The sport of American fly-fishing has two hours of screen time to thank for its resurgence at the turn of the 21st century: the film . The 1992 movie adaptation of of the same name, directed by Robert Redford and starring a young Brad Pitt, made fly-fishing not just cool, but wildly sexy to the general public. 鈥淚t was the most enticing fly-fishing movie ever made,鈥 Maclean鈥檚 son John told the Bozeman Daily Chronicle in 2012. 鈥淚n the first year after it came out, the fly-fishing industry grew by 60 percent, and the following year by another 60 percent.鈥 In the years following the film鈥檚 release, streams and rivers famous for their fly-fishing became noticeably more crowded. It was so influential that fly-fishermen around the country took to calling it simply 鈥渢he movie.鈥
But while a soaking-wet Brad Pitt could get twentysomethings to buy a starter fly rod, he couldn鈥檛 teach them how to cast it. And so, in only a slightly roundabout way, the real savior of modern fly-fishing is 鈥淟efty鈥 Bernard Kreh, whose books, videos, and articles on casting, tying knots, and catching fish were the first real introductions to the sport for many of those who stuck around long enough to actually give it a shot. Kreh, a Baltimore native who grew up during the Great Depression, is a compact 5鈥7鈥, with a wide smile that reveals a gap between his two front teeth. When he casts a fly rod, he has all the grace in the world鈥攅nough to overshadow even a young Pitt.
Kreh is the savior of the modern American fishing form in more than just a pop-culture-funneling way. It was Kreh who, along with one or two others, nurtured the sport when it arrived from the UK to American聽waters in the 1940s and 鈥50s. But while other fishing pioneers stuck to British traditions, Kreh rejected them. He rebuilt the American cast from the ground up. Then he started sharing his knowledge on everything from knots to casting to fly presentation, on fish in both fresh and saltwater, with students of all ages, women and men. Kreh came to be seen as not just a founder of the American version of the sport, but also its singular teacher, taking as pupils presidents and movie stars as well as blue bloods and normal folks.
Thirty-three books and thousands of students later, Kreh is finally slowing down. At 92, his world-touring fishing days are nearly through. Congestive heart failure is taking its toll. There鈥檚 a certain lighthearted morbidity to him these days. 鈥淚鈥檇 rather be looked at than viewed,鈥 Kreh told me with a chuckle. But he still has a twinkle in his eye. Kreh still has a lot to teach us about fishing and about life.
OUTSIDE: When you first started fly-fishing, in 1947, the sport was practically nonexistent in America. What sparked your interest?
Kreh: Joe Brooks [a major fly-fishing writer from World War II to 1972] called and said he was doing a little newspaper column for a paper down near Baltimore, and he wanted to go fishing with me in the Potomac. So we went. And Joe took this fly rod out. I had never seen one before. And I said, 鈥淲ell, Mr. Brooks, if you don鈥檛 have a plug rod, I have an extra one.鈥 And he said, 鈥淲ell, do you mind if I use this?鈥 And I said of course not. Well, he caught quite a few fish using it.
At lunchtime鈥攁nd this is what flipped me over on it鈥攚e were sitting on the side of a big flat rock out in the middle of the Potomac. We were sitting there, and Joe walked up out over the top of that rock. I didn鈥檛 know it then, but I would soon learn, that in October, the flying ants fly across the Potomac to migrate, and billions of them fall into the river. And we walked up there, and he had this little black-and-white fly, which I now know is a black ghost. There were these rings all over the place in the water. He dropped the fly in a ring; he had a bass. He did this about six times in a row, and I said, 鈥淢r. Brooks, I got to have me some of that.鈥
I鈥檓 trying hard to put the Lefty Kreh School of Fly-Fishing into words. How would you describe that?
When I went back home, in all of central Maryland I could not find a single fly-fisherman. Not one. I later found two in Baltimore. But there were no fly-fishermen. And there was no information about it鈥攅xcept, mostly, English literature, which was all out of date anyway. So I began to start thinking about how you do this stuff.
Joe鈥檚 casting method was basically the one they still teach today. And that method is you bring your rod up to about two o鈥檆lock, and you load it up and come forward and stop about eleven.
Well, I鈥檓 not very smart, but I have common sense. And I know that the longer I can swim that fly through that Potomac, the better the chances I got. I realized that fly-fishing was the only sport where you don鈥檛 use the whole body casting. I began pivoting and putting the rod back farther. Had no idea why it worked鈥攁ll I knew was that it did work. And I developed that style. Well, not a style, actually just the proper way to use a rod. I started there.
