There is an adage here in the valley amongst the local fly
fishers. If you can’t row, you can’t
go. This refers to how we rotate around
the boat while floating the Roaring Fork and Colorado, everyone getting a shot
at the coveted front spot, as well as the back seat and the middle, where the
work gets done. If you don’t know how to
row, your friends are less likely to ask you along.
Learning how to handle the sticks can be challenging, but
after a few days you start to get the swing of it. The main challenge is listening to your
instructor (beer drinking buddy) and turning your brain off at first, as most
of the moves are counter-intuitive to what you think you need to be doing. When your instructor tells you to point the
boat at what you want to avoid, it takes a minute to wrap your head around that
concept.
Nothing will make you appreciate the skills of a skilled
oarsman (or woman) than getting behind the wheel yourself. A talented rower works on his or her angler’s
fly drifts as hard as the angler, as the boat needs to equal the speed of the
dry flies or indicator moving down the river.
This requires a myriad of small adjustments, whether it is slowing down
or speeding up the boat, as well as the angle of the boat in relation to the
bank, the distance kept between the boat and the sweet spot, and so on. We have all ridden with someone who doesn’t
pay attention to these subtleties, and the boat feels like it is flying past
the honey holes all day.
You also pick up the nuances of boater etiquette as you
learn, which includes being tidy and surgical on the boat ramp, staying clear
of private property, giving other anglers a wide berth, and the host of other
ways you can be an effective and conscious river steward. If you have the itch to learn to row, hit up
that friend that has a boat and get some stick time! (Hint:
Your stock will rise if you bring the food, beer, and run the shuttle..)
Words by Scott Spooner
Photographs courtesy of Jeremy Stott, Taylor Logsdon, Mike Thomas and Scott Spooner
Reprinted from "On the Fly" in the Aspen Times and Post Independent
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