The Ethics, Perhaps, of Fly Fishing - Lighter Side

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December 3rd, 2001

The Ethics, Perhaps, of Fly Fishing Ed Zern By Ed Zern

I agreed to write something about the ethics of fly-fishing because
I hadn’t thought much about it at the time, and it’s always pleasant
to be able to impose, or try to, your own ideas and ideals on other
people, especially from a stance that makes back-talk difficult.

But now, faced with a blank sheet of paper and forced to think about it,
it seems to me that all the problems of living and dying and of work
and play are ethical problems, and to attempt to separate out the
ethics of fly-fishing is akin to prescribing a special inflection
of voice to be used when addressing bishops or billionaires or
Internal Revenue agents. And perhaps it isn’t really ethics that
we have in mind, but rather attitudes, a code of behavior, a concern
for tradition and a hope for conservation of both fish and values.
Perhaps, too, in my own case I tend to confuse ethics with
aesthetics (and perhaps ethics is the aesthetics of behavior.)

Since such an approach is highly subjective I can hardly do better
than to set down some of my own beliefs about fly-fishing; and
“ethical” attitudes I have would grow out of these:

  1. The essence of sport is skill, and the voluntary imposition
    or acceptance of arbitrary conditions demanding skills. There is
    nothing immoral about shooting sitting ducks, but the sportsman
    shoots them flying, and may decline shots that require little skill.

  2. Fly-fishing generally requires more skills than fishing with lures
    or natural baits; fly-casting generally requires more skill than
    spin-casting or bait-casting; fly-fishing encourages development
    of collateral skills, in insect identification and imitation, in
    streamcraft and in fly-tying. It is therefore a more sporting way
    of taking those fish which sometimes feed on insects on or below the
    surface of the water they inhabit or on small fish imitable by
    streamer flies. (The fact that skilled fly-fishers may be able
    under certain conditions to take more fish than the bait or lure
    fisherman is irrelevant; the honest man is often able to accumulate
    more wealth than the thief, but this is a shoddy argument for
    honesty.)

  3. Fly-fishing, or any other sport fishing, is an end in itself
    and not a game or competition among fishermen; the great figures in
    the historic tradition of angling are not those men who caught the
    greatest number of fish or the biggest fish but those who, like
    Ronalds and Francis and Halford and Skues and Gordon and Wulff
    and Schwiebert, made lasting contributions of thought and knowledge,
    of fly patterns and philosophy, of good writing and good
    sportsmanship. There have always been men who could accumulate
    a larger number of dead fish than other men, because it was important
    to them; but no one remembers who they were, or should.

  4. One of the greatest privileges of the fly-fisher is to release
    his catch, not out of sentimental avoidance of the act of killing
    but out of awareness that in most waters of this continent, capable
    of sustaining a fish population from season to season, a game fish
    is for more valuable as sport or the promise of sport than as food
    for belly or vanity.


5. There can be no fly-fishing without pure waters in which game
fish can live; there can be no such waters without proper management
of watershed forests and farmlands, or without control of pollution
through erosion or industrial or human waste. Therefore, the
fly-fisherman should be deeply concerned with measures to conserve
or restore pure waters, and will involve himself when possible in
efforts to promote such measures, recognizing that they are inseparable
from the conservation of all renewable natural resources. He will
bear in mind the legend of the African chief who said, “This land
belongs to my people. Some of them are living, some of them are
dead, but most of them have not yet been born.” ~ Ed Zern,

  • Random Casts, 1966.

Credits: From The Best of Ed Zern published by
The Lyons Press.


Originally published December 3rd, 2001 on Fly Anglers Online by Ed Zern.