A couple of times in the past week I, or someone I have fished with, has spent the time to lay out a running line from a shooting head to remove the irritating ‘memory’ that can appear with mono based (I use Varivas Airs) or some coated running lines. In fact, in the past, I have seen myself stretch out whole fly lines on swivels (after a days fishing!) to remove memory before re-loading to the reel
In the case of many fly lines stripping them off the reel straightening them out and unwinding any coiling before winding back on before fishing is time well spent, especially if the line has been on the reel or in storage for a while. Note that
all lines tend to be impacted by very cold weather
Now it may well be that you have never experienced this but, if you have experienced a line with memory that a Mastermind contestant would be proud of, then there are simple steps you can take to minimise the problem which lie in two key things – the loading of the line for the first time and the casts you make.
The first thing to be aware of is when loading lines onto a reel for the first time. Now it really doesn’t matter what line it is (backing, shooting line, a whole fly line etc) you absolutely
must have the spool carrying the line you are loading onto a reel and the reel itself aligned to each other. An extra pair of hands is handy here, in my case
SWMBO or ‘little me’ will be given the job of holding the spool of line I am loading onto my reel and to keep it in a straight line to me. To minimise the opportunity for twisting, always take the line you are loading from the bottom of the spool onto the bottom of the reel. You must be particularly careful with mono-type running lines, these can be a right pain in the derriere to fit without coiling of some kind. When fishing – and notably with mono-type running lines – coiling or twisting inevitably leads to knotting and that always seems to happen just at the worst moment
So, take care when loading and consider my mantra of ‘slow and steady’ when loading all lines but especially running lines.
I mentioned the casts that you make. Now this does largely apply to those using double handed rods making Spey casts, but I have experienced some ‘coiling’ of running line when Spey casting with single handed rods so the experience is valid there too. It all boils down to making the
same type of cast repeatedly off the
same shoulder/bank effectively winding coils into your line.
Sound daft
Go and see for yourself
The snake roll, something I use a fair bit for repositioning or making an anchor, is a bugger for creating coiling but more generally I believe that repetitive Spey casts of the same type are the trigger. If you can, mix it up a little and go over the other shoulder or use a different cast entirely. It can help. I have noted that those who favour short-headed lines (Skagit or versions of) seem to contend with more coiling/twisting than those who use longer-headed shooting heads or Spey-type lines. Now that could be a perception thing on my part, but a simple enough ‘fix’ is to let out the head and running line downstream of you and let it ‘sit’ there for a minute or so before winding the running line back on and continuing to fish. Or, as was commented on recently on the banks of the Beauly and the reason I am typing this out, take the time to stretch out the running line after a morning’s fishing and reload after lunch.
The time spent doing these simple things really can make all the difference when you’re on the water and remove much frustration from a day’s fishing