Thanks for sharing. Your description and illustration of the flight of the line with hand motions for "the sweet spot" in overhead casting is something I see and feel, but have been unable to verbalize. Well done! On a target for practice, I use a 9" aluminum pie plate, and inside that, place a 3" jar lid. So far, when I'm "on" I can place the fly in the plate 4-7 times out of 10 overhead casts, and in the jar lid on 2-4 of those casts. I have also started practicing bow & arrow and sidearm casts at different angles raising the rod up for the delivery stop into the plate to mimic rearward and overhead obstacles. I've got much work to do with those to reach any real degree of accuracy.
Good info. I'm an absolute beginner with Tenkara and you go over a lot of stuff that everyone just assumes you know. I feel like I understand what I'm supposed to do a little better now. You've earned a subscription.
Great tips - those are things I share with friends when we go out. One other thing: the quality of your tenkara cast begins in a swift and sharp backcast. If your backcast is on point, the forward cast will be effortless. When it comes to tenkara fly rods with very light and thin lines, you can’t force it forward. You need ALL the weight of the line to stretch the rod back behind/above you in order to shoot it forward.
Thanks for sharing. Your description and illustration of the flight of the line with hand motions for "the sweet spot" in overhead casting is something I see and feel, but have been unable to verbalize. Well done!
On a target for practice, I use a 9" aluminum pie plate, and inside that, place a 3" jar lid. So far, when I'm "on" I can place the fly in the plate 4-7 times out of 10 overhead casts, and in the jar lid on 2-4 of those casts.
I have also started practicing bow & arrow and sidearm casts at different angles raising the rod up for the delivery stop into the plate to mimic rearward and overhead obstacles. I've got much work to do with those to reach any real degree of accuracy.
Thanks Brian! It sounds like you are well on your way and better than most with your accuracy.
Nice simple instruction for a noob like me. Might need to start with a wash tub and work my way to the frying pan.
Thanks!
Good info. I'm an absolute beginner with Tenkara and you go over a lot of stuff that everyone just assumes you know. I feel like I understand what I'm supposed to do a little better now.
You've earned a subscription.
Thank you, much appreciated!
Absolutely the most informative instructions on Tencara casting. I’m looking forward to your next pod cast.
Thanks Linda! I hope it helps.
Excellent. I really needed to see this weeks ago!
Thanks…hope it helps
nice tips!
Great tips - those are things I share with friends when we go out. One other thing: the quality of your tenkara cast begins in a swift and sharp backcast. If your backcast is on point, the forward cast will be effortless. When it comes to tenkara fly rods with very light and thin lines, you can’t force it forward. You need ALL the weight of the line to stretch the rod back behind/above you in order to shoot it forward.
Thanks, I agree!
Thank you. Great tips.
You bet!
Great pointers. I definitely need to practice my frying pan casting. Maybe I'll start out using a cookie sheet.
There are days where I struggle to hit the ground.