In article , John
wrote:
Just found my old rod and reel in the basement. I'm thinking of going
fishing this weekend as well as walking, perhaps up in the Lake
District. I've not been for about 17 years!
g Welcome back, all is forgiven ;-)
I think I will almost definitely need a new floating line.
Probably, old one will have gone stiff at best and probably perished as well.
My rod is an Olympic Carbon Composite Black Fly rod. 9 1/2ft - 2.90M.
It also says #8/9 Art No A380 on it. Not sure what this means? Is it
the weight of the rod?
It's the weight of the line it is designed to cast...
Mainly going to be using it on rivers.
....rather too heavy for river work except possibly for big seatrout/grisle.
Last time I used this I was about 13 years old. Now 30! I'm going to
And definitely too much rod for a 13 year old.
give it a try, hopefully there will be no one around to see me making
a total ass of myself. Will probably go backwards into a field of cows
The standard best advice it to sign up for a lesson with your local
instructor - it will cost a few quid but save you half a season's
frustration.
stack up now I'm no longer a scrawny 13 year old, will have too see
how it goes.
Just keep it gentle and stay withing your limits - but it will be hard to
present your fly delicately with that outfit - for upland brownies a #4/5
would be better. I don't know that particular rod but it's most likely
designed to cast weight forward lines or shooting heads from the banks of
still waters and intended for long range work at that. It would be about
right for sal****er flyfishing from midsummer onwards.
Reel says Leeda on one side and RimFly on the other. Has a + to -
turning dial on its rear.
Regrease and it'll be fine.
Will have to ask about GRX Double Taper Floating Lines in a tackle
shop at the weekend like Junkster recommends in the reply 2 months
back to my post.
I'm certain that rod isn't intended for DT lines.
Look in one of the mags - order some dirt cheap mill-end lines that you
won't mind ruining - then abuse them by casting into every snag-pit - by the
end of a season you will no longer be damaging lines
but
That rod is too heavy for the fishing you intend - look out for something
lighter and practice -accurate- -unobtrusive- casting at no more than ten
yards (DT line fine for this) and you'll catch more.
Have fun. Cheerio,
--
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http://www.fishing.casterbridge.net/
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