While there is a plethora of good fly casting videos, books and magazine
articles, they do little to help you when you are on the river and fish are
rising. Here are some practical on-the-stream tips.
If your fly is catching on your flyline or leader you are casting tailing
loops--a very common casting error. It's primary cause is starting your
forward cast too hard and fast. To correct the tailing loop try this--start
your forward cast slowly and then accelerate to quick stop at the end of the
forward cast. While the change may seem subtle the difference in the cast
will be huge.
If you fly line lands in a clump of pasta in front of you and probably well
short of your intended target, you are probably either starting your forward
cast too soon or dropping your rod tip too far down on the back cast--or
both. The best way I have found to correct both of these errors is to WATCH
THE BACK CAST. The back cast is usually out of sight and therefore, out of
mind. Turn you head and watch the back cast. Modify your back cast to do
two things. Hesitate on the back cast long enough to see the line completely
straighten out in back before you start forward. Don't let your rod tip drop
too far towards the water--while I reject the conventional wisdom of keeping
the rod between 10 and 2 o'clock (like Lefty Kreh says: you don't cast with a
clock)--But swinging the rod almost to the water is going to put your line on
the water behing you. Think about the back cast being UP and back. In fact,
your casting hand should travel up a ramp as you move it backwards. Put the
butt or the rod under your shirtsleeve if you can't stop your rod from
traveling too far down on the backcast.
Remember: it's tough to fix something you can't see, so turn your head and
WATCH the backcast.