Showing posts with label Keiichi Okushi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Keiichi Okushi. Show all posts

Five Fly ~ Kebari


Yoshikazu Fujioka | David Southall | Adam Trahan | Keiichi Okushi | David West Beale

Let's get straight to the point, there is a lot of experience here. We have been fishing long enough to know what works where and have travelled enough to know how our choices served our craft of catching fish. I enjoy this type of article and am honored to be able to coerce the ideas from such a great group of fly fishermen & tenkara fishers. 
Yes, the group of us do both.
What would your choices be? 

How far have you successfully travelled with your choices? 

Without going on any longer, let's get into it.

Tenkara Dry Kebari #1

Tenkara Dry Kebari #1-2


1. Tenkara Dry Kebari

Tenkara flies do not have the distinction between dry flies and wet flies like Western style flies, but this is a dry kebari exclusively for fishing on the water surface.

The hook is #13-#11, tie gold flat tinsel on the hook as the foundation, show the tinsel of about 1-1.5mm on the hook-bend as the tag. The body is made of zenmai fern cotton, silk thread, synthetic dubbing, peacock herl, owl quill, etc., and the hackle is made of rooster, and the tail is not attached. This kebari has the indicator of synthetic wing material to find easily. This is shaped like the cripple pattern of Western fly and may sink half its body to the water surface.

Tenkara Soft Hackle Kebari #1

Tenkara Soft Hackle Kebari #1-2

 2. Tenkara Soft Hackle Kebari

This is a traditional tenkara kebari pattern, a kebari for underwater fishing and much like the soft hackle pattern of Western flies. The hook is #12-#10, tie the body by zenmai fern cotton that is a traditional material of tenkara kebari, wool yarn, silk thread synthetic dubing, etc. Feathers of pheasant and copper pheasant are often used for the hackle of tenkara kebari, but I like the softness and color of the fiber and also use wing feathers or tail feathers of sparrow.

Tenkara Sakasa Kebari

 3. Tenkara Sakasa Kebari

This is sakasa-kebari (reverse hackle fly) that is a pattern of traditional tenkara kebari uses pheasant feathers for the hackle and, this is kebari to fish in the underwater. The hook is #11-#10, tie the body by zenmai fern cotton, wool yarn, silk thread synthetic dubing, etc. Feather of pheasant and copper pheasant are often used for hackles, but I also often use hen hackle and hen saddle. I tie kebari so that it may not become the reverse hackle of narrow angle.

CDC Wing Caddis

 4. CDC Wing Caddis

Various types of caddis can be found in the mountain streams throughout the fishing season. This is a fly that can be adapted to many situations by changing its size and color. This is the fly that I use the most in Western style fly fishing, and it is no exaggeration to say that this is almost the only fly I use throughout the season. The hook is #15-#11, the body by synthetic dubbing and the wing is 2-4 pieces of CDC, the hackle is rooster.

Griffith's Gnat

 5. Griffith's Gnat

This is a very popular midge size fly that I take as my last resort even when I go tenkara fishing, but I don't use too small size. I use hooks of #18-#12. Not only for fly fishing, but also for tenkara fishing I use it when trout are interested in fly and kebari , but they are wary and do not eat it or when I find a trout that actively rises to midges. I also have a indicator of synthetic wing materia on it for easy to find.

The reason why I chose two kebari/fly

I started Western style fly fishing in the late 1970s. When it comes to fly fishing, the usual approach is to prepare a variety of fly patterns according to the fish's feeding habits, and I was like that at first. However, as I gained more experience, I have come to realize that the fun of fly fishing is not just to fishing, but that there are many more around it.

 Today, I think that I only need to catch only the trout that can be caught with my fly, and I enjoy both Tenkara fishing and Fly fishing depending on the conditions of the mountain stream and my mood at that time. I am mainly using the dry kebari also for the tenkara fishing because I liked the dry fly fishing of Western style from the first. To fish the trout on the surface of water has interest different from the fishing by fly of wet type. Although it is not the original tenkara fishing method, tenkara that does not put the line on the water surface does not make an unnatural motion of kebari. It is easy to drift kebari without drag.

In particular, my favorite kebari or fly are my self made dry kebari with a indicator of synthetic wing material to make it easy to find, and the wet type kebari that is used according to the situation such as the early season when trout are not concerned about the water surface.

My self made kebari are tied a gold flat tinsel as the foundation on the hook, and the tinsel of about 1-1.5mm is shown on the hook bend as the tag. It is the mark of my kebari but I don't know the effect of this gold tag well.

I feel that if the kebari is used many times and the material of the body wears down and the tinsel of foundation becomes visible, it will become a hook that can be caught well.

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David Southall


I much prefer to fish with dry flies rather than subsurface so only one of my flies is a subsurface pattern. I do occasionally fish with traditional Kebari patterns, but in 2010 when I first saw the Tenkara videos on the Tenkara USA website I realized that it was the perfect way to present my usual dry flies on my annual visits to the boisterous alpine streams of Austria. The tiny pockets of calmer water amongst the maelstrom of white water had caused me and my fishing friend Steve big problems in the past, even when high-sticking with our 10’ 4 weight rods and 14’ leaders.

