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#11
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On Fri, 07 Nov 2003 23:21:47 GMT, "Lennie Richardson"
wrote: "Skeeter" wrote in message . com... I am just starting out with the flyfishing bit and I am trying to get a feel for the best rod, for me, to buy. My brother guides quite a bit and he swears up and down by the Scott rod. What is everyone elses take. Skeeter you need a 16' 14 wt. spey rod. two handed fishing for a real man... FRAUD!!! Real men fish with a Bruce & Walker, 18' -- 11/12 wt. Me? I have to settle for the short **** (under 14'). For Skeeter 1) Ignore the rest of the loonies here, I'm the only loonie worth talking too. 2) Buy one of Uncle Walt's kits at www.ezflyfisher.com or 3} Buy a BassPro White River Classic or 4) Buy St. Croix Avid or 5) Buy a Temple Fork Outfitters rod or 6) Buy a cheap Redington or (7) an Orvis Clearwater Screw the high priced **** Peter turn mailhot into hotmail to reply Visit The Streamer Page at http://www.mountaincable.net/~pcharl...ers/index.html |
#12
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Hi Skeeter,
There are way to many choices today. Thirty years ago most would have just bought a fiberglass Fenwick fly rod which was the most popular fly rod in the US at that time. They producing close to 500,000 fishing rods just before the original owner, Don Green, sold to Berkeley Company. Don Green then started Sage Rod Company so he could get out of those old discount stores and produce a very high quality fly rod and sell it in fly shops. Today Sage Rod Company sells more premium fly rods than anyone else. Other premium brands are Scott, Winston, T&T, Orvis and G.Loomis. Most of their fly rods are still made in the US. Orvis does now have some of their very low end rods made overseas. They have a very nice entry level rod this year that is 9' #5, 4pc for $98US. The latest changes in fly rods in the US are the imported rods like Temple Fork Outfitters and Redington. These are great values in the $300US and under range. Today in the US we actually have imported fly rods that are under $100 that "smoke" anything that was available 20 years ago. The net effect for my fly shop is that we are now selling fly rods and rod, reel, line combinations to customers that would have normally mail ordered them from Cabelas. After someone has fly cast/fly fished for a while, they will gravitate to a type of action that fits their casting style. Some like rods that are ultra fast/ultra stiff. Some enjoy the very soft/very slow action rods that feel more like the old split cane or fiberglass rods. Most are happy to have a medium action rod which is in between and will fit most situations. Unless a person knows your casting style/rod action preference well, they can't just tell you that a particular brand and model will be right for you. We carry more (300-400) fly rods than 90% of the fly shops you go into mostly because we are in a very large city that can support this inventory. Unless a customer has never cast a fly rod, we try to get them to pick 2 or 3 rods out in the size, action and price point that he or she is interested in and cast them outside in our parking lot. The only thing better than that is to somehow be able to take some fly rods out to the fisheries you will fishing and try them right on the stream/lake with the exact lines, leaders and flies. This is pretty impossible except for lottery winners. The most popular length rod sold in the US today is 9' long. The most popular line size is #5. The most popular number of pieces is 4. I am not telling you that you should buy a 9' #5, 4 piece rod. I am just telling you that it is probably 50% of the market in most fly shops in the US. Today you can get a very nice fly rod to get started for $100 or less but why would you want to do that if you could afford a quality fly rod for $500 or more? Did I say that? When customers come in the shop, we try to explain the differences in fly rods from length (5' to 16'), line size (#0 to #16), number of piece (1 to 7), action, material (generations of graphite and fiberglass) and construction. Roughly there is the low end (~$100) that is OK if you need to be there. The mid-range ($200-400) which is the best dollar value. And then the high end ($500-$700) which are the best you can buy and if you can afford them, you should buy them unless you don't think you are deserving enough? Actually, the customers that buy the high end usually tell us that is where they want to be shopping. You don't sell customers $700 fly rods that are just starting out unless they decide that is what they want. My first car was an old 1956 Dodge that my grandmother gave me when I was 18 years old. My good friend who's dad was a judge got a new 427 Corvette for his 16th birthday. It's not fair. - Bill Kiene Kiene's Fly Shop Sacramento, CA www.kiene.com "Skeeter" wrote in message om... I am just starting out with the flyfishing bit and I am trying to get a feel for the best rod, for me, to buy. My brother guides quite a bit and he swears up and down by the Scott rod. What is everyone elses take. Skeeter |
#13
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Bill,
