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February 27 2012

Pleasanton Fly Fishing Show Recap

The Pleasanton show ended yesterday, took me about a day to recover. What a show! For tenkara, this was the apex of the fly fishing show season, and the beginning of the “year of tenkara”.

This time the impression that we had a busy booth was confirmed  by multiple reports that indeed we had the busiest booth in the show! Our inventory dissipated like crazy despite the careful planning with experience from previous show. So, yes, I’m stoked – the tenkara community grew considerably this weekend.

Connecting with customers in person was certainly the highlight for our team. A new tenkara adopter, Mike Sevon and his wife wrote to us after the show,  ”Tillie and I  really enjoyed the show and being able to handle the different Tenkara rods was the highlight.  I spent the entire day on the internet learning as much as I could about Tenkara…Since we only bought one Tenkara rod, the 12 foot Iwana, I have a feeling we will be fighting over this rod until I get another one.”

Tenkara casting demo at Plesanton Show photo by Mike Sevon

Photo by Mike Sevon

TJ, our customer service face, and Masaki lent us their very passionate and energetic enthusiasm for all three days. It wouldn’t have happened without their help. They helped customers left and right and allowed me to give a couple of demonstrations or interact with other vendors and friends. A winning team.

Tenkara USA booth at Pleasanton Fly Fishing Show

The casting demonstrations again served to dispel the “myth” that tenkara is dapping. I couldn’t keep track of the number of people who stopped by our booth and said, “oh, so it’s just like dapping…”. I would respond that no, it is not, and invite them to watch the casting demo a few minutes later, or take them behind the booth and let them cast the rods themselves.

Tenkara casting demonstration at Pleasanton Fly Fishing Show

Next up, Pasadena! Please join us next Saturday and Sunday at the Fly Fishing Show in Pasadena. 

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February 25 2012

Pleasanton Fly Fishing Show
And, TFM Spotting Pictures

Our booth has been up and running at the Pleasanton Fly Fishing Show the last couple of day, and again I have to consider it a wild success! The show, again, is being greatly run by the Furimsky family, and I am very pleased we signed up for it – definitely will be coming back next year!

Masaki and TJ have been of immense and very passionate help in manning the booth with me. In these last two days we have introduced a huge number of people to tenkara – way more than I could have predicted even after attending the large Somerset show – so if you want to guarantee you get a tenkara rod this weekend, and are reading this, come early tomorrow!

Tenkara USA booth at the Fly Fishing Show in Pleasanton

A shoutout to The Fiberglass Manifesto blog run by Cameron Mortenson.

In Denver, Massachussets, Somerset and now Pleasanton we have spotted folks wearing his t-shirts. He has a passionate crowd of people who appreciate the work he’s doing, and we’re very happy he’s a guy who gets tenkara!

Today we had a visit by Derrol Hammer. He agreed we should get a cool TFM Spotting picture on the Tenkara USA booth. The first picture was supposed to be a funny picture, where the “manifesto” guy gets put against the tenkara wall. The other picture is just a good picture of him trying out the glassier-feeling tenkara rod, the Ayu.

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February 23 2012

Pleasanton Fly Fishing Show

Today we setup our booth at the Pleasanton Fly Fishing Show, tomorrow the real fun starts!
Daniel has two demonstrations scheduled at this show, one on Saturday at 10:15AM, and one on Sunday at 1:15PM. We also have lots of fly sets and stickers that we’ll be giving away to anyone who asks!
Tenkara Flies

Come by our booth and talk to us – by the way, you can’t miss us, we’re on the main pavillion and our sign is visible from just about anywhere.
See you there!

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February 20 2012

“The More You Know The Less You Need”

This article was originally written by Daniel Galhardo for Ryan Jordan, of Backpackinglight.com, with the theme “Pack Less Be More”:

The More you Know the Less you Need

The first time I read the phrase “The more you know, the less you need”, it was attributed to Yvon Chouinard, founder of Patagonia. A Patagonia employee was wearing a t-shirt with the quote during a tenkara class I was teaching in Japan. A couple of months later I met Yvon in person, he admitted the quote was a favorite of his but it was probably from someone else, Thoreau he guessed. Some quick online research indicates it is often recognized as an “aboriginal saying” (aboriginal = native born). No idea what aboriginal people are being credited with it, but perhaps the saying came from Japan.

The first time I saw tenkara, the Japanese fly-fishing technique that uses only a rod, line and fly, I realized I would be able to pack less when backpacking, but still enjoy that activity that is an excuse to send me outside: fly-fishing. The one thing that seemed too indispensible to fly-fishing, a no-brainer, was now disposed of.

It was so obvious, so clear, that it would be possible to fly fish without a reel, yet no one had bothered dispensing with their reels in pursuit of fly-fishing with less. Sure people had spent a lot of time thinking of how to lighten their fly fishing gear, make things more portable and still enjoy fly-fishing: use lighter materials for the rod, for the reel, for the line, shorten the rod, break it into seven pieces instead of two, get rid of the backing, make the reel smaller, maybe leave the extra fly-box at home.

Yet, getting rid of a reel was out of question, it seemed.

