As I get older I find
there are a lot of things I tinker with that make my day and life easier. Fly
fishing waders is one of those items I’ve played around with to make my day on
the water a little more enjoyable. The first waders I fished with were some
chest waders bought at Academy Sports years ago. They lasted me one year before
the leaking started. Since then I’ve gone through numerous pairs of chest waders
all from Cabelas.
Fishing the Caney Fork River three years ago convinced me that I needed to try
some waist waders. It was a hot humid afternoon and I was melting in my chest
waders fishing knee-deep in cool water. I never fish any deeper than knee-deep
when wading; I’ve convinced myself that if there is a trout deep enough for me
to wade into the water above waist-deep then it should be taken by someone else.
My solution to the heat
that day was to convert my chest waders to waist waders, by letting the
shoulder straps and upper portion of the waders hang below my waist belt. That
helps cool me off quickly but the shoulder straps and the rest of the upper
portion of the waders were so cumbersome that I kept loosening and tightening
my waist belt all afternoon. I knew I had found a way to make my day on the
tailrace more comfortable. The question for me that day had nothing to do with
trout but what to do with the issue of belt-tightening concerning my newly
found waist waders.