2010/11 winter was one of our coldest of recent years in the UK and I soon realized the advantages of Tenkara in sub-zero (below 32 degrees F) conditions whilst fishing for grayling. There were no rod rings to freeze up, no wet hands from retrieving fly line and I could keep one hand in my warm pocket whilst wearing a glove on the other hand. Tenkara proved to be perfect for short-line euro-nymphing.

After experimenting with Tenkara for the last thirteen years I now usually only fish with a fixed line on the turbulent, boulder-ridden pocket water where it offers the only means of achieving a good presentation. On these waters the fish tend to be opportunistic and are happy to rise to big flies. I also still sometimes use a Tenkara setup to fish for grayling, particularly in the winter with both subsurface flies and tiny size 24 to 30 CdC Midge. 

So here are my 5 favorite flies for Tenkara.

Flip Flop Scarab Noire side view

1. Size 12 or 10 Flip Flop Scarab Noire

This has proved to be a deadly pattern throughout the summer on all of the waters that I fish. Its name dates back to a fishing session in the in the Austrian alps near Gerlos when I followed a French angler up a pool on the Schonachbach. He failed to catch anything, whilst I landed 3 good sized rainbow trout with my black beetle imitation. On my return to the hotel later in the day the French guy was telling his mates about this English man who was catching loads of fish with a “Scarab Noire”. A couple of years later friends Stuart Crofts and Don Stazicker (both top UK fly fishers) joined Steve Donohue and I on a trip to the same hotel. On our arrival who should be there but the French man who enthusiastically greeted me as “Monsieur le Scarab Noire”. On that trip I was given the challenge to catch the first fish each day on my Scarab Noire. It was September and one morning we woke up to find a heavy snowfall and a temperature of -6 degrees C at the alpine hut on the Krimmler Ache, altitude 5200 feet. Trudging through the falling snow I seriously doubted my ability to rise a fish to the foam beetle, but I need not have worried; casting my fly into a small pool on a side stream we saw several bow waves head for my offering. The result was a little brook trout securely hooked. For the rest of the day I continued to catch both brook trout and brown trout from the main river using the same fly. Cast it with a plop into a pocket in the white water of an alpine stream and give it a subtle twitch or two (something that is impossible with a conventional rod and fly line) and if there is fish there a take is virtually guaranteed.

Flip Flop Scarab Noire bottom view

Tying:

Hook: Size 12 or 10 dry fly

Thread: Black

Body: Peacock Ice Dub or peacock herl

Back: 2mm black sealed cell foam

Legs: 2 strands of single-knotted peacock here, untied in on each side

Sighter: Pink poly yarn

Apply super glue where the foam is tied in to prevent it from rotating on the hook shank.

Elk Hair Caddis

2. Size 14 to 10 Elk Hair Caddis

The late Malcolm Greenhalgh, one of the UK’s top fly fishers, once described the Elk Hair Caddis as one of the world’s most successful dry flies. It imitates not only adult caddis/sedge flies, but also stoneflies, alder flies and moths. If I ever had to fish with only one dry fly then this would be the one. It is a fly that will lift up fish that are not actively searching for surface food. Furthermore, it floats well and its weight and streamlined shape helps it to punch into the wind. Furthermore, it is highly visible against dark backgrounds such as at dusk. When fished against light backgrounds I often add a sighter of pink poly yarn. I’ve caught brown trout, rainbow trout, various species of char and grayling all over the world using this pattern. If the fish are reticent about taking it dead-drift I either give it a few twitches or drag it so that it creates a bow-wave to induce a take.

Hook: Size 14 to 10 dry fly

Thread Tan or brown

Tag (optional): Brown poly yarn (this helps with buoyancy)

Body: Spiky squirrel dubbing

Under-wing: Brown deer hair

Over-wing: Bleached Elk 

Long-shank Chernobyl Ant

3. Size 14 or 12 Long-shank Chernobyl Ant

This is a deadly fly on the high alpine streams of Austria and Italy and I am sure elsewhere. It is a good imitation of grasshoppers, crickets and large beetles. It is very buoyant so floats well on turbulent water and does not need repeated applications of flotant. Its weight makes it easy to cast into the wind and the plop that it makes when landing lets the fish, even in the most turbulent stream, know that potential food had landed on the water. Furthermore, being bulky, with a large surface area in contact with the water, it ‘anchors’ to the surface so is not dragged out of small pockets by any line-sag (I always fish with the lightest level fluorocarbon line that is possible). Brook trout in particular love a twitched Chernobyl Ant, simulating the struggling of a large insect trapped in the surface film and even small ones will engulf this big fly.

Hook: Size 12 long-shank

Thread: Any colour 6/0 (this thickness so that it doesn’t cut into the foam)

Body: 2 layers of 2mm sealed cell foam. Any color (green, yellow or brown if there are lots of grasshoppers about, but I usually use black)

Legs: Black brown or green rubber-legs

Sighter: Pink poly yarn

(Black) Klinkhamer

4. Size 10 (Black) Klinkhamer

Hans van Klinken’s Klinkhamer was originally designed as an imitation of the large emerging caddis flies/sedges that are common in Sweden and Norway. It has now morphed into patterns that imitate a number of emerging or half-drowned insects. This is another fly that, thanks to its submerged rear end, ‘anchors’ well into the river surface resisting any drag from currents or line-sag. It is a suitable representation of a range to terrestrial insect and tied with a brown body and hackle is a good imitation of the larger Heptageneids and emerging caddis/sedge flies.

