4 minute read

A GOOD PAIR OF EYES

A GUIDE’S LIFE • BY HAYDEN MELLSOP

A Good Pair of Eyes

We hunkered down at the edge of the clearing, clutching our hats close while the helicopter lifted off, peppering us in a shower of grit and leaves. Standing as it banked downstream and disappeared over the ridge line, we were left to the murmur of the river. I handed Bill his rod case.

“Rig this up and join me upstream. I’m going to move up to the next pool and see if I can spot a fish.”

Few things clear my mind from the residue of the noise and metallic confines of a helicopter better than standing quietly, centering my breathing and staring into moving water. Before beginning the process of spotting a trout, I stood for a couple of minutes with eyes closed, breathing deep and slow. The sun quartered across my right shoulder, burning off what remained of morning’s cool. Cicadas rasped their song from the surrounding manuka and beech, and somewhere nearby a tui cackled from its perch.

I opened my eyes. The pool in question was shaped like an elongated teardrop, narrow and turbulent at its head where the water spilled into it from the small rapid above. As the water’s velocity slowed it fanned wider and shallower until where I stood at its tail it flowed clear as gin and smooth as glass over cobbles of red, ochre and grey. Here in the Kiwi backcountry, a good pair of eyes are just as important to angling success as a good cast. Second is patience, a virtue essential to any attempt to detect a quarry whose very survival depends on not being seen, on blending into its surroundings like a dream into ether.

Keeping to the bushes that lined the bank, I stared into the shallow end of the pool, looking not at the water but through it, my attention on the detail of the bed over which it flowed. I hoped there would not be a fish resting here. A mere shadow cast by a line in the air over the water would be sufficient to spook it up into the deeper water of the head of the pool, putting down any fish that may be holding there along the way.

Mentally, I laid a grid out over the water, methodically searching each square for the hint of a fish - a torpedo shape lying among the donuts, the wisp of a shadow playing on the cobbled bed, but nothing appeared out of place. After a few minutes I felt Bill’s presence at my shoulder.

“Take a look. Let me know if you see anything while I tie on a fly.”

I took the rod from Bill and retreated deeper into the bushes before selecting and tying on a big dry. We moved on up the bank, ten feet at a time, pausing to repeat the process - grid, scan, grid, scan - until we were halfway up to the pool’s head. Here the water deepened, taking on a greenish hue. Only the larger rocks of the bed were now visible, the rest an indeterminate, mottled blur. The current pulsed and swirled, slow moving boils throwing shadows that took on the guise of an undulating fish before vanishing as quickly as they appeared.

An ebb in the current would sometimes By the way it moved toward the surface, I’m create a smooth window of water, a clear sure it’s looking up. Let’s stick with the dry portal into the depths of the river that would fly only.” drift downstream, morphing and twisting. Finally, an hour after the chopper had I’d follow these intently, the brief lifting of lifted off, we were in business. the veil to reveal the world below. It was “You drop down to the water’s edge and with the assistance of one of these that I first get a clear casting lane. I’ll stay high here saw it, a shadow that rose up the water col- and call the drift.” umn toward the surface, then with a flick of Bill nodded then picked his way down to its tail descended again. the river. I’d played my part. Now, it was his

Bingo. I turned to Bill. turn.

“Did you see it?”

He shook About The Author his head.

“It’s about Hayden Mellsop is an expat New Zealander living in the four feet below mountain town of Salida, Colorado, on the banks of the the surface, a Arkansas River. As well as being a semi-retired fly fishing rod length out guide, he juggles helping his wife raise two teenage from that little daughters, along with a career in real estate. point up ahead.

Get notified of each new issue.

Sign up now.

Hayden Mellsop

Fly fishing guide. Real Estate guide.

Recreation, residential, retirement, investment.

This article is from: