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Skills

Doing The Hard Work

There is a very real tactile, aesthetic pleasure in good fly casting, quite apart from fishing.
John Juracek profile picture.
John Juracek
August 2, 2025
Man casting a fly rod in the moutains.

Doing The Hard Work

One of my responsibilities as a fly casting instructor–perhaps the most important of all–is to provide my students with a pathway. A pathway that leads to better casting and more successful fishing, paved with an understanding of the essential mechanics of casting. After spending an hour with me, I like to think every student gets started down the path that’s right for them.

But the lesson is just the beginning. The easy part. After all, during a lesson I’m standing right there alongside the student. I analyze each stroke, suggest new mechanics when appropriate, and help to incorporate those mechanics. When things go awry (they almost always do as we learn something new), I’m there to intervene and rectify the problem.

The real work–the hard work–comes afterwards. That’s when the student, on his or her own time, has to turn what they just learned into muscle memory. All existing bad habits, frequently deeply ingrained, must be overcome. That requires an honest commitment to practice. It’s not something that can be accomplished during a one hour lesson.

While practice strikes many of us as unappealing (who practices fishing, right?), keep in mind that it does have its own rewards. There is a very real tactile, aesthetic pleasure in good fly casting, quite apart from fishing. Of course, I understand that for most of us catching fish is the ultimate objective. There too, it’s impossible to overstate the pleasure and sense of accomplishment that comes from the ability to do exactly what you want with your fly, especially as it leads to a caught fish.

So once you’ve received good instruction–not from friends or family, please–go out and practice. Regularly. Embrace practice. Not only is it enjoyable, but assuming your instructor has sent you down the right path, you will make progress.

And it will show in your fishing.

John Juracek is a fly fisherman, writer and photographer from West Yellowstone, Montana. For twenty-some years he was a partner at Blue Ribbon Flies, a local fly shop, and is currently the head casting instructor at the School of Trout and Anglers Academy. His writing credits include Yellowstone: Photographs of an Angling Landscape, Fly Patterns of Yellowstone, Fishing Yellowstone Hatches and Fly Patterns of Yellowstone, Volume Two

He is considered one of the sport’s expert fly casters and instructors and offers casting lessons for $100/hour at jjuracek@gmail.com or (406) 640-2828.

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