Articles

Review: The Believer by David Coggins

In a trope-riddled landscape of fly fishing writing, Coggins' latest is a standout
Photo: Markley Boyer.

I’ve spent much of my life writing for money and, because I’m a whore, all too often I’ve mined the things I love for subjects. One of these things is fly fishing, though I readily admit I’ve never written about it very well. I’ll also admit that, despite a lifetime of trying, I’ve never actually fly fished very well, either. This is part of the allure of worthwhile pursuits, that even when you do one with some level of occasional proficiency, the next day can be a completely different situation.

Luckily, taking photos of fly fishing is easier. Beautiful places, rugged individuals, humanity vs nature, eye-wateringly vivid fish captured on aesthetically pleasing, intricately tied flies … I want to say it’s harder to take bad fly fishing pics than good ones, but a quick scroll through Instagram proves otherwise. I’ve spent countless hours crouched by all manner of water swatting bloodthirsty insects with my camera while comrades wave sticks and lines around. The waving may as well be performative. As a photographer, a failure to hook up doesn’t impact my catch of easy-to-sell images for brands, media, and even fine art prints.

TL,DR: as any experienced writer knows — don’t @ me, photographers — making quality words is exponentially harder than quality pictures.

Yeah, I’ve dabbled with the keyboard. Plucked low hanging fruit for mags I worked at or ranted for odd niche fishing publications but, as Kenny Rogers crooned, ‘if you’re gonna play the game boy, you gotta learn to play it right.’ 

Therein lies the problem with writing about fly fishing: Doing it right. Because most don’t.

A big barrier for aspirational fly fishing wordsmiths looking to stand out is the preexisting murderer’s row of actual literary legends. Titans like Hemingway, Harrison, McGuane, Brautigan, and Arnold Gingrich — whose book Esquire editor-in-chief David Granger gifted me on my first day as a staff writer — leave a mountain of unfillable wading boots. In the modern era, writing about angling has become a trope. Bookstores ‘sports’ sections and our glossiest print mags bloat with awkward men (and it’s always men) wrestling with their father’s memory, humblebragging about trips or fish most of us will never experience, egomaniacally chasing nostalgia in their later years, or eulogizing lost dogs with the misplaced confidence of a man whose friends ‘like’ all their Tweets. For the reader, these stories scratch an itch, discussing a pastime we, a target audience, is obsessed with. Yet ultimately most are instantly forgettable.

The unique native rainbows of the southern Yukon

A one-of-a-kind strain of rainbow trout exists in an unlikely Canadian watershed
Photo: Earl Harper.

As we sat around what was left of the cooking fire on a bluff overlooking the stunning Aishihik Lake, happily sated by a robust New York strip that, minutes earlier, sizzled and snapped on the grill hung low over the coals, it was time to talk fish. Earlier that day, with our guide Allan Hansen, we’d motored around the lake and caught a good number of lake trout and northern pike. The lakers interested me the most. Some were short and big around. Others were behemoths. Still others were smaller and more sleek, and their colors were vibrant.

Life abundant

Rolling with the flow on the Lower Wisconsin
Winston Ostrow with a Lower Wisconsin smallmouth bass (photo: Kyle Zempel).

It felt like a slower-than-usual day. But then, on the morning after, I noticed a tender area a few inches to the right of my belly-button—not coincidentally, the place where I anchor the butt of my rod when I’m fighting a fish from a boat. The lesson being, I think, that even a slow day of smallmouth fishing on the lower Wisconsin River is still pretty good.

Five pounds of Sour Patch Kids

A conversation with author Michael Garrigan
Photo: Michael Garrigan.

Michael Garrigan’s life is a tapestry of words, water, and wild places. From the tranquil banks of the Susquehanna River to the rugged mountains of the Bob Marshall Wilderness, his experiences flow through his prose and poetry. Michael’s enlightened prose graces the pages of Orion Magazine, The Flyfish Journal, Gray’s Sporting Journal, and The Drake, and his two poetry collections–River, Amen and Robbing the Pillars–share immersive insights into his deep connection with the natural world.

Fishing the Murdich Minnow for smallmouth bass

One of the most effective bass patterns is also one of the most affordable and simplest to tie
Photo: George Daniel.

It has been said that anglers go through several stages during their angling lives. Recently, I’ve entered the stage where I am focused on simplifying the gear and patterns I use. I’ve also transitioned to fishing more warm water species within the last 6 years, including my current favorite—smallmouth bass. As a recreational smallmouth angler, I find it easy to decrease my selection. I’m not guiding for bass or entering bass tournaments where carrying a greater range of patterns might prove useful during the rare times when my staple patterns fail to produce a strike.

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