Greetings!
This
month Orvis celebrates 30 years on the English high street and it is an odd
thought but I write this from the very same room from which the Orvis
operation was run in 1985, the American firm having acquired Nether Wallop
Mill and Dermot Wilson's famous mail order company four years earlier.
I don't think anyone
would disagree but the foundation of the Orvis enterprise was the genius of
Dermot Wilson. I never met Dermot, but I suspect he was restless soul. He
came to fly fishing by way of Winchester College where the Itchen runs beside
the sport fields and a distinguished service in WW2 where he was awarded the
Military Cross. He dallied with the Foreign Office (he was fluent in Mandarin
Chinese) before joining the advertising colossus J. Walter Thompson to become
its youngest ever director.
But selling cornflakes
was clearly not his thing. As his wife Renee told me he arrived home one day
in 1968 announcing that he had found the most wonderful mill in Hampshire and
that he intended to resign his job to start a mail order fly fishing
business.
I am not sure if Dermot
was entirely truthful with Renee about the condition of Nether Wallop Mill.
It was in a truly dreadful state so they set about restoring it, living in
the cottage and making offices of the mill building. To boot Dermot dug the
trout lake which within three years produced the British rainbow trout record
(9lb 12 ½ oz in case you ask) which to this day remains the spot where
countless fly fishing lives have begun.
There were two secrets to
Dermot's early success: the first and most obvious was that he was the first
to offer a full service mail order company which combined with his marketing
genius and considerable expertise, to make his catalogues annual bibles to the
temple of fly fishing. But I think more than that he realised the British fly
fishing industry had fallen woefully far behind its American counterparts. In
the post-war years all the innovations were coming from the US so he set out
to find the best tackle and sold it to an eager market that was exploding as
the craze for stillwater fishing took off.
The Mill became something
of a Mecca for all the greats of the 60's and 70's: Frank Sawyer, the man
behind the lake construction, and Ollie Kite lived just up the road. Charles
Ritz, Lee Wulff, Ernest Schwiebert, Bernard Venables .... well the list goes
on. Even our very own Charles Jardine lived here for two years as 'the
apprentice' when he was fresh out of art college.
Dermot was always a
marketing man to his core; he understood that the fishermen he sold kit to
would appreciate somewhere to fish so he bought what are still the two Orvis
beats at Kings Worthy on the Itchen and the Ginger Beer beat at Kimbridge on
the Test. Here at The Mill his tuition, largely done by Jim Hadrell and
Charles Jardine, was the pipeline for a new generation. At the height he had
fourteen people working here.
If that seems a lot (if
you have ever visited The Mill you will agree it is) Orvis took it to a new
level; I think I am right in saying that by the time Orvis were ready to
leave in 1998 to a less lovely but more suitable warehouse in Andover there
were close to forty full and part time employees. The phrase quart and pint
pot comes easily to mind. To this day we still get the odd rod delivered
for repair and there are plenty of Orvis employees who tell me wistfully
where they had their desk or office. I have to tell you they made a clean job
of clearing the place out; I never found a cache of Battenkill reels. In fact
all I ever found were two empty rod bags.
Anyway congratulations to
Orvis; 30 years is a mighty achievement for a specialty retailer on the
brutal battlefield of the English high street but maybe a quick glance to the
heavens in appreciation of Dermot Wilson might not go amiss.
Somehow
I've been invited to talk at the Petworth Festival, that includes best
selling authors such as Andy McNab (hope I don't say anything to offend
him...) and David Starkey.
I'm up at noon on
Thursday November 5th so if you live locally do come along to hear my 'Life
of a Chalkstream' show. Tickets from the on-line or from the festival box office
01798 343055.
Quiz
The usual random selection of questions to confound and amaze. Answers at the bottom of the Newsletter. It is just for fun!
1) Who won the 2015 World Carp Fishing Championships?
2) How often does an otter have a litter of cubs?
3) What is gault?
Sporting
hospitality
On that thought entries for the 2016 contest that takes place on
Friday April 22nd are now open. The Iron Man Fly Tying Challenge and the Fly
Fishing Film Tour will be in Stockbridge the previous evening. Get those
rooms booked! More details .......
Have a good weekend.
Best wishes,
Simon Cooper simon@fishingbreaks.co.uk
Founder & Managing Director
1) England. River Ebro, Spain October 7-10th. 2) Once
every two years. 3) A thick, heavy clay found under southern England.
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Friday, 30 October 2015
How genius endures
Tuesday, 13 October 2015
Cut off in it's prime?
Nether Wallop Mill, Stockbridge, Hampshire, UK - Tuesday October 13th 2015
Greetings!
The death
was swift. A brief press release from the offices of the CLA (Countryside
Landowners Association) consigned the annual Game Fair to history. The biggest
event in the rural calendar, at least measured by the number of people that
attended, was to be cancelled. No reprieve was offered. Even though dates for
the 2016 event at Ragley Hall had been in the diary for two years, it was all
over forever. The show, despite being visited by around a 150,000 people, was a
loss maker for the CLA and the membership could no longer support the losses.
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Heady days. Kate Middleton at the 2004 Game
Fair.
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There will be many of you
out there who will never have visited the Game Fair and plenty more abroad who
are not familiar with the concept. In a nutshell take three glorious English
summer days at the end of each July. Against the backdrop of a magnificent
stately home erect a show ground amidst the oak parkland and alongside the
Capability Brown lake. Invite the best of British rural sports, trades and
craftsmen to showcase their wares. Throw open the gates to make this a
celebration of all things great about the countryside. A place where old
friends reconnect and new eyes are opened. What could go wrong? Well,
apparently quite a lot.