Hook: Size 10 grub or Klinkhamer

Thread: Black or brown

Body: Black or brown ice dub or similar

Hackle: Black, brown or grizzle genetic cock

Post/wing: Pink, grey, white or brown poly yarn

Orange Utah Killer Bug variant

5. Orange Utah Killer Bug variant

I would not be without this sub-surface fly, particularly when fishing for grayling. The original Frank Sawyer’s Killer Bug was designed to kill grayling on his part of the Hampshire Avon where there were so many grayling that they were at that time considered to be vermin. It was tied with just reddish colored copper wire taken from a transformer and Chadwick’s 477 wool, a greyish brown with a hint of pink. The wire under-body gave it some weight so that it would sink to the depth at which the grayling normally feed, close to the river bed. It subsequently proved to be effective for trout as well as the grayling. 

When I first saw the Utah Killer Bug, a variant of Sawyer’s pattern, in a post on the internet that I believe was by the Utah Tenkara Guides, I thought that it looked interesting. Their pattern substituted pink wire for Sawyers reddish wire and Jamieson’s Shetland Spindrift, oyster coloured wool for the Chadwicks’ wool. However, the pink wire base was far too light to take a fly down to the grayling in the deep sections of my local chalk stream, Driffield Beck. As a result, I tied some up with a lead wire base covered with fluorescent pink Globrite Floss, before covering with a single layer of the oyster colored wool. A single layer of wool over the bright floss ensures that the colour pink to ‘glow’ through the wool when the fly is wet. This and a small bit of pink thread exposed at the hook bend and where the fly is tied off I am sure act as attractants. 

I have found the pink version to be very effective for both grayling and trout, but knowing that grayling have a taste for orange as indicated by their preference for scuds/Gammarus that are infected with the acanthocephalan parasite, Pomphorhynchus laevis, that accumulates the carotenoid pigments in the scud’s body producing a bright orange spot in the middle of the scud’s body, I therefore tied some up with fluorescent orange Globrite floss and it is this version that has accounted for many UK grayling up to over 3 pounds. 

My best Tenkara session on my local chalk stream resulted in nine big grayling being hooked with seven from 1 pound 10 ounces to 2 pounds 15 ounces being landed in just twenty minutes from one deep pool.

Pink Utah Killer Bug variant

Hook: Size 16 to 10 grub

Thread: Orange or pink Globrite Floss

Under-body: 1 layer of lead wire or lead substitute covered with the floss

Over-body: 1 layer of Jamieson’s Shetland Spindrift wool

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26 years ago, I meet Yoshikazu Fujioka, we had just started making our fly-fishing web sites. We corresponded and began a friendship through fly fishing and now tenkara. 

His web site can be found at this link: My Best Streams

The first version of the idea of a few favorite flys are detailed here: Fly Box

Fujioka san is the resource for tenkara kebari. Although I use only a few versions of tenkara kebari, if I were to experiment more, his site is where I would do my research. What I have found is that tenkara kebari are related to "communities in different areas" and different materials sourced from the area of the community. Historically, kebari patterns were not shared as they were the tenkara secrets of the profession bringing trout to market. 

Now that tenkara is a sport fishing choice, and with the advent of the Internet, tenkara kebari patterns are shared from common resources such as magazines and books as well as online.

My fly fishing fly choices has evolved since I have been fishing tenkara for the last fourteen years. I tend to use flys that work everywhere. The Caddis Dry is almost an attracter pattern. The Zebra midge imitates a variety of midges and the Pine Squirrel Leech is a streamer that imitates all kinds of aquatic life. The Zenmai kebari is my choice of respect to the old ways of tenkara. But it is often that magic fly that wards off the evil spirit that is a skunk.

In short, my five fly/kebari have now been influenced by my love of both tenkara and fly fishing and 
are detailed below.

In no particular order.
  • Wrong Kebari
  • Zenmai Kebari
  • Caddis Dry
  • Zebra Midge
  • Bead Head Pine Squirrel Leech
Wrong Kebari


This fly/kebari epitomizes my tenkara choice. The hook is made for nesting type rods, the soft hackle provides "action" and the addition of a small tungsten bead will promote hook point up weedless presentation and enhanced water column availability as well as a uniform swimming pattern. I started out with the pattern as a un-weighted fly but now prefer the beaded version.

The recipe and story for the Wrong Kebari can be found at this link: Wrong Kebari

...and the development of the beaded version can be found at this link: Wrong Kebari with bead.

Wrong Fly with tungsten bead variation (bead is buried at the start of the hook bend)

Zenmai Kebari

The last zenmai kebari I tyed

There is no one single pattern that I stick to. It could be a variety of feather types on a keiryu hook with zenmai or the fiddle head fern fuzz applied to the hook as a body. I have heard more than once from Japanese tenkara fishers that zenmai can easily be replaced by any number of dubbing choices. 