I developed my four basic principles of casting, and of course they鈥檙e against all the regulations. [The four principles are: God will not let you cast a fly line until the end of that fly line is moving. The casting hand and rod must continue to accelerate and then be brought to an abrupt stop. The line follows the direction of the rod tip as it speeds up and stops. The longer the rod travels back and forward during the casting stroke, the less effort is required.] There鈥檚 one thing wrong with tradition: It gets in the way of progress. We鈥檙e still teaching casting the way we did a hundred years ago. And the technology鈥檚 changed, the fishing鈥檚 changed, everything鈥檚 changed, and we鈥檙e still teaching a big lumberjack and a 12-year-old kid to cast the same way.
The industry made several big mistakes early on, which is the main reason why we don鈥檛 have as many fly-fishermen today as we should. First of all, we made it too expensive. When a guy was working for $15 or $20 a month to support his family, we overpriced the market and made it impossible for him to afford it. That was a big mistake.
The other mistake was to tell people that it鈥檚 an art and all that kind of stuff. Now, I should know more about entomology. But I know that if there is a little brown bug on the water, and it鈥檚 about a size 16, I know that if I can put a drag-free cast out there, I got a damn good chance of catching a fish. It helps to know when the bugs are coming out. It helps to know. Now, a lot of trout fishermen speak Latin. But trout, they don鈥檛 care. They just eat what they can.
I heard you coached Jack Nicklaus on his cast.
Jack Nicklaus wanted me to fish with him. What you need to know is that Jack had been fishing in the Caribbean for years and had caught over a thousand bonefish. He said, 鈥淚 heard you can help me with my casting.鈥 He got out there with a five-weight rod, and we did the typical student-instructor thing鈥攋ust cast it. And it was beautiful.
He said to me, 鈥淲hat do you think, Lefty?鈥 I had been around some big people in the world, and a lot of those guys don鈥檛 want you to tell them anything. Jack was the opposite. I said, 鈥淛ack, what you鈥檙e doing is OK, but it鈥檚 extremely inefficient.鈥 His answer was, 鈥淕reat, how can I be more efficient?鈥 I started talking about the stroke. And Jack said, 鈥淗ell I鈥檝e been doing this wrong all my life.鈥 He knew what a stroke was.
The stroke is the thing that鈥檚 causing 90 percent of the problem in fly-casting. People think if they have to make a long cast, they have to throw it. They鈥檙e not throwing it. It鈥檚 the bend in the rod that鈥檚 throwing it.
Can you explain the way a really great cast feels to someone who鈥檚 never fished before?
You do not cast a fly rod. You unroll it. It鈥檚 like a rug rolled up. You kick on a rolled-up rug, it鈥檚 gonna unroll.
You started fishing during the Great Depression. How was that different from fishing today?
We were so poor we couldn鈥檛 have kept mosquitos in underwear. We didn鈥檛 have any money. My mother told me, 鈥淚f you can get enough money to pay for your lunch and your clothes, you can go to high school.鈥 In those days, kids could work.
I was bushbobbing, where you hang these little lines down into the water on limbs at night. I鈥檇 bait the hooks with mussels, which were everywhere then. And I was poling a boat when I was ten years old. You could pole along at night and catch these catfish. I was taking the catfish and selling them at market to get the money to go to school. But I always did enjoy it, even then.
A big part of your job for the past few decades has been fly-fishing around the world with important and interesting people, teaching them and entertaining them. One of the reasons people like to fish with you so much is your sense of humor. What鈥檚 your key to telling a good joke? Do you ever tell a dirty joke?
I haven鈥檛 told a dirty joke for at least 35 years. The thing is, they don鈥檛 have to be dirty. The key to a real good joke is that the last one or two words is a trigger. A joke has to be a surprise. If you鈥檝e heard a joke, it鈥檚 not a joke anymore. There is an art to doing it. But it鈥檚 mainly that I want to have fun with this person, and I want them to enjoy what I had. And they don鈥檛 have to be dirty.
