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Matching reel and line/rod weights. What can one get away with?
I am still baffled by the whole line/rod/reel weight thing. I have a 7
weight Hardy JLH Golden reel winging its way towards me from England to use on my old Fenwick 7 weight glass fibre rod. I have also decided to look for a cheap multi-piece travel rod to allow me to fish when hiking, and it would be nice if I could use the same reel. So, what is the lightest rod I could get away with using the Hardy reel on? I know one has to match line weight and rod weight, but does one absolutely have to match the reel to the rod and line? Since everyone seems to say that 4, 5 and 6 weight rods are right for trout, I was thinking that maybe I could get a 5 weight rod but only if I can use the 7 weight reel on it. Dan (who is beginning to think about making a trip to Sacramento just to talk to Bill Kiene in person.) |
Matching reel and line/rod weights. What can one get away with?
Dan wrote:
I am still baffled by the whole line/rod/reel weight thing. Just take a deep breath, relax, and go fishing with whatever gear you have available. The very best advice you've gotten, that I've noticed, came from Jeff Miller. Dan (who is beginning to think about making a trip to Sacramento just to talk to Bill Kiene in person.) It wouldn't hurt. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
Matching reel and line/rod weights. What can one get away with?
You can go up or down one fairly easily with a change of spools (line should
match rod). However, balancing the reel size and weight to the rod is much more desirable and contributes extensively to proper gearwhoring. -- Wayne To Fish is Human...To Release Divine! "Dan" lose wrote in message ... I am still baffled by the whole line/rod/reel weight thing. Dan (who is beginning to think about making a trip to Sacramento just to talk to Bill Kiene in person.) |
Matching reel and line/rod weights. What can one get away with?
Thanks RW,
I do appreciate the advice from you and everyone else here. However, that said, right now I don't have the equipment to go fishing at all and using the time until I do to ask questions to enable myself to make the best decisions about equipment seems rational. And yes, Mr Miller's advice did seem good. Dan "rw" wrote in message news:LQtyb.22685 Just take a deep breath, relax, and go fishing with whatever gear you have available. The very best advice you've gotten, that I've noticed, came from Jeff Miller. |
Matching reel and line/rod weights. What can one get away with?
Dan wrote:
Thanks RW, I do appreciate the advice from you and everyone else here. However, that said, right now I don't have the equipment to go fishing at all and using the time until I do to ask questions to enable myself to make the best decisions about equipment seems rational. And yes, Mr Miller's advice did seem good. There's a quaint and, IMO, effete tendency among flyfishers to suppose that gear is, if not everything, then maybe upwards of 90% of everything. Gear matters little, the opinions of ROFF's self-proclaimed gear whores notwithstanding. You'll need a rod, a line, a leader, and a fly. A reel (any reel large enough) would help a lot, but it's not absolutely essential for the trout fishing you'll be doing. (Sierras, right?) Don't fall into the trap of gear-whoredom, Dan. You will never recover. P.S. Although you only need "a fly" at any one moment, I suggest you take some spares. :-) -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
Matching reel and line/rod weights. What can one get away with?
You mean that those who told me that 90 percent of the sport is the acquisition
of things are wrong? And I've enjoyed it so much more since my closet has been filling up. |
Matching reel and line/rod weights. What can one get away with?
Lat705 wrote:
You mean that those who told me that 90 percent of the sport is the acquisition of things are wrong? And I've enjoyed it so much more since my closet has been filling up. They're not necessarily wrong. It depends on your priorities. It's much easier to collect gear than actually to go out and catch some trout; and, if you have the right temperment and personality, it might even be more rewarding. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
Matching reel and line/rod weights. What can one get away with?
RW,
Since my total gear at this point is one (30 year old and paid for IIRC, my mother) $25 rod and one (not here yet and cost well under $100) Hardy reel, I think I have the urge to just accumulate gear reasonably under control. My initial post in fact, at least on this subject, was in the hopes of being able to use one reel on two rods. However, I do take your point, which is, if I have understood you correctly, that the key point is to get out and fish. I am working on that part of the plan right now. Cheers - Dan "rw" wrote in message news:RSuyb.20709 There's a quaint and, IMO, effete tendency among flyfishers to suppose that gear is, if not everything, then maybe upwards of 90% of everything. Gear matters little, the opinions of ROFF's self-proclaimed gear whores notwithstanding. You'll need a rod, a line, a leader, and a fly. A reel (any reel large enough) would help a lot, but it's not absolutely essential for the trout fishing you'll be doing. (Sierras, right?) Don't fall into the trap of gear-whoredom, Dan. You will never recover. P.S. Although you only need "a fly" at any one moment, I suggest you take some spares. :-) |
Matching reel and line/rod weights. What can one get away with?
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Matching reel and line/rod weights. What can one get away with?
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