I disagree.

For me, it isn't replaceable.

It IS tenkara and represents where tenkara is from and I am taking zenmai with me.

Caddis Dry

I tied this one 25+ years ago


My first dry fly that I caught a fish or at least the first fly that I caught fish on that I knew the pattern name. My first dry fly that I have tied (and caught a fish on) and it is a pattern that I have used not matching the hatch and still caught at a good catch rate.

Easy to see, very useful and productive fly.

Zebra Midge


Ted Welling, inventor of the Zebra Midge recently passed. He worked with Lees Ferry Anglers on the Colorado River. I've been fishing the Zebra Midge for big tailwater trout since day one of my fly fishing and it works equally as well with honryu tenkara. Although I do not choose a Zebra Midge for keiryu tenkara, it would work and probably work very well as it imitates a variety of insects in their larval form. The Zebra Midge is a big fish fly I would not be caught without, tenkara or fly.




Bead Head Mini Leach


...or a bead head wooly bugger but I am picking this streamer version more and more and it is a fly that works in all types of streams and rivers for BIG FISH. 

I have even used this for #untenkara in urban impoundments. 

Easy to tye, I use a tungsten bead.


--------------------

Keiichi Okushi

Mr. Kenji Osawa

Osawa Kebari

One of my genryu fishing friend Osawa-san (Mr. Kenji Osawa) recently became a tenkara fishing field tester for Shimano. So, I would like to introduce 3 of my favorite kebari that Osawa-san ties.

Before talking about his kebari, I would like to introduce Osawa-san a little. Osawa-san was Born in Fujimi City, Saitama Prefecture in 1972.

He began Fishing at the age of 7 with freshwater fish such as crucian carp and motsugo. He started mountain stream bait fishing at the age of 20, and moved to tenkara in his late 20s when he started going to genryu. He was working for a major fishing tackle store for over 20 years. Therefore, he has deep knowledges and experiences in various types of fishing. He is currently active as a Shimano tenkara fishing field tester, and he also acts as the ambassador for tenkara brand "10colors", and a fishing writer.
 
Zenmai-dou Akashiba Hanagasa

Zenmai-dou Akashiba Hanagasa

We use this kebari all season long. Especially from March to May, when there are many mayflies such as Kinpaku and Pinchoro hatch, this pattern does great job. Body material is zenmai cotton, that has been used for body material since long time ago in Japan. Akashiba is the name of a Japanese dog, and he named it so because it has a similar hair color to this kebari. Hen feathers are used for brown and brown speckled. Peacock is used for the chest, and it is put in to give it a little appeal. The copper wire on the body is not only realistic, but also has the meaning of improving the durability of the zenmai body, which is easy to unravel.

Zenmai-dou Akashiba Sakasa

 Zenmai-dou Akashiba Sakasa

It is a Hanagasa sakasa pattern kebari. You can drift it without action, but if you give a detailed action, the sakasa hackle moves like open and close, increasing the sense of life. Hen's feathers are used for the hackle to give it the softness.

Kai-dou Kurotora Hanagasa

 Kai-dou Kurotora Hanagasa

We use all season. I use it when black river bugs and aquatic insects hatch even in early spring. Even after early summer, when there are many black terrestrial insects, it is a good kebari with a stable response. We use soft hen feathers. The peacock on the chest is put in to increase the appeal a little.

Other 2 kebari I mainly use are as follows.

Adams Parachute

 Adams Parachute

As I am also the western fly fisher and I like dry fly fishing, I often use western dry flies such as parachute patterns or elk hair caddis patterns. My most favorite dry fly is Adams Parachute or March Brown Parachute. I love dry fly fishing because I can see the fish bites on the surface of water. It is exciting and I often tie these parachute flies on my tenkara line.

Sebata Kebari Kijibane Sakasa kuro

 Sebata Kebari Kijibane Sakasa kuro

I always keep this kebari in my kebari case as a way of showing my greatest respect to Sebata-san, who had led the headwater fishing world for a long time.

Kiji-bane Sakasa Kuro is the most famous Sebata Kebari patern. The body was tied with self sticking tape, which is Yuzo Sebata's favorite material. The tape has certain weight and kebari sinks well. Soft pheasant feathers shimmer well in the water and entices trout. So to give action to the kebari is ideal for this patern.

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Our fly boxes can tell a lot about the kind of fishing we enjoy - preferred species, types of water, styles of presentation, philosophy even.

Here is my journey to five kebari I would take anywhere…

Several seasons ago, I took a limited box of flies with me to the water but found that I was defaulting to one pattern more and more. At first it wasn't a conscious decision, it just seemed that this particular pattern caught more fish more often, and of course once a fly becomes a favorite it is in effect a self-fulfilling prophesy. Because, of all your flies, this one spends the most time in the water, it stands to reason that it will probably catch you the most fish… until of course it doesn't and then you experiment with a different fly, perhaps get some instant success and then a new favorite emerges…

This fly choice is very subjective and most probably matched not so much to any hatch, but more to the random good fortune of catching a fish that has been offered up by the alignment of all sorts of unknown variables. But as time goes on we rationalize our fly choice, even develop our own theories or adopt the theories of others about why this or that fly works. However, if we were to try to prove our theory in any scientific way we would only have very scant data on which to base our observations, probably no control subject and absolutely no controlled environment. So we must say that our faith in a particular fly is exactly that - an act of faith or at best, flimsy empirical observation. Rather than faith, I prefer to think of it as ‘confidence’ and as we all know, confidence in fishing is a very large part of success.


