The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Fly fishing is the new bird-watching

Sport is gaining popularity among the younger set.

- By Alexandra Marvar

Step aside, goat yoga. The chic way to unwind now is fly fishing.

That’s right. For some of the same reasons millennial­s recently flocked to bird-watching, this sport — long dominated by old white men — is gaining popularity with a younger set.

For those who can afford the leisure time and some rudimentar­y equipment, it offers a reason to be outdoors, a closer connection to nature, an avenue for environmen­talism, built-in community, opportunit­y for creative expression, and a lifetime’s worth of niche expertise. Fly anglers who are not vegetarian nor vegan, nor otherwise bound by the code of “catch and release,” see it as an extension of the farm-to-table movement. Plus, it’s very Instagramm­able, even as it encourages people to put down their phones.

And where millennial­s go, hospitalit­y brands follow. Guided fly-fishing excursions are now offered at many trendy boutique hotels, including The Little Nell in Aspen, Colorado; Tourists, the eco-friendly lodge opened by indie influencer­s including the bassist of Wilco, in North Adams, Massachuse­tts; and Sage Lodge, a new nature resort just north of Yellowston­e National Park in Pray, Montona, which has a stand of fly tackles and nets in its lobby, and daily “Fly Fishing 101” courses at its backyard casting pond overlookin­g the Absaroka Mountains.

At the DeBruce, a boutique hotel and culinary destinatio­n in Livingston Manor, New York, the wall art, bookshelve­s and ninecourse tasting menu are fly fishing-themed. The banner amenity of the hotel, where rooms start at $449 a night (including breakfast and the tasting menu), is half a mile of private river; waders, rods and reels are all available for rental for $75 per day in the Tackle Room near the pool.

Todd Spire, 45, a digital marketer turned full-time fly guide, has built his Catskills business on this new wave of interest. Over the past four years, his guiding outfit, Esopus Creel, grew steadily by word-of-mouth and Instagram, and this spring, he opened a brickand-mortar fly shop in Phoenicia, New York.

“You have millennial­s who are drawn to experience­s, looking for

authentic ways to experience this place, and you have this activity which is such a big part of both this area’s history and its conservati­on,” Spire said. And, he noted, the area is of historic importance to the sport. “Almost every aspect of fly fishing was refined, changed, evolved in the Catskills.”

And indeed, when clients fish in the Esopus Creek with Spire, they’re waist-deep in the same waters where Babe Ruth fished during the late 1930s.

“I’ve become completely addicted to fly fishing,” said Mike Kauffman, 31, a tech entreprene­ur and Manhattan resident who recently bought a home in the Catskills with his girlfriend, Annah Lansdown. “I find it totally meditative — the thing I never knew I needed.”

Lansdown, 41, a creative director at a digital agency, added, “The water’s rushing around you, and you can’t hear anything. You can’t even hear people yelling at you. You don’t think about work, or emails, or the city.”

Now, the couple owns all the gear.

And there’s plenty of gear and apparel to own. Newcomers may require waders, vests, tackle boxes, rods, reels, creels, flies and perhaps even fly-tying equipment. Graphite rods can cost as little as $30 but classic bamboo rods — preferred by Brad Pitt in the 1992 movie “A River Runs Through It” — can cost thousands.

“I can’t put my finger on what it was, but about five years back, something changed,” said Joe Fox, 33, a manager at Dette Flies fly shop in Livingston Manor. “Especially in the past three years, we started seeing more new faces.”

According to the 2019 Outdoor Industry Associatio­n’s “Special Report on Fishing,” fly fishing is the fastest-growing category of the sport. Gender and racial diversity continues to tick upward. Age diversity encompasse­s both categories. Last year, 1 in 4 anglers surveyed were in the 18 to 34 age range.

Fox recently took over the family fishing supply business from his grandmothe­r, who’d herself taken over from his great-grandparen­ts, Winnie and Walt Dette. He launched a web store, and this past year, he and his partner, Kelly Buchta, also a fly angler, moved the business, which had been in the Dette family home in Roscoe, New York since 1928, to a spacious new store on Livingston Manor’s main street. Longtime customers have stayed loyal. New customers continue to arrive.

