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-   -   Fly rod recommendations (http://www.fishingbanter.com/showthread.php?t=8489)

SnotDemon July 8th, 2004 02:15 AM

Fly rod recommendations
 
Hi all,

I have been trying to learn to fly fish. I have been using my grandfather's 60+ yr old bamboo rods but they are all in only fair condition with corroded guides and poor finishes. I do have 2 fiberglass, 1 wood and even a steel fly rod but after trying a graphit rod I can see that I have been fighting the equipment more than anything.

I would like to buy a decent rod in the $200-$300 range and was hoping some of you might offer me some advise on manufacturers. I live in the north-east and mostly go for trout but have been lucky enough to have work ship me to ireland for a few salmon runs on the river Lee in Cork. Any thoughts are appreciated!

Mike


Flying Squirrel July 8th, 2004 04:49 AM

Fly rod recommendations
 
"SnotDemon" wrote in message
news:0f1Hc.42474$XM6.28515@attbi_s53...
Hi all,

I have been trying to learn to fly fish. I have been using my

grandfather's 60+ yr old bamboo rods but they are all in only fair condition
with corroded guides and poor finishes. I do have 2 fiberglass, 1 wood and
even a steel fly rod but after trying a graphit rod I can see that I have
been fighting the equipment more than anything.

I would like to buy a decent rod in the $200-$300 range and was hoping

some of you might offer me some advise on manufacturers. I live in the
north-east and mostly go for trout but have been lucky enough to have work
ship me to ireland for a few salmon runs on the river Lee in Cork. Any
thoughts are appreciated!

Mike


Try
www.templeforkflyrods.com. Try Dan Blanton's bulletin board for some
opinions - virtually all good. I know nothing about fishing for salmon, but
I imagine a rod good for Northeast trout wouldn't be ideal for salmon, and
vice versa. The Temple Fork rods are cheap enough you could get one for each
and still have change from $300.



Flying Squirrel July 8th, 2004 04:49 AM

Fly rod recommendations
 
"SnotDemon" wrote in message
news:0f1Hc.42474$XM6.28515@attbi_s53...
Hi all,

I have been trying to learn to fly fish. I have been using my

grandfather's 60+ yr old bamboo rods but they are all in only fair condition
with corroded guides and poor finishes. I do have 2 fiberglass, 1 wood and
even a steel fly rod but after trying a graphit rod I can see that I have
been fighting the equipment more than anything.

I would like to buy a decent rod in the $200-$300 range and was hoping

some of you might offer me some advise on manufacturers. I live in the
north-east and mostly go for trout but have been lucky enough to have work
ship me to ireland for a few salmon runs on the river Lee in Cork. Any
thoughts are appreciated!

Mike


Try
www.templeforkflyrods.com. Try Dan Blanton's bulletin board for some
opinions - virtually all good. I know nothing about fishing for salmon, but
I imagine a rod good for Northeast trout wouldn't be ideal for salmon, and
vice versa. The Temple Fork rods are cheap enough you could get one for each
and still have change from $300.



[email protected] July 8th, 2004 08:25 AM

Fly rod recommendations
 
Agree whole heartedly with the Squirrel, the Temple Fork Titaniums are hard
to fault in their price point. With Scientific Anglers' XXD lines I was
consistently rollcasting both the 5 wt and 8 wt 65 ft or more with little
effort, so you can imagine what they can do on an overhead cast. A 5 and 8
wt would be a good arsenal to have. With different style lines you could
fish all over the world multi-species.

[email protected] July 8th, 2004 08:25 AM

Fly rod recommendations
 
Agree whole heartedly with the Squirrel, the Temple Fork Titaniums are hard
to fault in their price point. With Scientific Anglers' XXD lines I was
consistently rollcasting both the 5 wt and 8 wt 65 ft or more with little
effort, so you can imagine what they can do on an overhead cast. A 5 and 8
wt would be a good arsenal to have. With different style lines you could
fish all over the world multi-species.

Bill Mason July 8th, 2004 08:57 AM

Fly rod recommendations
 
"SnotDemon" wrote in message
news:0f1Hc.42474$XM6.28515@attbi_s53...


I would like to buy a decent rod in the $200-$300 range and was hoping

some of you might offer me some advise on manufacturers. I live in the
north-east and mostly go for trout but have been lucky enough to have work
ship me to ireland for a few salmon runs on the river Lee in Cork. Any
thoughts are appreciated!

Mike


I might take a load of s**t for this, but I'm really happy with my Cabela's
SLi 5wt. Casts very nicely for any price, and a travel rod (untried by me)
is available. Good luck, tight line and all else that might be relevant :-)

Cheers,
Bill



Bill Mason July 8th, 2004 08:57 AM

Fly rod recommendations
 
"SnotDemon" wrote in message
news:0f1Hc.42474$XM6.28515@attbi_s53...


I would like to buy a decent rod in the $200-$300 range and was hoping

some of you might offer me some advise on manufacturers. I live in the
north-east and mostly go for trout but have been lucky enough to have work
ship me to ireland for a few salmon runs on the river Lee in Cork. Any
thoughts are appreciated!

