Chalk‑stream breakfasts
Chalk‑stream culture: morning rituals on the Test & Itchen

Dawn and the first brew
On Hampshire chalk streams such as the River Test at Wherwell Priory and the River Itchen, anglers greet dawn with small rites shaped by rising brown trout. Clear shallows two to four feet deep reveal bronze flanks as mist lifts. Mornings often begin with strong tea brewed in a billy can over a driftwood fire and sipped from tin mugs while casts are readied.
The catch, the cook
Dry flies timed to May‑June mayfly hatches bring trout that commonly range one to three pounds, though specimens up to four pounds have long folklore ties to subsurface nymph work. Freshly landed fish are gutted quickly; heads are set aside for stock and whole trout are pan‑fried in bacon fat on a folding stove or grilled over embers with foraged watercress from Itchen banks. At Longparish and nearby beats, variations include trout scrambled with eggs from riverside farms or poached in chalkspring water with blackberries.
Rituals, rods and lore
Eight‑foot bamboo rods spooled with 4‑weight silk lines still appear on morning banks, testing anglers and fish alike. Tales of lost "big 'uns" in streamer weed and essays by G.E.M. Skues on nymphing thread through conversation; grayling occasionally dimpling the surface keep the breakfast talk going. These simple meals and shared stories bind the chalkstream brotherhood as tightly as the beats themselves.
Recommended: bamboo fly rod 8ft