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Old October 16th, 2004, 05:37 PM
riverman
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Default Suitable Line Weights


"George Cleveland" wrote in message
...
I just finished reading the Lyon's reprint of J. Edson Leonard's book
"Feather in the Breeze". Leonard was a fisherman who started
flyfishing, mostly in the East, in the 1920s. In his chapter "The Long
and the Short Of It", he refers to one of his favorite bigger river
trout rods as being a 9 1/2' Phillipson cane that threw a DT8F(!)
line. He claimed that it would "place a dryfly as softly as a thistle
dropped by an upstream gust". Interesting.

My question is, other than the pleasure of experiencing the lightness
in the hand of the rod itself, do you think it is really necessary for
people to use very light lines to be able to catch trout? I know that
my first three seasons on Black Earth Creek ( a southern Wisconsin
spring creek) were fished with a 6 wt. line and I caught fish (2000+
according to my old logs) on every thing from a #6 Hex dry to a #24
midge with no more spooking of fish than I do now with my 4 wt. rods.


First of all, let me congratulate you on developing the habit of lying in
your logs early on! :-)

No, I don't think its necessary to have a light line to catch trout. I think
you need a light LEADER to catch trout, but if you have a heavy line, you
just have to be more careful in your presentation, as you are tossing a lot
of weight out there. For fishing in closer, it might be difficult to get the
rod to load up, but the longer rod might make up for that. Forget fishing in
tight little overhanging trees, though.

--riverman
(who spent his first 3 seasons working with a 6/7 weight rod)