Mark your calendars! Tim Arsenault’s Spey Casting class launches this Wednesday, January 29th. Don't miss out-find the course here: courses.anchor... #flyfishing #speycasting
Looking forward to the single spey, i've seen all things Tim Arsenault on the Tube, i think he has the best overall theory and explanation of the spey cast, and Tim's cast are just beautifull.
@@charlestraylor6385 agreed- I leaned quite a bit from her Spey casting class on anchored outdoors! Thanks for all the help. Maybe one day my casts will be as good as hers!
The D-loop is necessary (and the most important) part of the spey cast but never the sufficient part. What is going on between the D-loop formation and the firing position is important too. This video did not touch on that. From pulling the line off the water to the end of the power/firing stroke, the tip of the rod should never stop or hesitate. Otherwise, you would lose line speed. Just like the overhead cast, the tip of the rod and the line attached to that tip have to be accelerating in order for line to take off with higher energy. The best way to achieve this is to move your body and drift with your elbow before the firing position. That is the reason you are assuming the closed position in the first place. Closed position makes this translation first with the upper body then with elbow very natural. Otherwise, you could have done the firing position anyway you want.
Very clear, helpful instruction.
This was so good, Tim is the man!
What’s cool Tim! Great job.
Looking forward to subsequent chapters.
Great video. Excellent explanation. Thank you.
Looking forward to the single spey, i've seen all things Tim Arsenault on the Tube, i think he has the best overall theory and explanation of the spey cast, and Tim's cast are just beautifull.
Look in the Style chapter for an updated look at the Single Spey!
Very excited for this!
Us too!
Been waiting for this one, April. Although he’ll have to go a long way to make a better presentation than your Spey casting mini course! 😉
@@charlestraylor6385 agreed- I leaned quite a bit from her Spey casting class on anchored outdoors! Thanks for all the help. Maybe one day my casts will be as good as hers!
@@mattstout856 Showed me how to overcome the “Bloody L”🤗
I saw Tim at a spey clave out on Cultis Lake a little while back. I think he was using a 16-foot spey rod. Tossing bombs!
Very well explained.
The D-loop is necessary (and the most important) part of the spey cast but never the sufficient part. What is going on between the D-loop formation and the firing position is important too. This video did not touch on that. From pulling the line off the water to the end of the power/firing stroke, the tip of the rod should never stop or hesitate. Otherwise, you would lose line speed. Just like the overhead cast, the tip of the rod and the line attached to that tip have to be accelerating in order for line to take off with higher energy. The best way to achieve this is to move your body and drift with your elbow before the firing position. That is the reason you are assuming the closed position in the first place. Closed position makes this translation first with the upper body then with elbow very natural. Otherwise, you could have done the firing position anyway you want.
Hi self_taught_angler! This is just a sample chapter from Tim’s full class. ☺️
@@AprilVokey Okay, my bad, I missed that part.
👍👍👍✌️
Spray se llama espeyballa traduction😂