 And herein lies the dilemma of the abundant fly box, for when our go-to pattern/s fail us we search for a new fly that will work. We try this pattern, we try that pattern, but the more choice we have the more likely we are to confuse ourselves with options. And confusion leads to a lowering of confidence. Not only are we no longer fishing effectively but we are actually fishing less - because with all the chopping and changing of flies we have a fly in the water for less of the time. Perhaps then we look to others for advice, which is fine, but wouldn't we really be happier avoiding these pitfalls in the first place?

In contrast to a western-style imitative fly, the kebari is a blank canvas on which to paint a representation of life. This is achieved through how we cast and where, when and how we fish our fly. Our kebari is tied to give an impression of nothing in particular except that of life. The skill is in presenting our kebari to the fish in such a way that it is induced to take our fly, regardless of the natural food forms present.

When I decided that for some of my fishing trips I would limit myself to just one pattern, it was with the intention of developing my fishing skills. I would explore the many ways a single fly pattern can be fished and manipulated with tenkara.

So now, instead of trying to match a fly to any particular scenario I'm selecting a method of presentation to tackle that scenario. For most of my fishing last season I used just one pattern of kebari in size a 14 for some trips and the same pattern in a size 16 (but with a tiny bead head) for other trips. Never did I switch between the two versions during the day, I stuck instead with my initial choice for each particular trip. I should also explain here that I often use a tenkara approach to catch many species other than trout and it was with these in mind that the size 16 bead head kebari was used. If I was fishing only for trout I could have literally confined myself to just one pattern for all of my trips and still have fished with confidence. I would also say that the precise pattern is not so important - I would be equally happy to follow the same approach this season with a different 'one fly'.


 These are the benefits I discovered from a one fly approach which are of course highly subjective but worth sharing:

• no worries

With one fly I am relaxed and free from worry about things I cannot change:

I'm freed from the worry of leaving this or that pattern at home by mistake or losing my last one of that type in a tree or on a rock - it's pretty quick and easy to tie up a half a dozen kebari of the same pattern at home - more than enough for me for a trip and as long as I take them with me there's not much else to worry about..

I'm freed from the worry that I am fishing with the 'wrong' fly pattern - since I only have one pattern I must by definition be fishing with the right one..

• simplicity

With one fly comes simplicity and with simplicity comes clarity, efficiency and elegance:

With my one fly tied on I can arrive at the water and be fishing within seconds if I wish. If on the other hand I wish to just sit and observe, I am ready to fish instantly when the desire arises, with no fumbling around for the 'correct' pattern..

and since I'm not chopping and changing patterns, I'm spending more time actually fishing my fly in the water, or alternatively I have more time to stop and observe..

• travelling light

one simple little fly box..

• clarity

freedom from the confusion of too many choices of fly pattern and freedom to think just about reading the water and observing the fish's behaviour..

• learning

on-stream, because I'm free to focus on learning to read the water and observe fish behaviour, I'm more open to learning which approach might provide an effective presentation - and since I'm always using the same fly it's a swifter route to learning the subtle nuances of each presentation and how they may be influenced by us or the environment..

• authenticity

because there is nowhere to hide with the one fly approach, success is more rewarding and more authentic - somehow I feel more of an angler in the purest sense, fishing this way..

Where to next?

By fishing one fly and enjoying these benefits I created a space for myself where I could relax and enjoy my fishing more, catch more fish and learn new approaches. Because of extensive fishing of this one pattern I also learned the limitations of the dark colored soft hackle sakasa kebari I chose to restrict myself to.

Given differing light conditions and colors of river bed gravels, I felt there were times when a light colored fly would be easier for me to see and/or the fish to see. There were also times when I would have liked a stiff hackle version to try surface manipulations more effectively or to hold my fly in a pocket within the flow.


 And while none of this is really a surprise it does guide me very nicely in my fly box choices for this year. A collection of just five patterns - a dark soft hackle and a light soft hackle kebari, together with a dark colored and a light-colored stiff hackle kebari, plus a bead head soft hackle. A small collection of flies that will allow me to overcome these 'restrictions' and provide a large repertoire of presentations. More than almost anywhere else in fly fishing, the design of kebari are defined by their intended function, how they will be presented, how they will be fished.

None of these considerations are entomology-based, but they are nevertheless very effective routes to catching fish by induced take. In fact I have my suspicions that even with western style flies most takes are in reality induced and seldom do we actually deceive a fish into mistaking our fly for a specific insect. But this is another subject entirely and one for another time…



A Day Fishing Trip to Touge-zawa



One day in June, I received an email from my American friend John-san. He said he was coming to Japan for a few weeks on business in July, so he asked me if he could meet me somewhere for a day. In fact, I only exchanged emails with John-san, and it would be the first time for us to meet. We talked about going fishing if we were going to see each other, and we decided to go fishing to some genryu where we could go on a day trip.


