Monday 15 April 2013

New Arrivals

It's not just rods of course. Reels are a lot easier to collect. They are smaller, much easier to display and come in an endless variety.  For the most part it makes sense to focus on a particular type of reel,  - in my case of course, it's fly reels. Even that leaves a menagerie of makers, countries of origin and models to collect, so an overall theme within the chosen type of reel makes sense.  In theory anyway.

For a long time I concentrated on the reels of a particular manufacturer, Young's of Redditch, and at some point I'll show you some of these and raise some relevant points of interest. But since I have a number of American made rods, reels by the same manufacturers also have an appeal, particularly if they can be sourced in the UK. Buying items from America can be fraught with difficulty and expense. Items valued at more than £15, including carriage, attract VAT at 20%. In addition to this, the Post Office adds a surcharge of £8 for  processing an inbound taxable item, so if the initial cost of an object is, say £70, P&P a further £30, this is subject to £20 VAT  AND a further £8 surcharge, making a total of £128, almost double the actual item cost. So, if an interesting item of American made gear becomes available in the UK, it is significantly more attractive than one sourced from America.  This is why I was pleased to get this little reel.

Horton Manufacturing Co. Bristol no 66 Fly Reel with the original box.


Not really thought of as a particularly good fly reel - it has a rather poor click pawl check, this is nonetheless interesting because it was made by the Horton Manufacturing Company, located in Bristol, Connecticut. For a number of years Bristol rods were closely associated firstly with Eustis Edwards and latterly with his sons, Eugene "Gene" and William "Bill", Edwards. Edwards Senior trained with Hiram Leonard and was intimately involved in the early evolution of bamboo rods, adding his own innovation of heat treating, or "tempering" bamboo to imrpove it's suitability for rod making. The whole fascinating story of the early days of bamboo rod making in the eastern United States is told in George Black's excellent book "Casting a Spell".

Another newcomer, also in the original box is this little 3⅛'' Milward's Flycraft.




Milward's was one of a whole raft of tackle manufacturers to evolve in Redditch in the West Midlands, largely as a development of the local needle making industry. Walton gives detailed instructions for the making of fish hooks from needles in the Compleat Angler, and the progression from needle manufacture, through hook manufacture and other tackle items was a natural pathway. Indeed the last practising traditional hook maker in the Redditch area retired only last year. This is the third Flycraft I have of this period and makes an interesting comparison to the other two larger models in that it is right hand wind only, and has an adjustable check, similar to Young's model 15A. Young's, Alcock's and Milward's were neighbours in Redditch and seem to have shared manufacture and distribution of each others products, an area which I know is being researched. More on Fycrafts next time.


Monday 8 April 2013

Museum Piece

There was a time when it seemed possible that the collection might have a bigger purpose and form the basis of a small museum, dedicated to the development of modern fly fishing. With that in mind, I set out to acquire certain"landmark" objects that represent particular periods or developments in our hobby of fly fishing. The two oldest rods I have are good examples of this., not just because of what they themselves are, but because of the other things that were going on at the time they were made.

The first is a fairly typical late nineteenth century Scottish made fly rod. It is in three sections, is about 10 feet long and made not of split cane but of Greenheart. Greenheart (Latin Chlorocardium) is a tropical hardwood, native to northern South America. It has a number of properties that made it an excellent choice for making rods, it is close-grained and relatively impervious to water, can be shaped into the finely tapered forms necessary for rods and is relatively flexible.  It is also somewhat heavy, at least when compared to more modern materials.


Andersons of Edinburgh, greenheart trout fly rod c 1900

The rod is marked "Andersons, Princess  St., Edinburgh, Dunkeld Princess" on the brass butt.  Andersons had premises at 101 Princes Street in the centre of Edinburgh at the beginning of the 20th century, having relocated from Dunkeld on the Perthshire Tay. They were a well known and well respected retailer of all things to do with fishing. The rod itself has American twist snake guides throughout, - no stripping guide. The ferrules are spigotted and hooded, - the male ferrules have a domed brass cap the covers the edge of the female ferrule when the rod is put up. The solid wood handle has an ingenious sliding band reel seat with pinned rails to hold the reel foot in place. Clearly when this rod was new it was a quality item.

Greenheart remained the material of choice for fishing rods of many types well into the twentieth century, but there is evidence to show that cane rods were being imported from America from the end of the nineteenth.

