish a sinking fly in a quick, delicate manner over the weeds? Had I brought my conventional 5-weight, I might have endured a headache rather than enjoyed a fishing trip. The floating fly line, as light as it is, would have been still too heavy for the calm conditions and narrow window of fishability. Even a delicate cast would have rippled the water enough to spook the fish hunting nymphs over the pondweed flats.

My 5x tippet ended with one of the small family of nymph and wet fly patterns I can tie. The first is predominately brown, made simply from pheasant tail feathers and black thread. Another utilizes gray knitting wool matched with a natural deer hair wing. I also had several Pheasant and Orange soft hackles with me, although I wish I had brought some tied with olive floss as well. Many of the nymphs I saw were green in hue.

The twelve-foot length of the Ebisu rod matched with level line allowed me to cast as far as twenty-five feet out into the Meer. I retrieved the nymph with a high stick and short twitches. The fly casting techniques developed for tight spaces, the roll cast and bow and arrow, all entered into the process. There were plenty of irregular pockets within the flat expanse of weeds. Here I could let a pattern sink for an additional second, which often resulted in a connection with a pouncing fish, including:

Largemouth Bass

(photo taken 04 19 2012)

Bluegill

(photo taken 04 19 2012)

Black Crappie

(photo taken 04 19 2012)

One surprise catch eluded my camera; my first ever golden shiner, which inhaled a pheasant tail nymph. I knew this species resided in the Meer, but this was my first close encounter with one. Pulling this foot-long fish from a springtime pond filled me with the same aesthetic I perceive when reading and viewing the exploits of British coarse fishing as documented by my friend, Dominic Garnett, author of Flyfishing for Coarse Fish. His blog “Crooked Lines” is full of waterscapes that look like Harlem Meer and fish species that resemble the golden shiner, which has the coloration of a tench and the profile of a rudd. I landed the fish, fair and fully, but it flopped away from the camera eye and rolled into the water with the dexterity of a martial artist. Is the golden shiner, perhaps, an Anglophile in style with the sporting acumen of a Japanophile? Maybe!

Questions. Questions. I am not a Zen master, nor am I an expert tenkara fly fisher. I have, however, solved the most recent koan fishing fate has cast my way:

The Question: How to Catch a Fish in a Meer Full of Pondweed?

The Answer: TENKARA

– rPs 04 20 2012

Postscript:

View Taiko Josetsu’s “Catching a Catfish with a Gourd” at Wikipedia by following this link:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Hy%C3%B4nen_zu_by_Josetsu.jpg

Visit Dominic Garnett’s “Crooked Lines” blog by following this link:

http://dgfishtales.blogspot.com/

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Kendo Meets Tenkara

Kendo Meets Tenkara . . .

French Creek fallfish that fell for tenkara. (photo taken 04 15 2012)

When earlier I addressed the theme of all things Japanese, the one that has paralleled the course of my life, I omitted a single important example, which I wanted to save for this, the proper moment.

My wife, Maryann, has also cultivated a close relationship with the culture of Japan. When we met, during the wedding day of a mutual friend, we discovered we both had an affinity for the Japanese that went far beyond food. Her primary connection turned out to be the martial art of kendo: the way of the sword.

Best described to the uninitiated as Japanese fencing, kendo is a fascinating, beautiful, and artful approach to swordsmanship, or kenjutsu. When I first visited Maryann’s Manhattan-based dojo, Ken-Zen Institute, I found her and her fellow students, or kendoka, to be serious, even reverent, during study and practice. Under the tutelage of their sensei, Daniel T. Ebihara, Kendo Kyoshi, 7-Dan, each class first divides into two sides, which face each other and follow a series of exercises: a contemplative warm-up; kiri-kaeshi, in which strike centering and stamina are cultivated in successive turns; and wazo-geiko, when kendoka learn and rehearse techniques with a designated partner.