I must admit I always thought
the Game Fair and the CLA odd bedfellows. The latter, as the name suggests, is
an upmarket association. I always rather enjoy its glossy, quarterly magazine
but the contents are more suited to Downton Abbey that your local dentist
surgery. If it had a problems page (maybe it should ....) the letters would
read: "Dear Edgar, My gardener has announced his intention to take his
annual two weeks vacation in July. Does he not realise this is grass growing
season?" I am probably being a little cruel but you get the general idea.
I don't want to describe
the Game Fair of its last few years as downmarket but, in what was clearly an
effort for survival, it was chasing an audience that was a very long way from
both the magazine and my Utopian vision of what it might be. As an exhibitor
and visitor I have been unfulfilled. Certainly financially. As an exhibitor it
was a black hole. As a visitor the £35 entrance fee in 2015 was eye-watering.
The first ever Game Fair in 1959 was 13p; that is Weimar Republic scale inflation.
But setting the money issues aside the show had lost its way. It's USP, unique
selling point, that opportunity to offer a glimpse of the magic of country
sports, was lost in the melee stands more suited to an urban weekend
market.
Has the Game Fair died in
it's prime? Well, probably not. At 56 it was showing its age in a world that
has moved on, where I doubt even the term "Game Fair" in itself means
anything. It will leave a hole in the summer calendar and plenty will mourn its
passing, but maybe in its place will rise something that will inspire future
generations as the shows of the 1970's did for me.
Knotweed
and other menaces
Ever wondered why the 2012
London Olympics cost us taxpayers so much? Well, I don't exactly know but I bet
nobody surveying the Hackey site prior to construction gave the Japanese
Knotweed a second glance. They should have done. It took £70m to eradicate before
the first concrete slab was poured.
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Japanese Knotweed
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This I know because I have
been re-reading Balsam
Bashing and How to tackle other invasive non-native species by Theo
Pike who I bumped into at the Wild Trout Awards last week. Though he likes to
deflect, Theo is the undoubted authority on all things invasive.
I know the title of the
book is a bit prescriptive but it truly is a good read. I never knew that the
Freshwater Shrimp Gammarus
pulex, a staple diet of chalkstream trout, was entirely absent from
Ireland until misguidedly introduced in the 1950's to Northern Ireland. Now
spreading south it is devastating the native population. Our good friend
Himalayan Balsam (Britain's tallest annual plant) gets a mention as do rabbits
that took me up short. My daughter, a keen spotter of crayfish, was horrified
to read Theo's advice "It is illegal to release or allow to escape
non-native crayfish ..... crush underfoot."
Which all leads me in a
very roundabout way to congratulate John Wyett who wins the September Feedback
Draw winner with a signed copy of Theo's book on its way to you.
John you, like everyone who
has sent in a form this season, goes back in the draw for the fine Hardy
Cascapedia reel to be drawn on 31st October.
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Hardy Cascapdedia reel
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Jonny's
trout
If you ever wondered what a
river keeper does at lunchtime, well wonder no more. Jonny Walker, with a
deftly placed Daddy Long Legs, plucked this monster trout out of Wallop Brook
here at Nether Wallop Mill. Got to be six pounds or more ......
It actually caused a little
bit of debate when I posted it on Facebook. Nice stockie said some. Others were
not so sure. The truth is Edward leads something of a gilded life in the mill
pool. Life is easy. The water is slack and the food plentiful from the bread he
steals from the ducks to a multiplicity of small fish that he snacks on for a
pastime.
Is he a stockie? Well, he
may of been a very, very long time ago but no more than half a pound in weight
way back then. Anyway he is back in the river, hopefully relishing his
momentary fame.
Mystery
fish
We had our end-of-season
Guides party last week (yes, we went fishing .....) and Bob Preston bought
along a photo of this fish he recently caught. Could we guess what this
salmonid was? You can just see the adipose fin, so it is no coarse fish or sea
fish but even with that clue we were all bamboozled.
It was caught on a fly, but
not in any traditional method. As Bob describes: "About 15 years ago I
finally found out the method that the locals use which is a team of about 6
tiny buzzers with a decent sized lead underneath to get the flies down the 20
metres or so where the fish seem to spend most of their time feeding on
plankton."
Maybe you know? Answer at
the bottom of the page.
The
Invisible World - award winning film
Great work
takes dedication; this film is that. The director and film maker Andrew
O'Donnell arrived at my home at 9am in July to film
the
chalkstreams. 'Come far?' I asked, 'Glasgow' he replied. Yes, they drove down
and up in a single day to shoot a few hours of footage.
Andrew's short film The
Invisible World has just won the Salmon & Trout Conservation UK video
competition which in the words of the organisers seeks to 'to explore the
beauties as well as the threats that face our underwater environment - the
invisible world that no-one sees, but which surrounds us all and is so vital to
our well-being.'
Well done Andrew. The
£2,000 prize will go some way to paying for the petrol!
Have a good week.
Best wishes,
Simon Cooper simon@fishingbreaks.co.uk
Founder & Managing Director
Mystery fish: It is a European whitefish Coregonus lavaretus. We
did briefly think it might be a Houting, a fish that is technically extinct,
but still caught from time to time in Norway. That said this particular
whitefish, caught by Bob in Austria, is pretty rare in itself listed in the
vulnerable species category. More about it on Wikipedia.
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