Advertisement from the end matter of Lochs and Loch Fishing by Hamish Stuart , published 1899

This advert is for a Glasgow tackle shop, William Robertson, contemporary with Andersons, and features "American Cane Built Rods, American Tubular Steel Rods, American Cane Built Bicycle Rods" included in "Lochs and Loch Fishing" by Hamish Stuart.  It was common practice to include such adverts in the end matter of popular books and they can be a great source of information.

The advert also makes reference to  Robertson's "St. Mungo" rod.

Robertson's St. Mungo trout fly rod

The St. Mungo is superficially very similar to the Anderson's product.  Hardly surprising. Both rods are made of greenheart, both have similar sliding band reel seats. The St. Mungo does have an improved cork handle, but guides and ferrules are the same as those on the "Dunkeld Princess". Where the St. Mungo gets interesting is at the tip.

Tip of Robertson's St. Mungo trout fly rod

The final 2¾ inches of the rod is composed entirely of the tip eye itself, the wire support extending the entire rod. Stuart makes reference to this device in one of his foot notes


"I never had occasion to use the second top of this rod, which owed some of its power to the fact that I had one of Robertson's (Glasgow) patent steel rod-tips added to it—a most excellent contrivance ; it adds to the casting and holding power of a rod to a marvellous degree."
 He goes into more detail; about the rod in his main text,

"Rods are a lottery and though cheap rods are as a rule to be avoided, yet occasionally one picks up a weapon cheap that proves in use to be as good and faithful a servant as the highest priced rods. I had such a rod in use for many years. It was an American built cane and though I killed with it among other fish upwards of 80 trout between 2½1bs. and l0bs., it was as good a rod when the last fish was landed as it was when it received its baptism of fire on a big day when 85½hs. of seatrout yielded themselves victims of its prowess."
I think it very telling that Stuart refers to the American made cane rod as being "cheap" - perhaps this offers an insight into the perceived quality and therefore price of contemporary greenheart rods.





Sunday 7 April 2013

So......?

So I started collecting cane rods, not always the best, in fact my colleagues (I work in the tackle trade) often ask my why I don't consolidate things and get just one well made can rod. But where would be the fun in that?

Some of the rods I have are "blue collar" American models, shop built, factory finished but nonetheless interesting, often attractive and sometimes good fishing tools. Others are UK made, varying from the long and heavy, to surprisingly light and useful rods from well known UK makers.  Then there are the reels.

One of the reasons cane rods have a reputation for being heavy is that often modern reels are not heavy enough to balance the rod.I learned the importance of correct balance a long, long time ago when working in the museum service. A colleague and I were looking for items in the local edged weapons collection when he handed me a Scottish basket hilt broadsword. These were the swords carried by the Highlanders during the Jacobite rebellion. Five pounds of steel, the blade nicked and chipped, so it had been used, and...it just floated. There seemed to be no weight at all, even though the blade was more than three feet long. We'll come back to this business of balance in due course.




 Basket hilt broadsword, courtesy of Wikipedia

From tomorrow I plan to start sharing some of the items from my collection, and some of the things I've learned.  I also hope there will be some diversions, fishing trips, interesting books or web sites, that sort of thing,  The whole point is it ought to be fun...


Saturday 6 April 2013

Back on Track..

As I was saying before the fishing interrupted, Gierach's book, Fishing Bamboo reminded me of those  two cane rods I'd had as a teenager. In the UK, rods made of "rent and glued" bamboo are called cane , or split cane rods, that is the way it is. I know our American cousins call them bamboo, that too is the way it is, but, out of habit, I'm going to carry on calling them cane.


Allcock Popular 10' 3/1 A typical mass-market British cane rod made by one of the celebrated Redditch based manufacturers that dominated the UK tackle industry. Well made but relatively soft and heavy, and in modern terms, almost unusably long.

So, in the UK cane rods have the reputation of being soft, long and very heavy. When starting a back cast, you probably have time to make a pot of tea, light a cigarette and take in an old episode of The Archers before having to address the forward cast. The first British made cane fly rods I acquired seemed to bear this out. How then could the American still be so enthusiastic about their bamboo rods? And how the Dickens would I be able to afford a modern cane rod?

The answer came, like all quality cane, from the Far East, in the form of a new make two piece (2/2 in fact, 2 piece, 2 tops) imported via Ebay from China.


Zhu's Rods, 8' #5 2/2, apparently based on a Dickerson 8014 taper, and my first "modern" rod.

