THE FIVE HUMPHREYS CASTS
Casting Library
Every cast Joe teaches, in one place.
THE FOUNDATION
It Starts With the Short Stroke
Forget ten-and-two. The Humphreys cast is a short stroke that prizes control over distance. Thumb on top of the grip like you are holding a hammer, elbow pinned to your ribs, and the power comes from a firm squeeze at each stop, not from your arm or shoulder. Stop the rod high and the line snaps straight.
That one move is the parent of every cast below. Master the squeeze and the high stop, and the roll, the bow-and-arrow, the tuck, and the downer are all just variations on a theme. Twenty feet with a good squeeze beats forty feet with a sloppy stroke.
"The casting stroke is a short stroke, and you stop it high, therefore you get a nice deep tuck."
JOE HUMPHREYS
ALL FIVE CASTS
The Five Casts, Start to Finish
Each one tells you what it is, when to reach for it, which age tier learns it, the numbered steps, a coach's cue, and the error to watch for.
CAST ONE
The Short Stroke
FOUNDATION FOR EVERY TIER
WHAT IT IS
Joe's fundamental cast and the source of his power: a short, controlled stroke driven by a firm thumb squeeze at each stop rather than arm or shoulder strength. It loads the rod efficiently and stays repeatable for young hands. Without the squeeze, you are just waving a stick.
WHEN TO USE IT
Open water and the great majority of fishing situations. This is the cast every student learns first and the one every other cast is built on.
THE STEPS
- Grip: thumb on top, firm but relaxed, like holding a hammer. Pin your elbow to your ribs.
- Pick-up: smoothly lift the line off the water, accelerating as you go up.
- Back stop: abrupt stop at 1 o'clock and squeeze the thumb hard. This squeeze loads the rod.
- Pause briefly and let the line fully extend behind you. Feel the rod load.
- Forward stroke: crisp acceleration forward.
- Forward stop at 10 to 11 o'clock with a second firm squeeze. A tight loop forms and the line snaps straight.
- Follow through: lower the rod tip toward the water and feed line into the drift.
COACH'S CUE
"Twenty feet with a good squeeze is better than forty feet with a sloppy stroke. Thumb on top, squeeze, stop high."
COMMON ERROR
Too much arm and not enough wrist. If the loop goes sideways your thumb pressure is uneven; even it out at both stops. A weak cast almost always means the back-stop squeeze was too soft.
CAST TWO
The Roll Cast
FIRST CAST FOR THE SPARK TIER (6 TO 10)
WHAT IT IS
A cast that delivers the fly with no backcast at all. A D-loop of line behind the rod tip becomes the anchor that loads the rod, then unrolls forward across the water. It is the first cast taught to the youngest students because there is no backcast or whippy line behind them to manage.
WHEN TO USE IT
Any time a full backcast is blocked by trees, brush, or a bank directly behind you. Foundational for the Minnow tier and a lifelong tool on tight water.
THE STEPS
- Start with line on the water in front of you and a tight connection to the fly.
- Raise the rod slowly to the 2 o'clock position. Do not rush this part.
- Let a D-loop of fly line form and settle behind the rod tip. That loop is your anchor.
- Drive the rod forward with authority to an abrupt stop at 10 o'clock.
- The line rolls forward off the anchor and unfurls on the water toward the target.
COACH'S CUE
"Raise it slow, let the loop hang, then drive forward and stop. No backcast needed, the water does the loading for you."
COMMON ERROR
Lifting too much line before the forward drive, which kills the D-loop anchor. Raise slowly and keep enough line on the water to load the rod.
CAST THREE
The Bow-and-Arrow
GREAT FOR THE DEVELOPMENT TIER (11 TO 13)
WHAT IT IS
A cast for spots too tight for any backcast. You pinch the fly, draw the rod tip back to load it like a drawn bow, aim, and release. Joe grew up fishing Pennsylvania streams tunneled over by rhododendron and hemlock, where the only way to reach wild trout was to cast with no backcast at all. This is the key to water everyone else walks past.
WHEN TO USE IT
Tight, brushy pocket water with no room behind or above you. Joe's rule: pocket water is where the best fish hide, and the bow-and-arrow is the only way in.
THE STEPS
- Pinch the fly between thumb and forefinger, holding above the hook bend, never near the point.
- Extend the rod toward the target while pulling the line back with your rod hand.
- Load the rod fully until you feel significant tension, like drawing a bow.
- Aim at the target.
- Breathe, then release all contact points smoothly and at the same instant. Do not throw the fly, release it. The rod tip follows toward the target.
COACH'S CUE
"Load it like a bow, aim, breathe, and let everything go at once. Release the fly, don't throw it."