I got acquainted with John-san through the introduction of Adam-san, who is a fishing friend of mine and the webmaster of this “tenkara fisher”. Adam-san told me that they have been friends since they were teenagers. After that, John-san came to Japan for work when he was on his 20's and get married to a Japanese woman. John-san said that he worked in Tokyo until he was 50 years old. That's why John-san is very fluent in Japanese, especially when it comes to writing and using kanji. I lived in Tokyo for 4 years during my university days and afterwards I was working in Tokyo until I was 40 years old, so We may have met somewhere without knowing.


Well, we exchanged emails several times and decided to go to the genryu of my home river Naka River. However, this time I decided to go to Yukawa, a tributary, instead of the main stream of Naka River I usually go to. John-san told me that he would go to a town near the destination the night before and stay overnight. So, I decided to pick him up at the hotel early in the morning next day.


Yukawa means “river of hot water”. The name derives from the fact that hot springs spring up in the headwaters of Yukawa, and this Yukawa and surrounding areas are a special place because of two reasons. One reason is in the past, along the headwaters of the Yukawa, an old road called Aizu Naka Kaido was crossing the Nasu mountain range from north, Aizu Domain, to the south in Edo period. The road was built along the Yukawa. After the end of Meiji era, there were no more people using the road, and now it has become a trail that is inferior to mountain trails. The remains of this road and iwana fishing at the genryu of Yukawa are introduced in detail in a previous book written by Mr. Takakuwa.(Refer to #45 Takakuwa-san)


Second reason is there is a hot spring source area called 'Hakuyusan” at the tributaries of Yukawa. From the late Edo period to the Meiji period, the folk religion called "Kou" who came to worship “Hakuyusan” as an object of faith was very popular. If you walk upstream along the river for about an hour on the forest road from the car stop of Yukawa, you will find a surprisingly wide flat land in the mountains with an altitude of 1,100m. The size is about 3 soccer courts. This is the place where there used to be a post town called "Santogoya-shuku". During the Edo period, it was used as a post station on the road, and during the Meiji period, it was used as a post town for worshipers of Hakuyusan. During the peak period, more than 30 inns were built in this mountain, and it is said that more than 1,000 worshipers visited on a busy day.


It is said that ko was originally a group formed by Buddhist monks to study doctrines, but later came to refer to groups and acts of folk worshiping ethnic religions and nature. During the Edo period, "Fuji-ko," which worshiped Mt. Fuji as a religious object, was very popular. Here in Yukawa, the source of hot spring "Gohozen", which gushes out in Ozawa, a tributary of Yukawa, had become an object of worship. Hot spring water is still gushing out from Gohozen today, but it is used as a source for the Itamuro hot spring town at the foot of the mountain.


Well, the day came. I left my house early in the morning before sunrise, picked up John-san at the hotel after driving for about two hours, and we arrived at the car stop in Yukawa after 6:00 in the morning. Yukawa around here is taken the water by the intake dam a little upstream, so it is not the original amount of water. However, John-san, who said that it is the first time for genryu fishing in Japan, said that it was a wonderful and beautiful flow. The surrounding mountains create an atmosphere of deep mountains and hidden valleys. There were already two cars parked at the car stop, but as Sawanobori(Stream climbing) is popular around here, I arbitrarily judged they were for sawanobori.


We quickly prepared for fishing and started walking the forest road. For about 30 minutes, the forest road went along the Yukawa, but after that, the road left the stream a little and turns sharply and climbs the slope of the mountain. Before long, Aizu Naka Kaido joined from the right. The stone signpost at the three-way intersection said 'Bakuhan-zaka to the right'. Interesting name. Bakuhan-zaka means “barley rice slope”. According to Takakuwa-san's book, “Once upon a time, if a traveler had cried out to the inn at Santogoya-shuku from the top of Bakuhan-zaka, Inn staff started cooking rice and the rice was cooked about when the traveler arrived at the inn. That is interesting story.


About 15 minutes later, the steep uphill ended, and the vast plain of the Santogoya-shuku spread out in front of us. There were splendid stone lanterns, water bowls, stone monuments, and signboards explaining Santogoya-shuku, reminiscent of the past. At the end of the post town, there was a path on the right, and at the end there was a magnificent torii gate. There was nothing behind the Torii gate. Only the Ozawa Valley, a tributary that separated it from the Yukawa Valley, and the mountains spread out. I thought the direction ahead of this torii must be the direction of Gohozen, which is the object of Hakuyusan worship.


There were three tents on the side of the forest road, and two people were preparing breakfast. When I greeted them, they said that they had come to camp and sawanobori with two cars at the parking lot.