What follows is the dramatic peak of a kendo class. Kendoka suit up into full body armor, the distinctive indigo bogu, which is necessary for Ji-geiko. This part of kendo employs undirected practice in which all assembled fight one another at once. The dojo’s floor, polished wood similar to a basketball court, resounds with the barefootwork, fumikomi-ashi, combined with the collective kiai, the emotional vocal unleashing of the fighting spirit. When this part commences, the experience can be rendered in words as a human eruption. The violence of the sound and controlled chaotic motion of the combat produce a visceral effect in the third-party viewer, an effect that reminds us that kendo is battle.

Ji-geiko in action at the Ken-Zen Institute, NYC. (photo taken 01 08 2012)

Conversely, my practice of fly fishing is commonly called the quiet sport. I was delighted, then, when Maryann not only expressed an interest in trying my way of the fly rod; she actually found she liked the experience. The 5-weight, in particular, appealed to her. The structural logic of the rod, this fishing tool, neither intimidated nor baffled her. Several years of study with the bamboo shinai translated into an easy transition to the fishing instrument. She was, to use the phrase, a natural.

I proposed to her in June of 2009, a few weeks after she had landed a large bluegill on an Olive Woolly Bugger. That first fish moment had all the details of a classic tale. We were casting along the grassy banks of Harlem Meer in Central Park. A passing breeze and a bad reaction on my part created a bird’s nest so complex I had to sit down on the ground to unravel my leader. A few minutes passed, and I heard her call my name. I thought she must have fouled up her line in the wind as well. When I looked up to see, I saw instead her 5-weight bent, its tip vibrating with life: “Fish on!”

We were married a few months later. I moved to New York City to join her. We have since fished freshwater and saltwater, warm water and cold water, lakes and ponds, rivers and streams. Whatever the fishing situation, we seem to find ourselves on the same side of the bank. We are more than life partners; we are fishing buddies.

Last year, when tenkara began to appear again and again on my online angling reading radar, Maryann encouraged me to learn more, to purchase a rod, and then to learn even more together with her. She liked the symbolism embodied by a Japanese sword and a Japanese fly rod residing under the same Manhattan roof. I agreed, but waited until the spring of the year, mainly so we could jump right into the experience after receiving the equipment.

The simplicity of the tenkara rod, especially the fact it supports no reel, continues to feel fresh to me, yet it has a familiar appeal to her. The red pine handle of our Ebisu model, in fact, resembles the tsuka of a bamboo shinai and hardwood oak bokuto.

From top to bottom: bokuto, shinai, tenkara. (photo taken 04 16 2012)

Close-up comparison of the tsuka. (photo taken 04 16 2012)

The traditional grip, with the index finger extended, allows the tenkara rod to be held at an angle familiar to a kendoka:

Tenkara grip: note position of index finger. (photo taken 04 14 2012)

The narrower range of ideal casting motion fits the technique of those accustomed to striking with a sword. When done correctly, with feeling, and surrounded by a pretty natural setting, a successful 3-Dan kendoka turned fly fisher can easily slip into the zone:

Maryann, casting the Ebisu model tenkara rod. (photo taken 04 15 2012)

Recently, we spent Maryann’s birthday weekend in southeastern Pennsylvania with her twin brother and parents, who live just a few blocks from French Creek, a freestone stream suited to the tenkara rod and method. The flow averages between thirty and forty feet in width along its main stretches. Several riffled areas, bends, and chutes narrow down to ten to fifteen feet. Here there are brown trout, some smallmouth bass, and one of my favorite fly-friendly species, fallfish, perhaps the gamest member of the chub family of minnows. The fallfish averages between six and twelve inches in length and, being insectivorous, makes a great fly rod quarry.  Once hooked, a fallfish will fight hard like a baby tarpon, a fish which it actually resembles, albeit one that is one-thousandth of the size.

