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| "Spey
Fishing for Trout" Getting Started The development of Spey fishing began in Scotland, but chances are it came to your area through the American Northwest. The style is named for the River Spey, which begins in the Scottish Highlands and meanders its way north east to its mouth in the Moray Firth, emptying into the North Sea. |
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The river is broad, the salmon in it are strong, and rods and styles developed to match those conditions. Typical rods in use on those waters are 15 to 18 feet long, rated for a #10 line, and two-handed. Traditional fishing demands the angler stream wet flies “on the dangle” through the current, hoping to entice a salmon to bite during its spawning run. How did such a muscular style of fishing ever come to be used on trout streams? The answer lies in America. In the second half of the
Twentieth Century, anglers on both shores of the North American continent
began using two-handed rods for their salmon fishing. At first, styles
mimicked the Scottish roots: flies were dangled, rods were slow, the cast
graceful. |
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| Technically, the term ‘spey’
is all wrong. Scots will point out that the two-handed style is in use
on many rivers, including the Dee, the Tweed, and all over the world.
“Spey,” they maintain, is a style of casting, not a type of
rod. However, language being what language is, the name stuck, and if
you look today you will find “spey” rods, reels, and lines.
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The Mouth of the River Tweed |
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For the purposes of most American trout fishing, no spey rod above a #7 is light enough. The best (and only) trout speys on the market tend to be from a #5 to a #7, 12’ to 14’ long, with a soft tip and a rather traditional action. When choosing a trout spey, look for a rod with the proper length of cork on both upper and lower grips, preferably at least 6” below and 10” above. This will allow you to fit the rod to your grip and will help in finding a reel to balance without breaking the bank on a billfish reel. Balance is crucial in spey casting: be sure your reel is heavy enough and has enough capacity to contain at least a #10 line before attempting to purchase a spey line. For most purposes, Rio’s 5/6 Windcutter is an excellent beginner’s option, which will continue to serve just fine as you progress. |
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![]() The Author on the Banks of the Clinch |
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| The leader should be at least the length of the rod. For my 13’ rod, I typically choose a 12’ 5x leader, and I add 3’ of 6x fluorocarbon tippet. For nymphing fluorocarbon tippet is a good choice – it has a higher specific density than monofilament and will sink faster, keeping your leader from bowing as much in the water column. Strike indicators are a necessity. Choose an indicator that does not rely on being dry to float. Yarn is a poor choice, because so many of the spey casts leave the line on the water, dragging it through the film, and yarn will swamp. Palsa foam floats work for a few casts, but eventually they torque off the leader under the strain of spey fishing. I choose to use snap-on or toothpick indicators. On most trout waters appropriate for spey fishing, a larger indicator is just fine. | |
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to use it? Trout spey water can be hard to spot. Some locations are easy: Rim Shoals on the White River in Arkansas is a 100 to 300 yard wide, one to four foot deep shoal at low water – classic spey water. However, the Clinch River in Tennessee, which flows through the oldest TVA dam in the country near Norris, is also excellent spey water, despite its low gradient and slow current. Trout speys are appropriate anywhere a long drift is desirable, where water is deep enough to rig an indicator and nymph, or where current means mending and reaching the depths within 40’ is practically impossible. Many rivers in the country are appropriate for trout speys, even in the East. |
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![]() Rim Shoals on the White River |
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Indicator nymphing with a trout spey can be a real
joy. You have a number of options. Most seams can be approached from below,
above, or the side, depending on water conditions. When you locate your
foam line or current seam and spot your approach, you can choose which
tactic best suits your needs. When approaching a seam from above, try
carrying along a stripping basket and pulling 100’ or so of line
into it before beginning the drift. (Yes, I said 100’.) Begin with
a Czech nymphing style, reaching the nymph above you briefly to allow
it to sink below its indicator. Rig your indicator so that the nymph bounces
along the bottom but hangs up as little as possible. I choose to weight
most of my leaders about a foot above the fly. When the nymph reaches
the end of the Czech swing, lower your rod while feeding line. The spey
rod is a significant lever, and it will give you plenty of drop time to
get your line flowing smoothly. Keeping the rod tip close to the water,
play line out of the basket while swishing the rod side to side to feed
line. Mend line as needed with a left or right handed soft throw to keep
your fly in the seam. Be prepared- takes can come at any point, and on
a long drift it is difficult to read water. Concentrate on avoiding drag
on the indicator and trust the weight on your leader to keep your fly
bouncing smoothly. Rods and Reels The current rod and reel market for trout speys is surprisingly slim. Sage makes a 12’ 5 weight in their traditional series, and it is probably the top of the market, but you will pay for it. For people used to one handed prices, spey equipment can carry some serious sticker shock. A $750 spey rod, with a $500 reel of appropriate size, and a $75 spey line can add up. Other options are available, however. A Japanese company called CND owned by former Daiwa-UK rod designer Nobuo Nodera makes excellent, cheaper speys. Their Expert series 13’ 6/7 throws a 5/6 Windcutter nicely and sports appropriate cork, a decent reel seat, especially nice internal ferrules, and quality wraps. CND emphasizes cork, blank, and ferrules more than most companies. A jewelry-bedecked trout spey does not currently exist. Another option is Temple Fork Outfitters rods. TFO offers a 12’6” 6 weight which will handle the Windcutter 5/6, but this rod is lighter and faster than the CND. If you intend to try a lot of nighttime overhead casting, or boat angling, the TFO would be a good choice. Both the CND and the TFO are under $300. Most reels capable of holding a #10 WF line are appropriate for trout speys. Ross’s Canyon Big Game 4 will hold a Windcutter 5/6, as will Redington’s Brakewater and Teton’s big game offerings. Because this is, after all, a trout reel, a killer drag is not required. |
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Spey rods carry some odd traditions, and it would be a shame to turn away from a rod just because you didn’t know why certain choices were made. Most traditional speys have an insert-style tip top, like a casting rod. |
![]() Paraffin Wax and Electrical Tape |
Most traditional speys are downlocking, and they frequently
carry a large metal and rubber fighting butt. Typical spey handle designs
are full wells both on top and on bottom. |
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![]() First tape up both sides of the ferrule, then wrap around. |
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Spey Lines Spey lines largely control spey casts. Most spey lines
are a variant of the Wulff Triangle taper (or vice versa). Because a standard
spey cast involves forming a D loop of line from the middle of the line
and throwing it into the air, most of the weight of the spey line must
be at that middle point. Accordingly, most spey lines taper gradually
almost all the way from the back of the head, where they are very thick,
to the front. Custom spey lines can be constructed out of different sizes
of component lines using knotless splices, but thankfully most trout fishing
will not require such complex maneuvers. Differences in Trout Spey
Approach |