Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Re: {Tidal Potomac Fly Rodders} Re: New rod/reel

It sounds like most folks are in the 4-8 weight range for the river....and I'd imagine that most of the folks on the board could pick up anyone else's rod (with permission) and catch fish with it.  It's a lot of personal preference.  

To tell the truth, there's really no practical reason for me to ever use anything other than my 8-weight (TFO PRO II -- quite moderate compared to most 8-weights I've casted) for the river, regardless of the species and fly sizes.  The rod protects down to smaller than I would generally use for anything warm water, and it certainly permits me to cast in a wider range of conditions than my other gear.  Actually, there's very little disadvantage using it for most of my trout fishing, other than very calm areas that I don't fish often and really small flies that I like more flex.  

But practical = boring and if practical ruled the world, we wouldn't have movies about gambling or Toaster Strudels.  Light tackle is fun, and fun trumps everything in my mind.  So I don't argue with what people want to use -- it's pointless and I'll be dead in another 30-40 years.  

One guy I know on here had a lady jogging by in DC and saw him fishing and said "Don't you think it's cruel to just catch the fish, struggle with 'em, and then let 'em go?"  Of course, there's never time to explain fees collected from sportsmen via licenses, gear, etc. but the point is that there's a common enemy -- 

Joggers!   Well, and unleashed dogs.  

Gene



On Tuesday, March 25, 2014 11:40:29 AM UTC-4, Eric Y. wrote:
I like the bigger rods to deal with the wind but a good friend fished for a lot of carp and shad up here and now that's he's moved out of the area, specks and puppy drum down in Galveston Bay with an 8'6" 4wt (the $130 Lefty Kreh Signature model, no less). 

For reels, unless I'm fishing salt or a two-hander, I use a 60 year old click-and-pawl Cortland Rimfly that I found in my great grandfather's basement many years ago. There aren't too many freshwater fish that truly necessitate more drag than your palm can provide and nothing sounds quite as good as a fish pulling drag off a click-and-pawl. Plus, click and pawl is bomb-proof. 

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