Fishing the tenkara along French Creek created a pleasant experience. The casting proved to be easy and light. We both found the long rod and level line could swing an Amano Kebari or a soft-hackled fly into the kind of small bathtub depressions found in front of fallen trees and behind projecting stones. Tiny pools like these often hold all the catchable fish in shallow stretches overlooked by spin fishers who require greater depth. The result, then, is more fish for the fly fishers, which during our weekend included brown trout, common shiner, smallmouth bass, and fallfish.

A small stream, a simple rod, a single fish: these three can become one under a rising spring sun.

Maryann, out standing in her home water of French Creek, holding her first tenkara-caught fallfish. (photo taken 04 15 2012)

– rPs 04 16 2012

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By Ebisu

By Ebisu

Ebisu: front cover of the catalogue for The Vision and Art of Shinjo Ito. (photo taken 04 10 2012)

A recurring theme in one’s life may be perceived either upon past reflection or by present reminder. When one encounters the latest example of the latter and, for whatever reason, be it curiosity or impulse, begins to trace the line of occurrences backward from there, something profound often is found staring one in the face.

One leitmotif that has appeared along the road of my life like a string of green lights indicating “Go!” is all things Japanese. The root occurrence, the one I remember, was a seventh grade geography paper. I pulled JAPAN out of an upturned hat resting on Mr. Armstrong’s desk.  The World Book encyclopedia and a trip to the Carnegie Library followed, supplemented by visual and historical details culled from James Clavell’s Shogun, both the novel and the nine-hour television miniseries, which happened to air at roughly the same time as my assignment.

By the time I arrived at university in 1985, Japan was a dominating player in the world’s coalescing global economy. My plan at Penn State was to study print journalism. The idea of me being an arts and culture reporter in Tokyo lit my imaginative fire. I enrolled in a four-credit Japanese language class.

Mr. Takahashi, sensei, my instructor throughout my formal study of the language, was an enthusiastic young man who sported black glasses and a grey tweed coat. He taught us, he said quite frankly, the way he had instructed grade school children. Each morning we began by vocalizing the entire hiragana alphabet: “a, i, u, e, o . . . ka, ki, ku, ke, ko  all the way through to the concluding “wa, o, n”. . . The consonant and vowel combinations rolled off my tongue with a clear, staccato cadence that lacked the multisyllabic twists of the German that had challenged and daunted me throughout high school.

Classes in East Asian philosophy and history of art followed until I had accrued enough credits for an East Asian studies minor, although I was too distracted by college life to declare one. The thought front and center in my mind back then was a single detail that I noticed was present in a lot of the images I studied, paintings which were actually illustrated poems. Many, it seemed, depicted some variation on the theme of a contemplative monk, sitting beside a pond or stream, holding a rod without a reel, fishing.

University life’s dreams translated into adult life’s reality; I moved to Philadelphia rather than Tokyo. I spent two decades within its red brick setting, focusing on library science by workday and creative writing the rest of the time. The book dominated my life, so I naturally kept up on my reading of Japanese fiction, everything from the pop culture lit of Banana Yoshimoto’s Kitchen to the metaphoric epic of Yasunari Kawabata’s The Master of Go. His storytelling was so powerful that I bought a set and took up the game of black and white stones with a few other Japanophiles who played on weekends beside the large front windows of a nearby coffee shop called The Last Drop.

Besides café culture, there was music – the yin of acoustic guitar and the yang of synthesizers – which was a serious pastime of mine, one that bloomed into something bigger than a hobby in 2006. A friend who managed another café called La Colombe, and who also owned a small recording studio, invited me to play keyboards for a series of sessions. The goal of the project was to work some songs into shape for Murai, a vocalist who sang both in English and Japanese. During rehearsals, the occasional Japanese word I could recognize – like neko (cat) – would inspire me to improvise a grace note, a pitch bend, or a sound effect that often stopped the song, but always with a smile or laugh from the rest of the band.