COMMON ERROR
A hand on the hook, which is the program's flagged safety risk on this cast. Always grip above the hook bend or on the leader, never the point. If a student's fingers drift toward the point, stop and re-demonstrate the grip immediately.
CAST FOUR
The Tuck Cast
MASTERY TIER (14 TO 17)
WHAT IT IS
George Harvey's classic depth cast. A sharp, high stop kicks the weighted fly down and under the leader so it enters the water first and tucks deeper as it lands. The fly reaches the bottom before the leader can drag it, which is exactly where the fish feed.
WHEN TO USE IT
Nymphing in deep or fast water when you need the fly down fast and drag-free. The everyday depth tool once a student is ready for weight.
THE STEPS
- Begin with a normal short-stroke cast, back and forward.
- Stop the rod high, higher than usual, around 11 to 12 o'clock.
- On the forward stroke apply a strong squeeze and a sudden, sharp stop.
- That sharp stop throws slack into the upper leader so the weighted fly tucks down while the leader is still in the air.
- Keep the rod tip high to manage the slack as the fly drives toward the bottom.
COACH'S CUE
"Stop HIGH. Watch the nymph tuck DOWN. Keep your rod tip up."
COMMON ERROR
Stopping too low or too gently. A low, soft stop lets the fly land flat and drag sets in at once. The stop has to be high and crisp for the tuck to develop.
CAST FIVE
The Downer-Upper
MASTERY TIER (14 TO 17)
WHAT IT IS
Joe's down-and-across presentation, what he calls the downer and the upper: a quick tap of the grip combined with a downward push drives the weighted nymph down while the rod tip stays high. The fly enters first and sinks fast, the leader does not pile on top, and your elevated rod tip keeps control slack ready for the drift.
The Downer-Upper has two parts. The sharp downward stop fires the nymph into the water (the Downer). The immediate fast lift of the casting hand and forearm - thumb and forefinger pointing up - drives it to the bottom after entry (the Upper). Both are required. The cast is a pocket water technique: elbow tight to the body, stroke extremely compact.
WHEN TO USE IT
When the target is directly below you or slightly downstream, especially plunge pools, waterfalls, and deep pocket water. The presentation for reaching fish down and across the current.
THE STEPS
- Tighten up to the weighted nymph and start a normal short back stroke with a firm back-stop squeeze.
- On the forward stroke, tap the grip: a quick firm squeeze combined with a downward hand push.
- That tap with the squeeze, pushing down, is the downer. The weighted nymph kicks down and enters the water first.
- Keep the rod tip HIGH after the tap. That is the upper, giving you control slack to manage the drift.
- Hold the tip elevated as the nymph sinks fast and begins to roll the bottom where fish feed.
COACH'S CUE
"I take my hand forward, and I tap. That little tap with the squeeze as I'm pushing down gives me the downer. I'm driving the nymph down while the rod tip stays high."
COMMON ERROR
Following through and letting the rod drop. If the tip falls, you lose the high rod position that makes the downer work and the slack you need for the drift. Tap, then freeze the tip high.
THE FIVE CASTS AT A GLANCE
One Table, Every Cast
| CAST | WHEN TO USE | KEY MECHANIC | COMMON MISTAKE |
|---|---|---|---|
| Short Stroke | Open water, most situations | Thumb squeeze at the stop | Too much arm, not enough wrist |
| Roll Cast | Backcast blocked | D-loop anchor loads the rod | Lifting too much line |
| Bow-and-Arrow | No backcast room (brush) | Five steps, simultaneous release | Hand on the hook, a safety risk |
| Tuck Cast | Nymphing, deep or fast | High stop, nymph kicks under | Stop too low, too gentle |
| Downer-Upper | Plunge pools and water below you | Tap and push down, rod tip stays high | Following through, the rod drops |
FROM THE CASTING REFERENCE CARD
Joe's 3 Rules of Casting
RULE ONE
Casting Into the Wind
Drift the rod further forward before the stroke. Use wrist, not arm. Keep the rod level and right into the wind. The back two fingers pull while the thumb pushes down. Do not dump the rod tip.
RULE TWO
The Distance Secret
Climb the angle on the back cast, stop the rod high, and wait. Feel the rod load before the forward stroke. You can feel it right down to your casting hand. Most casters fail at distance because they rush forward before the rod has ever loaded. Wait, feel it, then wrist.
RULE THREE
Casting Is a Means to an End
If the fish can't see the fly, it doesn't matter how pretty your cast is. Short and sharp beats long and lazy every time on a brushy stream. Casting is a means to an end, and the end is a fish.
Now Take It to the Lawn
Pick your tier's school for the week-by-week lessons, or grab a printable homework sheet and start drilling the squeeze in the backyard. Tie yarn to paracord and master the short stroke first. Tight loops mean accuracy, and accuracy means fish.