Skues on Trout: Observations from an Angler Naturalist
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About this ebook
- Useful advice from the father of nymph fishing
- Extraordinary observations of the trout's world
Skues was that rarest of angling authorities, the iconoclast with a reverential respect for fly-fishing's traditions. A leading student of the sport's history and literature, Skues had a rare gift for sifting through many generations' accumulation of opinion and advice, keeping only what was truly useful and adapting it to the needs of anglers in a rapidly changing world. Skues on Trout showcases one of angling's greatest theorists sharing his hard-won wisdom along his beloved trout streams.
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Skues on Trout - Paul Schullery
George Edward Mackenzie Skues, illustration by Marsha Karle
Introductions and back matter copyright © 2008 by Paul Schullery
Published by
STACKPOLE BOOKS
5067 Ritter Road
Mechanicsburg, PA 17055
www.stackpolebooks.com
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. All inquiries should be addressed to Stackpole Books, 5067 Ritter Road, Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania 17055.
Printed in the United States
First edition
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Skues, G. E. M. (George Edward Mackenzie)
Skues on trout: observations from an angler naturalist / selected and introduced by Paul Schullery.—1st ed.
p. cm.
ISBN-13: 978-0-8117-0358-1 (hardcover)
ISBN-10: 0-8117-0358-4 (hardcover)
1. Trout fishing—Anecdotes. 2. Fly fishing—Anecdotes. 3. Skues, G. E. M. (George Edward Mackenzie) I. Schullery, Paul. II. Title.
SH687.S447 2008
799. 17'57—dc22
2007036713
eBook ISBN: 9780811753357
SERIES INTRODUCTION
We fly fishers are rightly proud of our long and distinguished literary tradition, but too much of that tradition has slipped out of reach. It is unfortunate enough that most of the older books are unobtainable, but as the sport’s techniques, language, and even values change, the older authors become less accessible to us even when we do read them. Fly fishing’s great old stories and wisdoms are often concealed in unfamiliar prose styles, extinct tackle terminology, and abandoned jargon.
The lessons and excitement of these older works will only survive if we keep reading them. By presenting the most readily accessible material from these authors, this series invites you to explore the rest of their work. Whether the selections in each book are instructive, entertaining, or inspirational, it is our fondest hope that they will whet your appetite for more of this lovely sport’s literary adventures.
It is one of fly fishing’s greatest attractions that the actual fishing is accompanied by a vast and endlessly engaging conversation. We have been conducting this conversation in print for many centuries now, and we seem always to have more to say. In this series, we invite you to sit back, turn the page, and give a listen. The conversation has never been better.
Paul Schullery
Series editor
CONTENTS
Introduction
Foreword
PART I
I. Considerations of Motive
II. The Why
III. Freewill and Predestination
PART II
I. The Sense of Taste
II. The Sense of Smell
PART III: The Vision of Trout
I. A Preliminary Cast
II. The Sense of Form and Definition
VIII. The Invisibility of Hooks
IV. The Sense of Position
V. A Problem For the Optician
VI. The Sense of Number
VII. The Sense of Colour
VIII. The Sense of Size
IX. Tone
X. In Dusk and Dark
XI. Looking Upward
XII. Looking Upward in Dusk and Dark
PART IV: How
I. The Mouth of a Trout
II. A Speculation in Bubbles
III. The Rise
IV. Assorted Rises
V. Fausse Montée
VI. The Moment
PART V: What
I. Flies as Food
II. Fly Dressing as an Art
III. Imitation, Representation, Suggestion
IV. Styles of Fly Dressing
V. Kick
VI. Ex Mortuâ Manu
PART VI: Bafflement
Suggestions for Additional Reading
INTRODUCTION
The British angling writer George Edward Mackenzie Skues (1858–1949) has been described not only as the father of nymph fishing, but as the greatest fly fisher who ever lived. He was also a modest, humorous, and warmly accessible writer whose writings never lost sympathy for his fellow anglers. His self-deprecating and deceptively simple-sounding writings on trout and fly fishing remain among the wisest and most revealing in the sport’s enormous literature.
I came to my interest in fishing literature from voluminous reading in a parallel literary universe, that of natural history. With that perspective I am convinced that had Skues chosen to devote his energy, observational gifts, and literary skill to almost any element of the natural scene other than fish, he would have achieved far broader public renown than he did in the relatively narrow readership of fly fishing. He was a great nature writer.