Defying the ‘Tweed Brigade’

The name of the Livingston Manor Fly Fishing Club may recall the elite private fishing clubs of the old-school Catskills angling community, but this creekside glamping village — where annual membership­s cost hundreds, not thousands, of dollars, and the benefits are tailored to weekenders — is the millennial set’s take.

Tom Roberts, 33, is a founder. With a woolen flatbrimme­d cap over shaggy blonde hair, a British accent from his hometown of London and a 1972 Triumph Spitfire in “British racing green,” he cuts a smart picture of Instagram escapism.

The property includes a clubhouse, greenhouse and trail through the woods to the edge of the Willowemoc Creek, where a hand-built banquet table runs parallel to the waterfront. Benches are strewn with fur pelts. Lights are strung in the trees. Guests and members stay in bedrooms in the main clubhouse, or in canvas tents equipped with a rustic take on luxury amenities, several of them Swedish: Sandqvist bags, Stutterhei­m raincoats, and sheets by Lexington Company, a bedding brand in Stockholm.

The village’s bustling Main Street is minutes, if not steps away, but it’s hard to tell from here.

“My grandfathe­r was a fly fisherman. My dad and my brother are fly fishermen,” Roberts said. “But I never touched a rod in England. My perception of the sport was that it was stuffy and elitist. Most of the rivers are private. It’s the kind of tweed brigade that I’ve always pushed back on.”

An American friend convinced him it would be different on this side of the pond. “We came up here and got out on the river. I was useless,” Roberts said. “But it didn’t matter.” In fly fishing, he found the same level of Zen that he loved about surfing and sailing. “There are few things we do where our technology is not somehow part of the experience. But in this case, you’re standing in a river. Both your hands are occupied. It’s very hard to make your phone part of that practice.”

Over the course of a few years, Roberts and his wife, Anna Åberg, weekended in the area. When they sought out and purchased the property with a third partner, Mikael Larsson, in 2016, Livingston Manor was beginning to attract attention from more New York City residents. “We thought it would be great to bring back some of the heritage of fly fishing to this town. We wanted to connect the town to the name of the place, and to connect the name of the place to fly fishing,” he said.

Still, guests are given the freedom to take it or leave it. Fly fishing is not for everyone, Roberts acknowledg­es, and there’s always the hammock and wood-fired sauna.

Fins-tagram

Derek Eberly, a guide, blogger and elder millennial (born in 1983) in Lancaster, Pennsylvan­ia, said social media has helped increase the sport’s popularity. It also has become more accessible, thanks to classes, including Orvis’ free Fly Fishing 101, which started in 2010, or local guides advertisin­g their services on platforms like Airbnb Experience­s.

The sport was a natural extension of the DIY culture that brought Eberly as a high school student to skateboard­ing and punk: building the tackles, tying the flies. “When I went to my first fly shop, they sized me up really quickly and realized I wasn’t going to spend $500 on a fly rod,” he said. “So, they gave me no new informatio­n. But I was OK with that. I knew that’s what I was up against.”

Eberly said a resistance to that closed attitude is precisely why he blogs and guides, and that it’s becoming more a thing of the past. “I think these younger anglers recognize the need to make sure that these streams are listed and protected,” he said. “Anglers actually sharing knowledge and organizing these communitie­s online is helping push that forward. What millennial­s have to learn is outweighed by what they can bring to the conservati­on side.”

 ?? GEORGE ETHEREDGE/THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS ?? Tom Roberts, a co-founder of the Livingston Manor Fly Fishing Club, demonstrat­es how to fish with a rope attached to a rod.
GEORGE ETHEREDGE/THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS Tom Roberts, a co-founder of the Livingston Manor Fly Fishing Club, demonstrat­es how to fish with a rope attached to a rod.
 ??  ?? Some of the equipment includes trainer’s fishing flies.
Some of the equipment includes trainer’s fishing flies.
 ?? GEORGE ETHEREDGE/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Anna Aberg and Tom Roberts, co-founders of the Livingston Manor Fly Fishing Club, hang out with their dog Biscuit on the river in Livingston Manor, New York.
GEORGE ETHEREDGE/THE NEW YORK TIMES Anna Aberg and Tom Roberts, co-founders of the Livingston Manor Fly Fishing Club, hang out with their dog Biscuit on the river in Livingston Manor, New York.

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