Are your 6 and 8wt mid or tip flex? That will alter expectations on casting distance as MF is designed for presentation and TF to have more backbone. 80ft is okay with my 8wt (Orvis Clearwater, TF) but not much past without basically a running start. Distances of greater than 75ft are basically why a lot of folks have gotten into the two handers. Throwing out miles of line on my 6wt switch is a lot easier than with my 8wt.
Unless you're fishing for big brutes like striper, marlin, or LMB, presentation is still generally what's most important. I fished redfish, snook, and cobia pretty hard for a short while and while distance makes a difference, you'll scare them all away with poor presentation. It is also a lot easier to get distances when you're in open water on a casting platform (or, alternatively, in a drift boat) when you're up above the water more than you normally would be and there are few obstructions to watch out for on the back cast.
On Saturday, February 2, 2013 2:15:24 PM UTC-5, TurbineBlade wrote:
-- On Saturday, February 2, 2013 2:15:24 PM UTC-5, TurbineBlade wrote:
Hi - with the silty waters I decided to go out and grass-cast for a couple of hours this morning. This time I took a long tape measure and a couple of white towels to measure distance/accuracy.Rods -3 weight6 weight8 weight (wife's rod with 5" lead clouser to make it realistic as possible)Okay, at 50 feet I can hit the towel pretty consistently with all 3 rods. This is with a "gentle" double haul and not too big of a casting stroke (don't know if that is scientific or not - hopefully that makes sense).At 75 feet though, I have problems hitting the towel with the 3 weight, period. 60 feet is "okay", but 50 is really about the best I seem to do comfortably with the 3 weight.With the 6 and 8 weight, I can unreliably hit the 75 foot distance, but accuracy kind of goes to hell....I am also using a lot of body movement (weight shifting) and a really long stroke. The forward cast I have "reach for the sky" with the rod so that the line shoots out to get the distance...which probably looks pretty grotesque.Question - with the 75 foot distance (which is really long for me) the fly line seems to kind of want to "crumple" on itself on the forward cast. This not a tailing loop...because God knows I've thrown enough of those to recognize it. I used to throw the tailing loops even on 40-50 foot casts until I figured out how to remove slack from the cast and learned to double haul better.Also, I can only have out about 50 feet of line and still pick it up. Beyond that and I can't seem to haul/muscle the back cast well. It looks like a cartoon if I try.These fly lines are - 1 weight forward, 1 bass taper line. Should I be able to throw a 75-80 foot cast with these kind of lines, or do most people use some kind of distance line?BTW - I cannot believe how much easier that 8 weight throws a huge clouser minnow than my 6 weight! There's no comparison -- the 8 weight is the right tool for the job on those big heavy flies.Thanks for any tips -- when fishing it seems like I'm only casting between 20-40 feet, but I didn't want to get soft in case I get a chance to go for some SW fishing at some point ;). I kind of enjoy casting just for the heck of it too. Crap, the penguins just scored again. Talk to you!Gene
http://www.tpfr.org
---
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Tidal Potomac Fly Rodders" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to tidal-potomac-fly-rodders+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com.
To post to this group, send email to tidal-potomac-fly-rodders@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msg/tidal-potomac-fly-rodders/-/PHZH6BwjR4IJ.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.
No comments:
Post a Comment