That said, Skues’s initial fame in fly fishing came about in good part because he led the way in correcting the excesses of the dry-fly revolution
that Frederic Halford and his colleagues launched on the southern British chalk streams in closing decades of the 1800s. Halford, whose dry-fly teachings were showcased in Halford on the Dry Fly, one of the inaugural volumes in this series, symbolized a movement in angling that, for all its wise theorizing and scientific precision, soon approached bigotry in its condescension toward other fly-fishing methods. It is difficult for us today, accustomed to a happy diversity of fly-fishing methods and tastes, to imagine the intensity of the dry-fly specialist’s self-pronounced superiority a hundred years ago. But such was the atmosphere in which Skues learned to fish, and against which he so effectively reacted in his own writings.
Skues’s first book, Minor Tactics of the Chalk Stream (1910), tentatively rebelled against the exclusivity with which dry-fly advocates perceived themselves as the highest and most refined form of anglers. His second book, which many still regard as his masterpiece, was The Way of a Trout with a Fly (1921), and it quickly established him as one of the day’s great angling theorists—as it also established the intellectual and ethical basis for sunken flies as legitimate tools of a well-rounded angler.
But it would be a great disservice to Skues to regard him merely as an iconoclast whose only legacy is that he saved fly fishing from its own worst impulses. He did not base his fly-fishing theories on a blind devotion to the older wet-fly styles that had preceded the Halford era. Instead, he built on the older traditions of sunk flies as effective imitations of immature forms of insects while employing key elements of the dry-fly specialist’s methods.
He advanced this corrective process with remarkable speed. Colonel E. W. Harding, another of the twentieth century’s most thoughtful angler-naturalists, was among those offended by the arrogance
of the cult of the dry fly.
As early as 1931, he said that Skues restored balance and tolerant sanity to the sport
because he extended the dry fly purists’ technique to the use of the wet fly and created a new and delicate branch of the art of fly fishing.
That branch
is usually known as nymph fishing. And though many generations of anglers had appreciated the value of imitating subaquatic insects, to Skues goes the foremost credit for codifying the theory and practice of this kind of fishing among modern anglers. It is no wonder that Brian Clarke and John Goddard, in their own milestone book, The Trout and the Fly (1980), described Skues as the greatest liberator of the human mind in fly fishing in this century.
For this sampler of Skues’s writings, I have chosen to excerpt his pathbreaking study of trout behavior that occupies the first division
of The Way of a Trout with a Fly. I am aware of no other book, and certainly no book published up to Skues’s time, that contained anywhere near as perceptive and helpful a study of the creature our sport depends upon. I think of it as brilliant nature writing thinly disguised as a superb fishing book. The already world-famous chalk streams of southern England, with their slow, clear currents and readily observable trout, provided Skues with the perfect laboratory in which to study the behavior of a fish whose daily life had remained a mystery to most anglers for many centuries.
In fact, rereading Skues now I am reminded of the old story about the college sophomore who naively complained that he didn’t like to read Shakespeare’s plays because they were so full of cliches. There is hard-earned wisdom in our modern understanding of the trout as a fly-fishing quarry, and it’s hard to overstate how much of that wisdom was first or best articulated right here.
Naturally, we now know more of some subjects, such as the vision of trout, than Skues did so long ago. But on most topics, we are still holding these same inquiries on the stream as we attend to the descendants of the fish that so engaged and baffled the anglers of Skues’s day. Nobody has ever thought harder or more creatively than he did about the questions that vex and intrigue us as anglers, or watched fish with a more penetrating eye, or gave us more charming disquisitions on the whole fly-fishing scene. As I worked on my own recent book about how trout take a fly, The Rise (2006), I was repeatedly struck by how often, and how thoughtfully, Skues had plowed the same theoretical ground.
As mentioned in the series introduction, it is our goal to make these new editions of older fishing writings as accessible to the modern reader as possible. My own first encounters with many of the older fly-fishing books were halting and confused by the great changes that have occurred in the language and practice of the sport. Even a hundred-year-old book can be almost impenetrable to the new reader who isn’t familiar with the old terms and attitudes. It is to Skues’s credit that there are relatively few such obstacles in the following text—I will mention a few