I sometimes did cat sit for the husband and wife team of Murai when they visited her family, natives of the bucolic horse country on the northern island of Hokkaido. When once her parents visited the states, they invited me, the cat man, to a dinner hosted at her apartment. When, at the start of the meal, I mentioned I spoke some Japanese, her father asked me what I did. I told him I was a writer and a  fly fisher; I wrote about using a rod, reel, and line tipped with a hae, which is Japanese for fly, the insect. Mr. Murai responded with a humorous look and corrected me. The hae, I learned, is the kind of fly that crawls on a window screen. “Kebari,” he said, “this is the name of a feathered lure designed to look like a fly.” This, then, from the source, was my initial introduction to Japanese fly fishing.

Perhaps the most significant confluence of the Japanese with my path occurred in 2008, and it was because this one was to have a profound impact on my fishing writing life. During February of that year, my then fiancée and I visited the Milk Gallery in Manhattan to see the  “Art and Vision” retrospective of the Japanese Buddhist master and artist, Shinjo Ito. One of his pieces in the exhibit was a cast bronze sculpture of Ebisu, the Japanese god of fisherman, good luck, and workingmen, as well as the guardian of small children’s health. He is one of the Seven Gods of Fortune, and the only one of the seven to originate in Japan.

Self, standing by Ebisu by Shinjo Ito at the "Art and Vision" retrospective, Milk Gallery, NYC. (photo by Maryann Amici 02 2008)

I purchased a catalogue of the show and one evening, while contemplating Ito’s image of Ebisu, I experienced an epiphany in the form of a new way to spread the word about the manuscript of my second book, Small Fry: The Lure of the Little. I realized I might be able to serialize the book in the old-fashioned way with a set of biweekly installments, and do so in the most contemporary forum – online, which later came to fruition in the form of collaboration with Martin Joergensen of Global Fly Fisher. The success of its digital appearance resulted in its publication as a paperback published by The Whitefish Press in 2009. Thank you, Ebisu!

Ebisu: a Japanese god, a god of fisherman, residing in the pantheon with all of the others. The fact he was there, representing us little people casting nets and rods in search of fish, inspired a poem about the mortal masters of a related discipline, the art and craft of fly tying . . .

Patterns go
In a stream’s flow.

Fishers,
Men and women,

Tie together
As feathers and fur do

When wrapped
By thread and floss;

Their names, embossed,
Become floating sculptures.

While Ebisu was rejuvenating my own fishing life, he was at also apparently guiding another amerikajin at work on the opposite side of the country. Daniel Galhardo, a young man working in international finance, was manifesting reality from his own Japanese dreams. His experience travelling and fishing in Japan compelled him to introduce the traditional Japanese expression of fly fishing, both the unique gear and their specialized techniques, to America. To do so, he founded a company, Tenkara USA.

Marriage and a move to Manhattan filled my life in 2009. Once established, I began to encounter Galhardo’s name and angling mission on fly fishing blogs everywhere, so I paid a visit to his company’s website. The embedded videos of tenkara gear in action along narrow mountain trout streams fit my fishing style and temperament. I have always appreciated intimate environments, finesse casting, and especially small fish. Large fish, landed on heavy tackle, heave and gasp and reveal the exhaustion of their life or death struggle. By contrast, small fry are a quick, fun catch, almost playful. The way a little largemouth bass or brook trout springs from your open hand is a much more positive conclusion to a fishing encounter than the tentative, winded descent of a giant into the opaque unknown.

Galhardo’s Tenkara USA proved to be a kind of one stop shop that offers a complete assortment of traditional Japanese fly fishing equipment: the Kebari, lines, nets, and several different tenkara rods. One of the models his company offers is named the Ebisu: a telescoping, twelve-foot, light-action rod with a red pine handle. Of course, seeing the name, reading its description, knowing it would fit the kind of fly fishing I have long loved and written about, I pounced. I pounced the way a pugnacious sunny hits a popper floating on a quiet farm pond.

Ebisu: a tenkara rod. (photo taken 04 07 2012)

– rPs 04 10 2012

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