When you break something, you want to break it right. If you snap a fly rod, you want to snap it on a big fish.

If you ruin a pair of waders, you want to croak them from overuse instead of ripping them open at the truck.

At least I’m trying to convince myself of that after discovering the dreaded inside wader seam blow out (it’s happening on the other leg too).

My left leg was soaked after Saturday’s McCloud trip, but in true writer fashion, I forgot about it entirely until this afternoon, when I went looking for what suddenly didn’t feel like a pinhole.

That’s no pinhole, nor is it repairable.

In the interest of tomorrow’s fishing, I’ve got to dig out my old (and sadly leaking) waders, which I haven’t seen since we moved.

The Upper Sacramento – overrun with wild blackberries and other thorny flora – is notoriously hard on waders, and this pair of old-style Orvis Pro-Guides suffered exactly one pinhole in a couple years of use.

Sadly, they also suffered from the fatal “inside seam” flaw, and Orvis clearly knows it, because they moved the seams on the updated version.

The good news, I suppose, is that I killed a pair of waders by using them instead of letting them rot in my garage.

The bad news is tomorrow’s trip is going to be a cold, wet one.

See you on the river, Tom Chandler.

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