Travel Blog

16 Jun

The Philips’ Flyfishing Tackle

Although contemporary fly-fishing gear is full of high-tech advancements like graphite rods and synthetic  fly materials, the sport also has a strong traditionalist bent. For many anglers, the romance of bamboo rods, hand-tied flies, and other vintage tackle has almost as much allure as the fish themselves.

Fly fishing at Myrtle and Alex Philip’s renowned Rainbow Lodge was the Whistler Valley’s first tourist attraction, so the Museum naturally has a lot of fishing gear in our archives, not to mention hundreds of photographs.

A great capture of an epic battle between angler and fish, circa late 1910s.

 

To better understand these artifacts we recently had Brian Niska and Scott Baker-McGarva from Whistler Fly Fishing give us their take on some of the fly-fishing gear in the Philip collection. We were pleasantly surprised to discover that both Brian and Scott are true historians of the sport, providing tons of  insight into our collection drawing from their impressive knowledge of the evolution of fishing tackle design.

We have several old cane and bamboo rods, some for flyfishing, some for casting and trolling. They mostly demonstrate design features from the 1920s and 30s, the heyday  of Rainbow Lodge, but their most obvious quality is the amount of use they have all seen.

They appear to have been re-varnished multiple times and have many replaced eyes. This makes sense considering that the Philips and their guests were out on the water almost every summer day (and some winter days as well) for decades on end. Considering most rods had to be shipped from the U.K. or the eastern U.S., the rods were irreplaceable workhorses whose lives needed such prolongment.

We also have Myrtle Philip’s beautiful leather carrying case which carries a travel tag from autumn 1961, likely the last time she used it.

Here we have Alex Philip’s stylish felt fishing hat, a Fedora made by Adam Hats of New York with a special water-repellency treatment for rainy day fishing.  Note how the crown is full of an array of traditional wet flies suited to trout fishing in small lakes like Alta.

A bronze fly reel made by P.D. Malloch of Perth, Scotland. Scott thinks this particular reel could predate World War One because it is made of brass, and most reels were made of alloys after the war. It resembles some of the reels we see in early photos of Alex Philip, and could potentially be one of the earliest fishing reels used at Rainbow Lodge. We contacted the manufacturer for more information but unfortunately their records were destroyed in a fire in 1986.

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Although the lakes don’t provide our valley’s main draw anymore, there is still great fishing to be had. Whistler Backroads is putting on their 12th annual Fishing Derby this Sunday, June 17th at Lakeside Park. All are welcome from neophyte to seasoned angler, registration is free, and they even have some complimentary gear to use on a first-come, first-serve basis.

For more artifacts and historical fishing photos, check out the Whistler Museum’s blog! Happy fishing!

Article source: http://www.whistlerisawesome.com/2012/06/16/the-philips-flyfishing-tackle/