It turned out, the reel was dispensable, and highly so. Learning that there was, on the other side of the world, a legit fly-fishing technique that didn’t include a reel was like being awoken from a deep hypnosis. All of a sudden I could look around me, in a bit of a daze, and question all the other little items I was carrying. Do I really need floatant? Split-shots? Strike indicators? Multiple fly patterns?

The more I learned about tenkara, the more I realized things could get even simpler, that I could pack even less. The more I learned, the less I needed. I learned that tenkara anglers in Japan rely on only one fly pattern, so I started learning how to use my one fly pattern and could leave all others at home. I learned I did not have to carry split-shot, or floatant, but instead could rely on currents to make my fly sink, on technique to make it stay on the surface, or on knowledge to know that fish also take flies just below the surface if they are not dressed. I could even dispense with my knife, that hardest thing to let go of, when I learned I could clean a fish with a simple stick – didn’t even have to open it.

My current kit of essentials is a tenkara rod, spool of line, spool of tippet, small box of flies, nipper and hemostats. I add a whistle and lighter for emergency, and a small Frontier Pro water filter (this was added after drinking water directly from streams for years, but unknowingly carrying giardia all along).

I know that if fish is the only goal I could even leave it all behind and try “ticking” a fish for dinner. But, I am an angler.

Through Tenkara USA, I introduced tenkara outside of Japan. In doing so we were the first to say, “hey people, you don’t need a reel – and fly-fishing can be simpler!” Like it had happened to me, that simple act of removing a reel from the equation opened the eyes of a multitude of anglers to the fact that maybe they were carrying a lot of other unnecessary items too.

Awake from our hypnotic state, tenkara allowed us to look beyond our fly-fishing kit. We looked at our packs and asked, “what can we get rid of? What skills can replace pieces of gear?” We looked at our lives and asked, “what else can we learn? How can we be more?”

Who knows whether we would have ever awoken from that hypnotic state, the one that told us reels were necessary for fly-fishing, if tenkara wasn’t there, deep in the Japanese mountains, waiting to be discovered?

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February 18 2012

Image for the day: In Search of Tenkara

A picture I took while in Japan has been receiving a lot of comments on Facebook, so I thought I would share that here today.

In Search of Tenkara - shower climbing fishing

This image was taken in a remote mountain stream in Japan, while engaging in the activity they call “shower climbing”, where, dressed in wetsuits and sporting climbing equipment, we rappelled some waterfalls and climbed others in the pursuit of rare native Iwana.
At this particular spot I found myself alone, but with a gorgeous background. Not to miss the moment, I used the self-timer, placing the camera on a rock, and trying to make my way to the rock I had been fishing from a few moments earlier. The fish in this session eluded me, but the spirit of the adventure was certainly captured.
This adventure inspired me to write a full story, which I titled “In Search of Tenkara” and is the main feature story in the upcoming issue of The Fly Fish Journal. So, keep your eyes open, we’ll make a big announcement when that issue is out in the next couple of weeks.

By the way, here’s the reason we had to wear the wetsuits:
tenkara adventure

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February 08 2012

“Tenkara is not dapping” campaign

Tenkara is not dapping, tenkara fly casting

The most common misconception about tenkara it that it is just dapping – that because the line is tied to the tip of the rod, it is only lowered onto the water instead of cast as is done with western fly casting. At the recent fly fishing shows we attended, it was clear that a lot of people had heard of tenkara, at least in passing at this point, but a vast majority would say, “yes, I heard about it, it’s that dapping technique from Japan…” This assumption is all to common among those who have never tried it, but luckily very quickly dismissed by anyone who has or who has seen it in person. I pleaded the organizers of the Fly Fishing Show to give me sometime on the show’s ponds to demonstrate the casting techniques, and that was a huge eye opener to many attendants.

As the first company outside of Japan focused on introducing the method to others, a huge part of what we need to do is education of the public. In this stage in the game, we will be focusing on a new campaign: “Tenkara is Not Dapping”.  The first two products of the campaign are based on the photography and video clips taken by Brian Flemming of www.learntenkara.com.

We’d love to count on your help to post pictures, and videos showing that it is a method of fly fishing where casting is involved. Please inundate the web with the message that “Tenkara is not dapping”!

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February 06 2012

Maruhachi – A taste of old Japan in a mountain ryokan

Last May I got to spend 2 months in the Japanese mountain village of Maze, on the shores of the Mazegawa (Maze River). I went exclusively to learn everything I could about tenkara. But, along the way I definitely enjoyed some treats. One of the highlights was visiting the ryokan called Maruhachi. Actually, I had visited Maruhachi once before, in 2010, and really felt like I was in heaven at that place. Last year I was actually able to enjoy it 3 times! Once with my good friend Chikara and his wife Rebecca, once with a large group of tenkara anglers after a weekend clinic, and once with the local fishing cooperative officials.

Fuji no hana, tenkara flower

Rebecca is a freelance writer, and she just completed a story about the place for The Guardian. The story features some of my photographs. It is a very well written article that captures the essence of the place very well, even if it doesn’t mention tenkara.  If you are interested in learning more about Japan, and a place that could still be considered a heavenly secret, take a look at the writeup. My mouth is now watering remembering the 11-course meal of sansai (mountain vegetables), iwana sashimi and shioyaki amago (sea-salt on the skin and on a skewer).

Shioyaki amago

 

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