Debi Lander Wins First Prize in Writing Contest

Bill Oyster: The Wizard of Blue Ridge

I’m thrilled to say I won first prize in the SATW Eastern Chapter Media Contest for Best Magazine Article in 2021. My article featured Bill Oyster: The Wizard of Blue Ridge, Georgia.

I invite you to read the winning article I wrote for DeSoto Magazine, published in October, 2021. Sadly, the magazine is no longer being published.

Bill Oyster: The Wizard of Blue Ridge

Bill Oyster with the sign "Nobody gets in to see the wizard."
Bill Oyster is the Wizard of Blue Ridge

The sign on the door reads, “Nobody gets in to see the Wizard. Not Nobody, not no how.” It’s not the Emerald City but a different hue in  Blue Ridge, Georgia, and this wizard, Bill Oyster casts real magic. He is a soft-spoken, somewhat shy man with a gray beard and mustache who also happens to be the foremost expert on bamboo fly fishing rods. But, he doesn’t hide secrets behind a screen;  Oyster shares his wealth 22 times a year when he opens his Oz-like workshop to eight lucky students. They enter to watch and learn under the guidance of the master.

Participants come from all over the globe and with many different backgrounds. But, they share traits common to the Yellow Brick Road travelers: a passionate heart (for fly fishing), courage (to try their hand at a rare form of craftsmanship, and brains (to know where to make it happen).  In addition, they all enjoy working with their hands. 

The bamboo rod-making classes take place in a mountain town aptly bearing the moniker of Trout Capital of Georgia. The school sprang from an accident, a literal one that befell Oyster in 1996. The up-and-coming professional competitive cyclist suffered a crash that eliminated his chances for the Olympic team. Oyster retreated to his hobby, fly fishing, but soon realized he needed to choose another career. He turned to guiding, teaching lessons, and making flies — but it wasn’t enough. His wife, Shannen, said, “Bill had studied aerospace, English literature,  philosophy, and studio art while at Georgia Tech and the University of Florida. I knew my husband needed something that would challenge him, something that would use his vast knowledge and artistic skills.” 

Around the same time, Oyster had become fascinated with the classic manual bamboo rod — an American standard stretching back to the 1800s. Wanting to make his own, he discovered that no instructions were available and found the few old-time artisans still around unwilling to share their knowledge. 

Author Debi Lander gets a fly fishing lesson to help understand the sport.
A Fly Fishing Lesson for Debi Lander in Blue Ridge, Georgia

Scouring libraries and fishing shops eventually produced a thin catch: a few videotapes and, later, a battered copy titled  “A Master’s Guide to Building a Bamboo Fly Rod.” Learning from these, he worked for six months to finish his first project, but to great disappointment. “My first rod looked terrible,” Oyster said. 

Tapping his competitive genes, he upped his work intensity and improved his skills through trial and error. Others took notice and started to ask him to make rods for sale. After an Atlanta newspaper featured him in a story, Oyster got calls from many interested parties.  Custom hand-engraving of the hardware came next, today the signature of an Oyster rod. A Georgia charity organization ordered a rod to auction, intent on adding Jimmy Carter’s autograph. The former president first tried casting and fishing with the rod. Carter wanted one of his own, and Oyster fulfilled Carter’s wish, adding the engraved grip with the Presidential seal. 

By 2000, Oyster was working long hours with too little profit.  He started teaching others to make rods, beginning with classes in his basement. His reputation grew, and he purchased the Blue Ridge property.  

 Each student begins with a piece of bamboo but no ordinary stalk of cane. Oyster’s stock comes from a 30-acre plot in Tolkin, China, chosen for its tensile strength greater than steel. The process involves cutting and planing 24 pieces of bamboo to within 1/1000 of an inch, barely wider than a strand of hair. The pieces are glued together and wrapped with silk thread. After sitting overnight, the hexagon shape that runs down the core of the rod becomes visible. 

Bamboo from Tolkin, China is used to make bamboo fly fishing rods.
Fly fishing rod bamboo from Tolkin, China

Oyster and his assistant, Riley Gudakunst, closely oversee the students. They added a new teaching tool during the pandemic to avoid close contact. Riley shoots live videos of the teacher projected to monitors around the workstations. It gives each participant a laser-focused view of the process.  

Hands on help from Riley Gudakunst at the Oyster Bamboo Fly Fishing Road class.
Assistant instructor, Riley Gudakunst helps Bradley Bertram with his rod.

No clicking of heels or shortcuts, the project takes students six full days of 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. work. “By the time they finish, Oyster said,  I often see grown men cry.” Why not – – they leave with a sense of pride and a treasured heirloom.   Student John Dinkins, from Jackson, MS, said, “This project was the hardest I’ve ever worked to build anything, and I’ve built many things, including guns. The class became empowering and gave me confidence.”  Melinda Smith, the only female in the class, agreed. They both hope to return a second time.

Student Melinda Smith carefully works on her bamboo fly fishing rod.
Melinda Smith working on her rod.

A father/son team, Bradley and Collin Bertram attended from Augusta. The 21-year-old and his dad previously built a kayak. Collin rated the bamboo rod class “a ten out of ten.” 

Camaraderie builds as the week progresses, some students becoming lifelong friends and fishing buddies, like Keith Hill of Seneca and James Looper of Pickens, SC. 

In addition to teaching the classes, Oyster fashions between forty and sixty rods per year, most high-end custom orders. Clients have included professional athletes, famous writers, and billionaires, whose identity he fiercely protects. Most of these highly coveted rods start around $5,000, with some fetching as much as $30,000. Oyster also organizes fishing expeditions. 

Bill Oyster hand engraves bamboo fly fishing rods for customers.
A Bill Oyster hand engraved rod handle

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