After passing the ruins of the post town, we parted ways with the mountain trail and followed the ruins of the road Aizu Naka Kaido along the Yukawa. The road was very narrow almost disappearing foot paths. After walking for about 15 minutes, we got off onto Yukawa. Although it is the genryu of Yukawa, decent number of anglers coming up to this area often. Immediately, John-san prepared for fishing and he start fishing. John-san said he does fishing quite often in USA. His casting was very beautiful and there was no problem for fishing in genryu. I thought that if there was a fish, he would catch fish immediately, but there was no bite at all. We decided to walk upstream to the stream divides in two, and we devoted to stream walking for a while. The morning sun had risen considerably, and the sunlight was entering to the valley. The Nasu mountain range was beautiful on both sides of the stream. The weather was forecasted to be downhill from the afternoon, but it looked like there would be no problems until after noon. It was a lovely morning.


After walking for about 30 minutes, we arrived at confluence of the stream. Nakanomata-zawa on the right and Touge-zawa on the left. We proceeded to Toge-zawa to the more upstream side. Toge-zawa means the mountain pass stream. Beyond this stream source was the pass of the Aizu Nakakaido in the Nasu mountain range, and beyond that was the Aizu Domain in Edo period. The water volume of the stream had halved and become smaller, but Touge-zawa is the very upper part of genryu of Yukawa. The water was infinitely clear and beautiful.


Here, I also set the fishing rod and start fishing. There was good looking flow, so when I cast the kebari, iwana came out from the first cast. It was small iwana about 20 cm. It seemed that the downstream of the flow was still good, so I cast once more and another iwana bit kebari at the end of the flow. This time it was a nice iwana about 25cm long.

There was a nice pool with a small waterfall when we walked a little upstream. The depth of the pool was perfect and the water is lush and beautiful. I gave this place to John-san. John-san's cast drew a beautiful loop and the kebari just landed on the water at the falling edge of a small waterfall. When the kebari was drifting in the pool for a while, a nice-sized iwana suddenly bit the kebari. John-san set the hook perfectly, and a beautiful iwana bent John-san's rod. It was John-san's first iwana. At this time of year, the iwana was probably the best size in this stream. I thought it was good that John-san caught a good fish first. John-san was also smiling and taking pictures.

From there, we fished up Touge-zawa that flowed down like a staircase. At the very end of the stream, the spots where we can fish are limited. John-san fished picking up points with a right depth of water. Time passed quickly, it was about noon and the weather was still beautiful with blue skies. The ridgeline of the Nasu mountain range became quite close. We arrived at a place where the old Aizu Naka Kaido crosses Touge-zawa as a mountain trail. John-san seemed to be satisfied with catching 7 or 8 iwana until then, so we folded the fishing rods there.

When we walked a little downstream direction on the trail, the trail split in two. The road on the left toward the ridgeline and crosses the pass to Santogoya Onsen, an old hot spring with 2 onsen inns in the middle of Nasu mountain range, and the road on the right is the old Aizu Naka-kaido. We took right to the old road. We ate lunch on the riverbed on the way and again walked down the old road to the car stop while looking up at the sky where the clouds were moving a little faster.

Genryu Fishing of Japan #48


The River of Sebata-san’s

by Keiichi Okushi 

One day in March, I received a FB message from Sebata-san. There was a link, so when I clicked on it, it seemed that a dedicated section for tenkara fishing was opened in Kuro-kawa, which flows through the village of Okorogawa in Mae-Nikko. Kuro-kawa is the mountain stream where young Sebata-san first met tenkara fishing many years ago.

Sebata-san took on the ambassador for this Tenkara-only section because of the relationship at that time. Recently, this kind of special sections dedicated to Tenkara fishing have been opened in some rivers in various places of Japan. The special section of Kuro-kawa is the second special section dedicated to Tenkara fishing in Tochigi prefecture.

"I want to fish in the river that Sebata-san fished on his young day. ","I want to see the sceneries of the river that Sebata-san saw." I talked it with some genryu fishing friends.

Then one Saturday in April, about a month later. I was driving west on the highway in the early morning toward the Okorogawa. Okorogawa is a mountain village located in the Mae-Nikko Mountains, which lies on the south of Nikko, which is registered as a World Heritage Site, and also about 20 km west of Utsunomiya, the prefectural capital of Tochigi Prefecture. From Mito where I live, I can reach Okorogawa in about 2 hours using the highway.

Around 7:00 am, after passing the last big town Kanuma, the scenery became a rural landscape. Eventually, the road ran along the Kuro-kawa and gradually entered the mountains.

When I entered the village of Okorogawa, I saw the brave figure of Mt.Nikko-Nantai beyond the gorge in the direction of travel. Okorogawa was a beautiful village that retains the atmosphere of a Japanese mountain village in the good old days. I had heard from Sebata-san many times about Okorogawa and the stories of learning Tenkara fishing there. "OK, this is the scenery of Koraigawa.” I wondered in my mind.

When Sebata-san was only 20 years old, he was working at an automobile company in Utsunomiya. At that time, Sebata-san was absorbed in the mountain stream fishing he just learned, and if he had time, he would go out to the mountain stream near Utsunomiya and spend all his time fishing. Sebata-san was still doing bait fishing then.


 One day, Sebata-san encountered a mysterious fishing in Okorogawa. That was the fishing which casts only the kebari and line without bait or weight. That was the tenkara fishing that was handed down to Okorogawa in Mae-Nikko. Eventually, Sebata-san met Mr. Juntaro Tanaka, who was fishing for yamame in Tenkara fishing in Okorogawa. Sebata-san begged for the teaching of Tenkara fishing. Mr. Tanaka was willing to teach Sebata-san how to make kebari, how to make tenkara lines, and the fun of tenkara fishing.

