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Thread: Another take on "one fly" and tenkara

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  1. #1
    Join Date
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    Default Another take on "one fly" and tenkara

    After the Tenkara Summit last September, I had an extensive discussion with Dr. Ishigaki, the most prominent "one fly" advocate, about what is and what isn't tenkara. We covered a lot of "what about"s - (what about weighted nymphs? what about dry flies? what about bluegills in ponds? etc.) What it finally came down to was the only thing he was adamant about was "one fly" but not the one fly you're thinking about. He wasn't talking about using only one pattern all the time, he was talking about having only one fly on your line at any one time. Fishing a nymph is (or can be) tenkara, fishing a dry fly can be too, but fishing both together definitely is not (at least in his view).

    The use of one fly or multiple flies might in fact be the biggest difference between tenkara and pesca a mosca Valsesiana, which uses three or four flies at a time (with a long rod and line tied to the rod tip).

    We didn't get into why only one fly at a time, and there is evidence that at one time Japanese fishermen used multiple flies on their lines.

    However, over the weekend I learned of a potential problem that could definitely cause someone to fish only one fly at a time. A guy emailed me and said he broke his rod tip. He had been fishing two flies and had gotten the lower fly snagged in a spot that was too deep and too swift to reach the fly. He did what we say he should do, he got as close as he could and then collapsed the rod so that he could reach and pull back on the line to break off the snagged fly. Unfortunately, while he was collapsing the rod a large brown grabbed his second fly. A tenkara rod can handle a big fish if it can spread the strain over the full length of the rod, but when it is mostly collapsed it takes very little sideways pressure to break the tip.

    I've often felt I was courting disaster when collapsing the rod and allowing the line and fly hang in the current downstream. Sometimes fish do hit a fly held in the current like that. If a nice fish hits your fly when the rod is mostly collapsed it could easily break your rod. I hadn't ever thought of a similar problem when fishing two flies and getting one snagged, but obviously it can happen and it is not at all clear what can be done to prevent it, other than pulling straight back on the rod without even trying to collapse it and reach the line - but that risks getting a stuck tip from pulling tightly enough to break the tippet.

    Maybe that's why tenkara is a "one fly" method.
    Tenkara Bum

  2. #2
    Join Date
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    Looks like Murphey's law struck (if anything can happen it will) when a large brown struck and broke that guys rod. Still if I did have one of my tenkara rods broken I would consider it an honor if a large brown would do it.

  3. #3

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    Chris, that's the first time I have seen some one actually post about the "one" fly. When I saw the Dr's fly box I noticed different flies. So what you have straightened out is the one fly means one fly on the line...

  4. #4
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    No, I wish it were that simple. The comments about "one fly" really do mean one pattern that he (and some other tenkara masters in Japan) fish with to the exclusion of all other patterns. It has kind of gotten blown out of proportion, I believe. Amano-san does fish with just one fly. Every fly in his box is identical. Dr. Ishigaki has different flies in his box (same basic pattern, but different colored bodies and different colored hackles, plus he carries some flies that other people give him - I don't know if he fishes them, but if you look in his box you'll see them. There are other tenkara anglers in Japan do not limit themselves to one fly or one pattern or even what we think of as tenkara flies (including beadheads and dries).

    Some people here talk about finding their "one fly" as if it were a vision quest or something. Dr. Ishigaki ran out of his favorite fly, bought a different one in a fly shop and found out that it worked just as well. He then decided that patterns don't matter and settled on a fly that was particularly easy to tie. That's how he "discovered" his one fly. The whole point isn't that you find your own one best fly, it is that the fly you choose doesn't matter. Pick a hare's ear soft hackle - you'll do as well with it as anything else. If you want something easier to tie, a Partridge and Orange. It will work most of the time in most places, so why worry about carrying two patterns?

    Apparently it is universal in Japan that tenkara is a method of fishing only one fly on the line at a time, but that is not at all what the "one fly" commentary is about.
    Tenkara Bum

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