Mike


I might take a load of s**t for this, but I'm really happy with my Cabela's
SLi 5wt. Casts very nicely for any price, and a travel rod (untried by me)
is available. Good luck, tight line and all else that might be relevant :-)

Cheers,
Bill



Lazarus Cooke July 8th, 2004 10:32 AM

Fly rod recommendations
 
In article 0f1Hc.42474$XM6.28515@attbi_s53, SnotDemon
wrote:


I would like to buy a decent rod in the $200-$300 range and was hoping some
of you might offer me some advise on manufacturers. I live in the north-east
and mostly go for trout but have been lucky enough to have work ship me to
ireland for a few salmon runs on the river Lee in Cork. Any thoughts are
appreciated!


You're on the edge trying to use the same rod for both trout and Irish
salmon . A 9 foot, 6 weight rod is a bit heavy for trout (depends more
on the size of the fly than anything else), and a bit short for Irish
rivers, but you can, and I do use one for both.

Lazarus

--
Remover the rock from the email address

bassrecord July 8th, 2004 09:31 PM

Fly rod recommendations
 
Suggest you buy a four piece travel rod regardless of the brand you buy.
Good luck!

John
"SnotDemon" wrote in message
news:0f1Hc.42474$XM6.28515@attbi_s53...
Hi all,

I have been trying to learn to fly fish. I have been using my

grandfather's 60+ yr old bamboo rods but they are all in only fair condition
with corroded guides and poor finishes. I do have 2 fiberglass, 1 wood and
even a steel fly rod but after trying a graphit rod I can see that I have
been fighting the equipment more than anything.

I would like to buy a decent rod in the $200-$300 range and was hoping

some of you might offer me some advise on manufacturers. I live in the
north-east and mostly go for trout but have been lucky enough to have work
ship me to ireland for a few salmon runs on the river Lee in Cork. Any
thoughts are appreciated!

Mike




bruiser July 9th, 2004 06:14 AM

Fly rod recommendations
 
Good call on the 4 piece. Even if you never fly. There's tons of good
cheap rods out there these days. Try Temple Fork and Redington.

bruce h



rw July 9th, 2004 06:43 AM

Fly rod recommendations
 
bruiser wrote:

Good call on the 4 piece. Even if you never fly. There's tons of good
cheap rods out there these days. Try Temple Fork and Redington.


Why do you hate Orvis so much? :-)

--
Cut "to the chase" for my email address.

rw July 9th, 2004 06:43 AM

Fly rod recommendations
 
bruiser wrote:

Good call on the 4 piece. Even if you never fly. There's tons of good
cheap rods out there these days. Try Temple Fork and Redington.


Why do you hate Orvis so much? :-)

--
Cut "to the chase" for my email address.

Jim July 9th, 2004 04:35 PM

Fly rod recommendations
 
Why don't you build your own? You can buy kits from Cabelas or check online
at other websites. There is nothing like landing a fish on a rod you built.


"SnotDemon" wrote in message
news:0f1Hc.42474$XM6.28515@attbi_s53...
Hi all,

I have been trying to learn to fly fish. I have been using my

grandfather's 60+ yr old bamboo rods but they are all in only fair condition
with corroded guides and poor finishes. I do have 2 fiberglass, 1 wood and
even a steel fly rod but after trying a graphit rod I can see that I have
been fighting the equipment more than anything.

I would like to buy a decent rod in the $200-$300 range and was hoping

some of you might offer me some advise on manufacturers. I live in the
north-east and mostly go for trout but have been lucky enough to have work
ship me to ireland for a few salmon runs on the river Lee in Cork. Any
thoughts are appreciated!

Mike




SteveB July 9th, 2004 09:27 PM

Fly rod recommendations
 

"Jim" wrote in message
...
Why don't you build your own? You can buy kits from Cabelas or check

online
at other websites. There is nothing like landing a fish on a rod you

built.


Whilst living in or near Galveston, Texas, we would go and find a good
"calcutta cane" pole, and make them into a surf redfish rod. I was not sure
of the merit of these, but once, I had a plain one come off the top of the
car and immediately run over by a semi and a few cars. A few nicks, but the
thing was fine. Some people had neither the time or talent to make them, so
others capitalized on it and made a few bucks. Putting on guides,
particularly with today's glues and supplies isn't exactly rocket surgery or
brain science.

You had to look through a bunch of poles to find a straight one that was
just right for mounting a reel and guides on. But the end product, was, as
you say, rewarding. And you could toss a 5 oz. sand sinker and a big chunk
of mullet a country mile with one of them. And they lasted forever.

Steve



SteveB July 9th, 2004 09:27 PM

Fly rod recommendations
 

"Jim" wrote in message
...
Why don't you build your own? You can buy kits from Cabelas or check

online
at other websites. There is nothing like landing a fish on a rod you

built.


Whilst living in or near Galveston, Texas, we would go and find a good
"calcutta cane" pole, and make them into a surf redfish rod. I was not sure
of the merit of these, but once, I had a plain one come off the top of the
car and immediately run over by a semi and a few cars. A few nicks, but the
thing was fine. Some people had neither the time or talent to make them, so
others capitalized on it and made a few bucks. Putting on guides,
particularly with today's glues and supplies isn't exactly rocket surgery or
brain science.

You had to look through a bunch of poles to find a straight one that was
just right for mounting a reel and guides on. But the end product, was, as
you say, rewarding. And you could toss a 5 oz. sand sinker and a big chunk
of mullet a country mile with one of them. And they lasted forever.

Steve




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