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Children learn to fly-fish, catch fun and life lessons

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“The first boy I sponsored is now 28, many of my boys are in the Navy; they’ve taken some service and it’s good to see how they’ve given back, too,” Gearhart said. “It’s unlike anything else. It’s pure. I tell the boys, ‘Some might not have what you have. Help them out. These men helped me out.’”

George Stamas, who has known Wright since they were growing up, brought his then-8-year-old son Jimmy to the Camp Airy event 18 years ago.

When Jimmy got around to writing his college essays, he wrote about the impact the brotherhood and fly fishing had on his life. His father said the admissions counselor at Virginia Tech, where his son graduated in 2009, found Jimmy’s essay to be unique.

“It will change you,” said Stamas, who lives in Towson. “Some of these men, it’s hard to explain how great they are to the children. Fly fishing is a very pure way to fish. When you teach somebody to do it, they learn for a lifetime. There’s a camaraderie, there’s almost a cult with fly fishermen. It’s nature at its finest. The men who work here are all about the kids and teaching them the proper ways of life.”

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