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L.A. Smithers really gets me thinking when he posts about the Ghillies from Scotland and their spey casts and the true definition of spey casting.
I have always tried in my mind (at least casually) to always call the long rods we use for Spey casting that allow the use of two hands a "two hander," as opposed to a "spey rod" because as much as a "two hander," lends itself to easier spey casting because of the added length, you can spey cast even a single hander and I tend to consider the Spey about the method (casts) and not about the equipment. From my understanding, the original spey casts were designed on the River Spey (as we've all heard about) to help fly fisherman avoid snagging up with the brush/foliage behind them on a back/false cast from overhead casting. This then opened up a lot of water that wasn't previously available to the fly angler because of the creation of these casts.
Now with the above thought in mind, does this then label any cast that is created to take advantage of minimal backcast room as well as make fishing more efficient a "Spey cast?" (because of the original idea in mind to use casts that load the rod with minimal backcast room?) or are spey casts only casts that were forged on the River Spey and similar rivers with DT lines and soft greenheart rods? Does this then set the stage for giving name, like the article by Mr. Ward states, to some of the newer casts which we deem part of Spey casting, the "Skagit casts." I don't really discriminate on the river myself when using the casts, whatever loads the rod for a particular situation on the river is what I use. I don't say a prayer for the river spey everytime I use a Spey cast, and I don't say a prayer for Dec Hogan everytime I use the Snap C, or think about Simon Gawesworth everytime I'm using the Snake/Spiral roll. I guess I'm on the lesser discriminatory side and tend to call just about anything that has the basic premise of being able to cast with minimal backcast room and no false casting a "Spey cast."
What is your defintion?
I have always tried in my mind (at least casually) to always call the long rods we use for Spey casting that allow the use of two hands a "two hander," as opposed to a "spey rod" because as much as a "two hander," lends itself to easier spey casting because of the added length, you can spey cast even a single hander and I tend to consider the Spey about the method (casts) and not about the equipment. From my understanding, the original spey casts were designed on the River Spey (as we've all heard about) to help fly fisherman avoid snagging up with the brush/foliage behind them on a back/false cast from overhead casting. This then opened up a lot of water that wasn't previously available to the fly angler because of the creation of these casts.
Now with the above thought in mind, does this then label any cast that is created to take advantage of minimal backcast room as well as make fishing more efficient a "Spey cast?" (because of the original idea in mind to use casts that load the rod with minimal backcast room?) or are spey casts only casts that were forged on the River Spey and similar rivers with DT lines and soft greenheart rods? Does this then set the stage for giving name, like the article by Mr. Ward states, to some of the newer casts which we deem part of Spey casting, the "Skagit casts." I don't really discriminate on the river myself when using the casts, whatever loads the rod for a particular situation on the river is what I use. I don't say a prayer for the river spey everytime I use a Spey cast, and I don't say a prayer for Dec Hogan everytime I use the Snap C, or think about Simon Gawesworth everytime I'm using the Snake/Spiral roll. I guess I'm on the lesser discriminatory side and tend to call just about anything that has the basic premise of being able to cast with minimal backcast room and no false casting a "Spey cast."
What is your defintion?