For example, one that everybody seems to like is:
This man came home from work. And his wife hit him on the head with a frying pan, knocked him flat on the floor. He got up and said, 鈥淲hat鈥檚 that about鈥? She showed him a little piece of paper that had 鈥淒arlene鈥 written on it. She said, 鈥淚 found this in your shirt this morning.鈥 He said, 鈥淗oney that鈥檚 a horse I been betting on. Here鈥檚 half of what I won.鈥
He came home the next day, his wife hit him again, harder. He got up and he said, 鈥淲hat the hell鈥檚 that all about?鈥
She said, 鈥淵our horse called.鈥
Have you ever been starstruck by anyone you鈥檝e fished with鈥攑residents, movie stars, journalists? How do you keep from being intimidated when you鈥檙e doing something as intimate as fishing with people like that?
First thing I do is call everybody by their first name. Everybody has a first name. You do it in a nice way. Famous people want to be treated that way. You should see them guys. Say it鈥檚 me and Michael Keaton and Tom Brokaw and Yvon Chouinard or something like that. All day long they鈥檙e real well-known people, and they unconsciously act the way people want them to. At 5:00, the camera people who are filming them go away. We all take a shower. And they have what I call a 鈥渃rocktail hour,鈥 where they get about half-crocked. Then, all the sudden, it鈥檚 like a mantle coming off, and there鈥檚 their real selves. They love to tease each other. You see that they鈥檙e real humans.
You鈥檝e fished with some interesting people, including, I think, Ernest Hemingway and Fidel Castro.
I didn鈥檛 fish with 鈥檈m鈥攂ut I did watch 鈥檈m fish. Me and a guy named Howard Gillelan from Outdoor Life were the first two sportswriters sent down to Cuba after the revolution. It was about a week and a half after it鈥檇 ended. We went down for the 14th annual Hemingway white marlin tournament.
On the first day, we were on Castro鈥檚 boat. We weren鈥檛 fishing. We were just observers. Well, it was a three-day tourney. For the second two days, they put us on Hemingway鈥檚 boat. I had never caught a billfish. Lots of saltwater species, but not that. When we got on the boat, Ernest told us that his little mate [Gregorio Fuentes, whom some have attributed as the inspiration for the character Santiago in The Old Man and the Sea] was the best billfisherman in the world. Well, I glommed onto that guy. I spent the entire day with that guy learning to debone mullet and all that kind of stuff. I was in my joy.
That night, me and Howard stayed at a thing called the Hotel Nacional, which was a giant hotel. But except for the crew that worked there, there was not a single person there, because the revolution was just over. Howard had quite a bit of education. And he just chewed me out like you wouldn鈥檛 believe. I said, 鈥淲hat are you talking about?鈥
He said, 鈥淵ou haven鈥檛 spent any time with Ernest Hemingway. Do you know who Ernest Hemingway is?鈥
I said 鈥淵eah, he writes books.鈥
He said, 鈥淗e does more than write books.鈥
He gave me a lecture. So I spent most of the next day with Hemingway. Which I really liked. During the day, we got real friendly. I was an exhibition shooter for Remington Arms, and he was big at that, too, and we did a lot of talking about that stuff. Anyway, I finally said to Ernest, 鈥淓rnest, I just got into this writing business. How do you tell what鈥檚 good writing?鈥
And he thought about it and finally said, 鈥淚t can鈥檛 be edited.鈥 Which is I think the best answer you could have.
One thing that鈥檚 noted about you by others is the sheer number of friends you鈥檝e made across all the years. How do you relate to so many vastly different people?
I think I have such a number of friends, and really good friends, for one reason: I realized early in my life how much pleasure you get out of doing something for somebody and there鈥檚 no way they can reward you. You鈥檙e doing this because you want to do something that makes them feel good.
What makes you a good teacher? I think most would agree that鈥檚 what you鈥檝e been above all else to the fly-fishing community.
There鈥檚 two ways to teach anything, whether it鈥檚 fly-casting or teaching at a grade school. You can display your knowledge, or you can share your knowledge. And there鈥檚 a world of difference.
When I would figure something out fly-fishing and saw somebody having the same problem I had been having, I would say, 鈥淟et me show you something somebody showed me.鈥 And then it鈥檚 different than 鈥淟et me show you how to do that.鈥 The first one makes the person you鈥檙e teaching think, 鈥淲ell, he was as dumb as I was.鈥 And the second one is 鈥淗e鈥檚 trying to be a smartass and tell me he鈥檚 smarter than I am.鈥 You鈥檙e sharing your knowledge and not displaying it.
What do you think your legacy will be for fly-fishing?
I don鈥檛 think anything about that. It was just something I enjoyed doing. And it was a great life. I don鈥檛 think anything about legacies and all that stuff. Hell, I鈥檓 just another fly-fisherman.