When the rod finally arrived, packed in a 2 inch water pipe, I took it out of the bag and it looked fabulous. I have to say there are few graphite rods that you can genuinely say look pretty, but this did. The first outing too was a revelation.  I'm still  not sure what I expected, perhaps some kind of magical moment. What I actually got was a perfectly usable fishing rod..you can see me using it in the picture below (First Post).

Friday 5 April 2013

Oops - Missed Yesterday..

...because I was getting organised to go fishing.

Spent most of the morning on the River Avon at Linlithgow, fishing a stretch below the entry of the Mill Burn at Little Mill.



  © Copyright AlastairG and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence

No fish, but then I hardly expected any as it was a bit too early in the day for much to be happening, and it is unseasonably cold still.

There are rivers Avon all over the place, mostly in England, but the word itself derives from the Celtic "Abona", -Welsh "afon", meaning simply, "river". Our own Avon rises in the hills to the South of the River Forth, makes its way North through Slmannan, Avonbridge and Linlithgow Bridge before entering the Firth of Forth between Grangemouth and Bo'ness. Nearly all of it is accessible for fishing,mostly for Brown Trout but there are runs of Sea Trout and every year there's talk of the occasional Salmon. It also has a number of very pretty stretches, including one of the best wooded river valleys in Scotland in the form of the Avon Gorge. If it were 30 miles further north, there'd be a visitor centre, a cafe and several hundred brown road signs. If you fancy wetting a line here, you can get a day ticket for the stretch at Muiravonside Country Park.


Wednesday 3 April 2013

I've Already Got a Book...

..................why would I need another one?

I have a real problem with books. For a start there are 3,500 in the attic, most of them neatly ordered on shelves, covering everything from the Poems of William Blake to the History of Pinball.  Fortunately I never tire of books. The one I'm reading at the moment just happens to be the one that made me think differently about fishing, - actually I'm re-reading it mainly because of writing this Blog.

Some of my books are about fishing, some are "How To" books, others are encyclopaedic lists of species and methods, and some are other people's fishing stories. The best of these are by John Gierach. Can't remember how I came across Gierach's books, but I was completely taken with his mix of philosophy and fishing, and the deceptively easy way he draws you in to his world - one essay is even written in the second person. One particular book stands out in it's dedication to a particular theme, Fishing Bamboo, and it was this book that not only reminded me of my early fishing exploits with a bamboo rod, but opened up the possibility of a whole new way to enjoy fishing.





Tuesday 2 April 2013

Cane Fly Rods

That fish was caught on one of the then new fangled glass fibre rods, but even then I already had more rods than I could fish with. Some were more useful than others, the six foot solid glass pier rod I'd inherited from my brother, the local hardware shop special (we had them in the UK too) spinning rod with its bright gold foil backed whippings both come to mind.  There were two others though, one I now know to have been made in Japan, a combination spin/fly rod offered in their hundreds to departing Allied soldiers, and a curious six piece poacher's rod, both of which were cane. I'd learned to cast on the Japanese rod using Charles Ritz' "A Fly Fisher's Life" as a guide - the only magazine covering fly fishing that I could get was Trout & Salmon which had very little to offer the fledgling angler. So I struggled along, despite everyone insisting that what I really needed was a "wurrum", until I captured my first trout.

When fly fishing found me again it was with the by now typical graphite fly rod, capable of throwing a size 10 Yellow Dancer on a WF7F to the other side of the fishery and at first I thoroughly enjoyed myself. Then one day I read a book, and everything changed.


Monday 1 April 2013

So Why Whiteadder?


Why call myself Whiteadder? Well, as nommes de plume go, it's not bad, not quite as distinguished as "Sparse Grey Hackle" perhaps, but then I'm not in his league. Whiteadder is the username I chose for a whole raft of online forums, a lot of which are fishing related. It was on the Whiteadder Water that I caught my first wild trout when learning to fish as a teenager, living just a long-ish cast from the river.

  © Copyright David Sanderson and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence


It was in this pool, just below Cumledge, or Preston, Bridge on a size 20 Tupp's Indispensable fished upstream into the slack water just below the rock on which the bridge footings stand. And I can't for the life of me remember the date!

As it happens that was the first and only fish I caught from the river. Life got in the way and I was kept away from fishing until 2001, when I caught my second fish, but - that's another story.

..and that's why I chose to be Whiteadder!