However, he never showed Sebata-san how to fish, and Sebata-san later thought that Tanaka-san probably wanted Sebata-san to learn tenkara fishing from yamame(It means to do fishing and study by myself). In addition, Tanaka-san always said, "Tenkara is an interesting fishing. If you catch 5 or 6 fish, you can't stop it anymore." “Tenkara is easy fishing. Just cast and pick up the rod then you can hook fish.”

However, when Sebata-san actually tried it, tenkara fishing was not so easy. Sebata-san says that the word "Quick setting hook for yamame" was stuck in his head, and it made tenkara fishing difficult. In the end, it was said that one season was over without the feeling that he was convinced that he had fished yamame. One day in the second season of Tenkara fishing, one cast did not go well, and the tippet and the line stayed slack and fell on the water surface. Sebata-san thought “Ah, this is useless”. Then yamame appeared and bit the kebari. he could not set the hook because the line was slacked. Anyway Sebata-san thought yamame had already escaped, but when he pulled the line that Yamame was still biting the kebari, and Sebata-san could catch the yamame. Sebata-san thought this was it. "If there is slack in the line or tippet, yamame does not spit out the kebari immediately. Then setting hook is easy even if it is a bit slow." It was the moment Sebata-san opened his eyes to tenkara fishing. Decades have passed since then, and Sebata-san has become one of Japan's leading tenkara fishermen. Kuro-kawa, the river of Sebata-san’s memories, flows through there in Okorogawa village.

Kuro-kawa gradually took on the appearance of a mountain stream from Satokawa(village stream), and I arrived at the Tenkara-only section. I met a friend, Kubota-san, in the car parking next to the house of the fishing ticket office. We were served cups of tea by the old man at the fishing ticket office, and we chatted about Sebata-san for a while, and he kindly told about recommended fishing points.


 We entered the point of Otaki (Big water fall), the most upstream part of the dedicated section. Kuro-kawa was a mountain stream with paved roads along the river, but the flowing water was wonderfully clear and clean. This day was a sunny day like early summer, and the temperature rose steadily as the sun rose. When we went down to the stream, many mayflis were already hatching and dancing on the stream. It was the best day for kebari fishing. I connected my traditiona Japanese bamboo tenkara rod, and we started fishing immediately. However, although we could see some yamame were staying in the water, they were not active, and we took turns fishing for a while, but I only caught one small yamame. While fishing the pool of Otaki, Ishimori-san and Hirasawa-san arrived by a car at the parking lot above the waterfall. We finished fishing and went up from the river once and talked for a while.

After talking somewhile, Ishimori-san wanted to do fishing, he started fishing a little downstream and immediately caught a good yamame over 25cm. Then, we move downstream altogerther, there was a good flow with some nice points that were looking better than upstream. As soon as Ishimori-san and I started fishing, Ishimori-san caught another 25cm over yamame again. Although it was discharged fish, it was beautiful yamame. I got motivation looking at that yamame, and I took turn of fishing in the good current, good-sized yamame was a hit in the flow immediately. He bent my bamboo rod and fought well. It was healthy 24cm yamame. Overall, it seemed that a fair number of yamame have been released in the tenkara-only section. The size of some yamame were also quite good.


 When I fished the good-sized yamame, I received an incoming call on my cell phone. It seemed that radio waves came in the stream because it was close to the village. When I answered the phone, it was from Takahisa-san, the eldest son of Sebata-san. Takahisa-san probably heard from Sebata-san that we would go to Okorogawa on that day. He said that he would come to Okorogawa in an hour because he had just some errands to do. It had been a few years since I met Takahisa-san last time.

About an hour later, when we just got up from the stream and were taking a break, Takahisa-san arrived. Since it was the first time for the other three people to meet Takahisa-san, I introduced them, and we talked about latest situations for a while. It was a good time, so we had lunch at a soba restaurant nearby. The weather was nice, so we took seats on the terrace. It seemed that there was a small campsite just below, and a good number of people are setting up tents on a sunny Saturday. I thought they might be anglers who were also camping. The topic of the talk went about Sebata-san. Takahisa-san said that Sebata-san’s legs became weak, and he could no longer walk in the genryu. Still, a few weeks ago, Sebata-san visited Okorogawa and stood by the stream, and he was happy to meet old friends living in Okorogawa. The soba sets had been served. The soba made with local buckwheat flour were accompanied by the local wild vegetable tempura, pickles, and rice, which was very delicious.
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Takahisa-san said he would retire from his work in June. He had been very busy with work and away from genryu fishing for a long time, so he said he would like to start genryu fishing again after his retirement. So, we promised to go genryu fishing together in this summer and we said good-bye.

When I was driving home on the road along the Kuro-kawa after leaving the village of Okorogawa, I remembered that Sebata-san saying "In the old days, I could see a bunch of good yamame swimming in every single pool in Kuro-kawa." Sebata-san was smiling with longing eyes.