Although the free viewing of Hirata-san's video mentioned in this episode is no longer available, the good news is you can now enrol on the comprehensive Hirata-san On Stream Masterclass.
Survival Skills: The Roots of Modern Tenkara
Genryu Tenkara
Keiichi Okushi is one of the most passionate promoters of the hard-core exploration, hiking, foraging, rough-camping, climbing and fishing cultures that are all rolled into the love of "genryu" culture of Japanese mountain areas. There are a surprising number of different groups in Japan that come together regularly to explore and push the limits of these powerful, steep headwater streams and the forested mountain ridges and valleys that create them. Each group has their hard-won knowledge of the most beautiful, most pristine, hardest-to-reach and most remote genryu areas.
To be a member of these groups is to enjoy a special bond. All members of the group need to fit well together. They must all trust each other in the dangerous environments. They must also know the skill-sets and abilities of all group members - so that each can play their role in the wilderness survival skills and physical exertions of making it to (and setting up) base-camp. In Japan, that stream-side camp is called "tenba" - and the foraging, preparing and sharing of food and drink is a simple satisfaction that is surely older than the human race.
Although today most genryu addicts use lightweight modern gear - all of the skillsets needed to survive and thrive on an expedition come from the long pre-history of Japanese mountain culture. The knowledge and abilities are shared with those traditional mountain professionals such as the matagi (bear and game hunters) and the shokuryoshi (professional, subsistence mountain river anglers). The materials may have evolved with modern chemistry, but the knowledge and skills are all completely recognisable between the modern "sport" and the ancient mountain-craft practices.
Hand-made Fishing Tackle and the Shokuryoshi
The old saying "knowledge weighs nothing" is absolutely perfect when it comes to describing the fishing arts of the Shokuryoshi. The depth of knowledge Hisanobu Hirata (and his father before him) needed in order to selectively and efficiently catch the species, size and number of fish to fulfil the orders of local inns is immense. That skillset - along with the techniques for hand-furling the casting lines made from horse-tail fibres, to tie flies that are still incredibly effective today (even in high-pressured catch & release waters) are, again, rooted in the generations of knowledge built up by the shokuryoshi.
Just like other simple but refined tools made from natural materials (a well-napped flint blade is every bit as sharp as a modern scalpel), with the right knowledge and skill, the simple bamboo rods, horsehair lines and hand-tied (no-vice) flies are exceptionally effective today. BUT - the devil is in the detail - both in terms of making the tackle AND especially in the fishing skills and stream-craft needed to use them. You need to pick up the knowledge as well as the tackle.
Those insider skills and the deep knowledge of the techniques of a professional, survival fly fisher are why we were so lucky to film and analyse Hisanobu Hirata fishing, making his flies and his lines and explaining his skills on visits spanning four years.
His on-stream fish-catching demonstration (and our detailed breakdown of it) is captured in the main feature length video within the Masterclass course. What is really impressive is the fact that he caught fish in low water, bright/hot sunshine conditions on a busy section of heavily fished Catch & Release river in Japan. In other words, one of the most difficult challenges that any fly fisher could face.
Best wishes, Paul
PS
Don't forget to use the social share buttons to give your friends the chance to get in on the Hirata-san Masterclass too (and show them what they're missing if they don't carry the knowledge of a Shokuryoshi on stream with them!!)
I have been registered and I’m curious to watch the next news. with and about Hirata san. Knowledge is always an important thing to improve.
Thank you Eberhard, I think you’ll really enjoy the Hirata san content 🙂
Guys thank you for this small peak into genryu culture. Fun to hear Keiichi-san’s description. Though I will never have opportunity to do it. It appears to be a more intense form of the more common tenkara limbic hunger. Hoping the preview window is open in sync with when I have adequate internet access, which I will not always have during up coming planned travel.