In a sport as resistant to change as fly-fishing, tenkara is a revolution. Actually a counterrevolution, since its stripped-down, minimalist aesthetic harks back to the earliest days of angling with flies. Remember the cane pole of your childhood? No reel — just rod, line and fly? That’s tenkara. Except instead of flimsy bamboo you have an unimaginably light, durable, collapsible carbon fiber rod that fits snugly in your backpack. Leave it to the Japanese to come up with something perfectly simple and beautiful that you can painlessly pack to high-country streams or even carry with you while trail-running.
After years of dalliance, tenkara is finally catching on in the US — Yvon Chouinard, that high prophet of fly-fishing, has even cowritten a book on it — with several manufacturers offering a dizzying array of options that run the gamut in quality, beauty, transportability, and price-point. To be sure, tenkara rods have their limitations: they excel on tight, narrow streams and pools with mid-size fish, and definitely not on big water with, say, a five-pound bass in your crosshairs. But they can be a refreshing break from the standard western rigs, as well as a great learning tool for aspiring anglers at a fraction of the normal costs of a rod and reel — a kind of gateway drug offering beginners a more accessible and affordable entry point. Here are five of the best American-made tenkara on the market today.

Tenkara USA Sato

Best Starter Rod: Named after the British diplomat and outdoorsman Ernest Mason Satow, who was the first to describe tenkara fishing to western audiences, the Sato is a light, elegant, versatile rod that’s tailor-made for small-to-moderate streams with sparse wiggle room. Designed with the company’s “triple-zoom” technology, the Sato adjusts to three lengths (10 feet and 8 inches, 11 feet and 10 inches, 12 feet and 9 inches — the average tenkara being about 12 feet long), allowing you to fine-tune your presentation depending on conditions. Tenkara USA owner Daniel Galhardo also had the novice angler in mind, the idea being to ratchet up your rod length to match your ability. It fishes well at all three lengths, with a soft feel allowing for effortless casting and accuracy, and can handle fish in the six-to-15-inch range, give or take.