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Author: admin
Overloading by Daniel le Breton
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William Glasser Quote
We Learn . . .
10% of what we read
20% of what we hear
30% of what we see
50% of what we see and hear
70% of what we discuss
80% of what we experience
95% of what we teach others.
William Glasser
Physics of Overhead Fly Casting by Daniel le Breton
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Backcast Tracking by Gordy Hill
“I first experienced the technique of watching my casting arm with a rod handle in a side mounted mirror when I took Joan Wulff’s course for casting instructors at her place at Lew Beach, N.Y. about 15 years ago. She was concentrating on wrist positions at the end of the back cast and at the conclusion of the forward cast.
Here is another one which I forgot to teach you:
Start the back cast pickup with the butt of your fly rod actually making a dent in the volar side of your forearm. You delay rotation of the rod a bit by not releasing it from that position until you are very close to the termination of your back cast just before the stop. This helps in keeping the rod tip from dipping down too far from the oncoming line. For some casters it works well for tightening up that back cast loop as seen in the vertical plane.
I use that, ”forearm dent pressure” when I want good back cast loops while fly casting with tarpon tackle in the pre-dawn dark. Gives me better presentations and fewer tangles and other screw-ups which are so common when casting in the dark. Also, gives me smoother pickups when I can’t see the line on the water in front of me.
Lots of self teaching tricks and techniques.
When you think about it, in the end, the student gets best results when she takes what she learned from her instructor and uses that information to teach herself with repetitive practice after each teaching session and beyond.
I still do that. When I make a bad cast or two, I go back to basics, shorten my line, and teach myself what I already have learned to self improve.”
Rod Harmonics by Daniel le Breton
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Rod Fit for a Given Task by Daniel le Breton
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Energy Budget of the Cast by Daniel le Breton. Illustrations by John Symonds
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Rod Loading by Daniel le Breton
As promised, here is Daniel le Breton’s latest paper on rod loading. I’ve added an addendum which contains results of a simulation to act as an example of how rod loading and rod selection can affect the cast. (Note that there are two documents).
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Casting for Fishing by John Symonds
From John Symonds:
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