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A fishing life offers all sorts of opportunities for mini-epiphanies
and I've recently tripped over one that's worth mentioning. "Why do we fish?" For all of us, it's more than just catching fish, but the "catching" is always required somewhere in the mix. The social aspects plus the opportunity to innovate has always been much higher than "catching", on my priority list. As is obvious with such priorities, my "catching" suffers. Frankly, I don't put nearly as much effort into it as I should. But when I ask this hard question again, am I ordering my priorities this way because they suit me or in part because I don't want to make the effort to move beyond an average level of "catching"? In other words, am I hiding behind my priorities to save myself the bother of doing the "catching" right? Enter the minimalist angler as a highly effective angler. I've always loaded myself up with bulging vest, stuffed pockets, spare spools, spare rods in the car, all precautions against not having the right thing to satisfy picky trout. But this load of gear is really a recognition that I haven't taken the time, haven't made the effort to know what I'm doing. I have burdened myself physically with armloads of gear to avoid having to take on the mental burden of selecting just what is necessary and no more –- to avoid having to know what I'm doing. So here I am on Whitemans, wet wading, one small fly box, one spool of tippet, one rod, one reel, and thinking about what I am actually doing instead of just chucking the contents of multiple flyboxes at unimpressed fish. Before I left the house, I had decided where I would fish using the right bug for that water, time of day, and at that point in the season. Bingo, epiphany time. By forcing a minimalist approach, I have to really know what I'm doing as there's no margin for error. I've stripped away the excuses, the multiple flybox crutches, and faced the fish armed with a handful of flies and my wits. Stripped of the superfluous gear, I'm reading water, examining bugs, search bankside bushes, catching fish, and in the process, discover that there's an amazing mental clarity to the minimalist approach. Is it more fun? You betchya. |
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