And now onto more serious discussion... The Harvey "Slack Cast." Sweet skill for sure. I practiced it today and was def able to get nice dead drift w it. I may be wrong but I think it is when you pull back a bit on the line just as you are making a true presentation cast. by pulling back quickly w your retrieve hand you kill the energy and the line falls slack and lazy in a serpentine pattern which serves to absorb conflicting currents and protect the drift of the fly. totally works no doubt about it. great skill and gurantees a good few feet of dead drift. Glad that AJ reached into the closet and busted out that one. nothing beats old school tricks of the trade.
As for the reach cast. I like to land one false reach cast three or four feet shy of my target, then I add three feet of line to my true cast so that it falls exactly where it needs to be. so basically I land one false cast shy of the fish where it can't be detected, then I go for the true cast after feeding a bit more line. If the first cast gets no take then I do it again, again and again w/o false casts so the fly is drifting over and over target again, again, and again until the fish slips up and takes fly. awsome method as it doesn't spook fish and lands high volume reach casts w/out false casting. It is important to keep your line pinched and your motion the same each time so that the multiple casts are identical and eventually (usually within 4-5 casts) you get that perfect drift and take. When you get a little practice at it you will be able to land the fly exactly where it needs to be each time w a nice upstream belly cast after cast after cast. the high volume of casts is good as it maintains the anglers focus and increases the volume of potentially perfect casts exactly wher they need to be.