
When he was young, newspaperman and avid fly fisher Rip Woodin didn’t fish at all.
Instead, he used his talents on the tennis courts of the North Carolina junior circuit, eventually finding himself on the B squad at the University of North Carolina. There he found out that the talent level seemed to stretch on without him.
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“I was on the freshman team at Carolina but never got to play a match because I was on the bench picking up leftover balls,” Woodin said.
How does a young man, who is a decent tennis player but doesn’t fish at all, become a lifelong fly fisherman and ardent conservationist in his later years?
Woodin’s life has seen him move three-quarters of the way across the continental U.S. and eventually return to North Carolina. Now he’s fishing waters and doing the kind of work that he never dreamed of back when he was smacking tennis balls across the net.
After graduating from UNC in January 1969 with a double major in journalism and English, Woodin joined the Marine Corps where he enjoyed a pleasant six-week vacation at Parris Island, South Carolina. Later, he spent six years working in Greensboro while also serving in the Marine Corps Reserve.
That’s when, in a twist, Woodin received an offer to join the Air Force and go to flight school.
“(I) probably would have been sent to Vietnam and met John McCain,” Woodin theorized, but instead he stayed in Greensboro until 1976.
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“I worked various reporting jobs for the Greensboro Daily News,” he said of the Guilford County paper.

Then in 1976, he moved to Jackson, Wyoming. He became editor of the Jackson Hole Guide and met his wife Jane.
“I was living in the basement apartment of a condo while three women lived upstairs. The other two moved out and Jane moved downstairs,” Woodin said.
Jackson was where they stayed until 1986 and where many of the events that would shape much of Woodin’s later life took place.
“We were married in 1979 and two of our three children were born there,” Woodin said of Jackson, which is also where he first learned to fly fish.
“Paul Bruun was my boss when I first moved out there, and he gave me a fly rod,” Woodin said.
Bruun would go on to be inducted into the Fly Fishing Hall of Fame in Roscoe, New York, in October 2021.
Bruun’s was an opportune gift because, “Jackson is all about fly fishing for cutthroat trout,” Woodin said.
Woodin, with an eye for newspaper design, quickly found that the thrill of fly fishing was the visual aspect.
“The thing that really appealed to me was seeing the fish come up and take the fly,” Woodin said. “When a nice cutthroat trout comes up to hit a hopper, he just rolls up on it slowly, opens his mouth and takes it back down. Then you lift the rod and you’ve got an 18-inch fish.”
There was also an opportune real estate purchase that would come to shape Woodin’s later years.

“We purchased a piece of property that we never developed and when the kids got older and we had moved away, we decided to sell it. Real estate values in Jackson had risen dramatically over 30 years, and after using the money to help pay for the kids’ colleges, we were able to buy a duplex in Atlantic Beach,” he said.
By that time, after having jobs at different newspapers in various states, the move back to North Carolina came with a new title, publisher at the Rocky Mount Telegram.
The Woodins quickly took to the coastal life and they decided if they were going to be spending a lot of time at the beach, they needed to have a boat.
“I went to Jerry at Fort Macon Marina and bought the boat I still have today,” he said.
He found that the variety of marine life and saltwater fishing was something he really liked, and he got into it quickly.
“I bought a saltwater fly rod and starting fishing around here pretty quickly,” he said.
As Woodin progressed with his fly fishing, he started traveling to some pretty far-flung places where he tangled with a lot of different fish.
“The most challenging is the permit because it’s the hardest to catch and the hardest to hook,” he said. “They fight hard and they’re rare. You don’t go out and get 10 shots on permit in a day, you’re usually lucky to get two or three.”
One of the most thrilling species, however, is the tarpon, Woodin said.
“Obviously, because they jump so much,” he explained.
Closer to home, Woodin loves to fish for false albacore.
“The hardest fighter is false albacore. They fight better than bonefish (and I’ve got some big bonefish). But fight wise, nothing compares to a false albacore,” he said.
In recent years, Woodin has blended his experience as a newspaperman and his love for the saltwater environment and fish and applied it to becoming actively involved in conservation with the Coastal Conservation Association, an organization of recreational anglers focused on protecting the marine environment.
“For a while we put out a newspaper, which I edited, and because of my background in writing I wrote press releases and stories,” Woodin said. “I still advise them on good PR strategy.”
He’s also on the board of CCA-NC and an active participant in the state chapter’s activities.
Woodin’s fishing advice?
“The key is practicing your casting and being able to hit your target, but more important is keeping your emotions under control so you are able to concentrate and don’t basically screw it up when staring at a big fish.”
In the end, Woodin said, “If you take care of the fish, the fishing will take care of itself.”