Chalk‑stream etiquette on the River Test
Chalk‑stream etiquette on the River Test

Upstream approach
On Hampshire’s River Test the first rule is practical and ceremonial: begin at the bottom of the beat and fish upstream, casting the dry fly up and across the current. Anglers observe this discipline to keep shadows, footsteps and lines out of the trout's field of view; downstream presentation is rarely tolerated on managed beats. The Test's clear gravel runs and resting lies for brown trout reward patience as much as precision.
Stealth and single‑fly tradition
Stealth is treated as sacred. Move quietly, stay low and watch the water; light wading boots and a short leader are standard kit for navigating weed and gravel without commotion. Sight fishing here favours a single dry fly or one nymph rather than multi‑fly droppers. Watching a rise or the flash of a trout's mouth is part of a ritual celebrated since The Compleat Angler.
Landing‑net lore and riverside teas
The landing net carries almost ceremonial weight: soft mesh, a broad scoop and the rule to keep the trout in the water until the photograph or release. Gentle handling, wet hands and a quick unhooking preserve the Test's stocks. When the rod rests, anglers gather by small Hampshire beating huts for strong tea and scones—an unhurried, convivial close to a day on the chalk streams.
Recommended: waterproof wading boots