So I've been trying to get good at single hand casting in moving (river) water for a couple years now. Admittedly if I practised/fished more I'd be a lot better than I am. 99% of the time I gear fish on rivers. On lakes I mainly fly fish and, although my back/false casting is far from perfect, I can lob my indicator and leader + fly out there with no real issues.
My problems arise on the river. When I first stared out I never heard of spey casts or roll casts. I would let my fly swing down to the shore, then strip in most of the line, then go through 7-10 false casts to get the line back out. What a waste of time!
Then 2 years ago I took a group (4 hrs) single hand spey class on the Vedder. We learned the snap-t for a direction change to the right, and the double spey for a direction change to the left (plus each cast off non-dominant shoulder for an upstream wind). It was a lot to soak up in 4 hrs but it was fun and informative.
Since that time, when I do get out with my river fly rod (9 foot 8wt) like I did today, I still have the same issues. Mainly getting a proper anchor and d-loop before the roll cast, and from there a decent roll cast. Sometimes my roll cast sails out nicely, and sometimes it goes no-where. I understand the concepts of d-loop, point-p, and anchor. I bought the book "Single Hand Spey Casting" hoping to sort out my issues with the spey casts. I even brought the book with me to the river today, spent hours trying to sort out my casting issues, but still not much luck. Now I'm sure I could pay an instructor $60+ an hour to help me out, but I'm not really interested in that.
I finally said f**k trying to master the snap-t, double spey, along with a few other casts I tried from the book (cicrle-c, etc). I made up my own system that was working fairly well. Curious if anyone has feedback and can offer perhaps a better idea.
So, I let my fly swing down so it's in the dangle-ish (decent amount of line already stripped in), then I roll cast once to bring the fly and sink tip up. Then I'll do a back cast, then anouther 2-3 back casts to get the line shooting in the right direction, once I'm casting across the river again, I let-er go!
The benifets are mainly that it actually WORKS for me and I don't spend a lot of time swearing with my spey casts not working. The downsides are that I need a lot of space upriver as I'm doing kind of a "lasso" cast to get my line re-directed in the air. There is no way I could fish close to someone up river from me or else they would likely get my line wrapped around their head
Also, if I didn't have space for a back cast I'd be screwed as I suck at the spey casts
However most of the places I fish have lots of backcast room.
I would like to learn the spey casts properly with a single hand rod but just find it too difficult and I'm not interested in paying for another lesson. From what I have heard it's a fair bit easier to spey cast with a spey (2 handed) rod. I'm currently saving up my $ for a 2 handed set up, but in the mean time I'd still like to single hand fish for coho and pinks, etc this fall.
I'm curious what casts other people use in the river with a single handed rod.