Why weren't you around when I started fly-fishing???????? Richard "Bill Kiene" wrote in message . com... Hi Skeeter, There are way to many choices today. Thirty years ago most would have just bought a fiberglass Fenwick fly rod which was the most popular fly rod in the US at that time. They producing close to 500,000 fishing rods just before the original owner, Don Green, sold to Berkeley Company. Don Green then started Sage Rod Company so he could get out of those old discount stores and produce a very high quality fly rod and sell it in fly shops. Today Sage Rod Company sells more premium fly rods than anyone else. Other premium brands are Scott, Winston, T&T, Orvis and G.Loomis. Most of their fly rods are still made in the US. Orvis does now have some of their very low end rods made overseas. They have a very nice entry level rod this year that is 9' #5, 4pc for $98US. The latest changes in fly rods in the US are the imported rods like Temple Fork Outfitters and Redington. These are great values in the $300US and under range. Today in the US we actually have imported fly rods that are under $100 that "smoke" anything that was available 20 years ago. The net effect for my fly shop is that we are now selling fly rods and rod, reel, line combinations to customers that would have normally mail ordered them from Cabelas. After someone has fly cast/fly fished for a while, they will gravitate to a type of action that fits their casting style. Some like rods that are ultra fast/ultra stiff. Some enjoy the very soft/very slow action rods that feel more like the old split cane or fiberglass rods. Most are happy to have a medium action rod which is in between and will fit most situations. Unless a person knows your casting style/rod action preference well, they can't just tell you that a particular brand and model will be right for you. We carry more (300-400) fly rods than 90% of the fly shops you go into mostly because we are in a very large city that can support this inventory. Unless a customer has never cast a fly rod, we try to get them to pick 2 or 3 rods out in the size, action and price point that he or she is interested in and cast them outside in our parking lot. The only thing better than that is to somehow be able to take some fly rods out to the fisheries you will fishing and try them right on the stream/lake with the exact lines, leaders and flies. This is pretty impossible except for lottery winners. The most popular length rod sold in the US today is 9' long. The most popular line size is #5. The most popular number of pieces is 4. I am not telling you that you should buy a 9' #5, 4 piece rod. I am just telling you that it is probably 50% of the market in most fly shops in the US. Today you can get a very nice fly rod to get started for $100 or less but why would you want to do that if you could afford a quality fly rod for $500 or more? Did I say that? When customers come in the shop, we try to explain the differences in fly rods from length (5' to 16'), line size (#0 to #16), number of piece (1 to 7), action, material (generations of graphite and fiberglass) and construction. Roughly there is the low end (~$100) that is OK if you need to be there. The mid-range ($200-400) which is the best dollar value. And then the high end ($500-$700) which are the best you can buy and if you can afford them, you should buy them unless you don't think you are deserving enough? Actually, the customers that buy the high end usually tell us that is where they want to be shopping. You don't sell customers $700 fly rods that are just starting out unless they decide that is what they want. My first car was an old 1956 Dodge that my grandmother gave me when I was 18 years old. My good friend who's dad was a judge got a new 427 Corvette for his 16th birthday. It's not fair. - Bill Kiene Kiene's Fly Shop Sacramento, CA www.kiene.com "Skeeter" wrote in message om... I am just starting out with the flyfishing bit and I am trying to get a feel for the best rod, for me, to buy. My brother guides quite a bit and he swears up and down by the Scott rod. What is everyone elses take. Skeeter |
#14
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"I love you, man."
-- Bill Kiene or "Boca Grande" in these parts...... Kiene's Fly Shop Sacramento, CA www.kiene.com "R. D. L." wrote in message m... Bill, Why weren't you around when I started fly-fishing???????? Richard "Bill Kiene" wrote in message . com... Hi Skeeter, There are way to many choices today. Thirty years ago most would have just bought a fiberglass Fenwick fly rod which was the most popular fly rod in the US at that time. They producing close to 500,000 fishing rods just before the original owner, Don Green, sold to Berkeley Company. Don Green then started Sage Rod Company so he could get out of those old discount stores and produce a very high quality fly rod and sell it in fly shops. Today Sage Rod Company sells more premium fly rods than anyone else. Other premium brands are Scott, Winston, T&T, Orvis and G.Loomis. Most of their fly rods are still made in the US. Orvis does now have some of their very low end rods made overseas. They have a very nice entry level rod this year that is 9' #5, 4pc for $98US. The latest changes in fly rods in the US are the imported rods like Temple Fork Outfitters and Redington. These are great values in the $300US and under range. Today in the US we actually have imported fly rods that are under $100 that "smoke" anything that was available 20 years ago. The net effect for my fly shop is that we are now selling fly rods and rod, reel, line combinations to customers that would have normally mail ordered them from Cabelas. After someone has fly cast/fly fished for a while, they will gravitate to a type of action that fits their casting style. Some like rods that are ultra fast/ultra stiff. Some enjoy the very soft/very slow action rods that feel more like the old split cane or fiberglass rods. Most are happy to have a medium action rod which is in between and will fit most situations. Unless a person knows your casting style/rod action preference well, they can't just tell you that a particular brand and model will be right for you. We carry more (300-400) fly rods than 90% of the fly shops you go into mostly because we are in a very large city that can support this inventory. Unless a customer has never cast a fly rod, we try to get them to pick 2 or 3 rods out in the size, action and price point that he or she is interested in and cast them outside in our parking lot. The only thing better than that is to somehow be able to take some fly rods out to the fisheries you will fishing and try them right on the stream/lake with the exact lines, leaders and flies. This is pretty impossible except for lottery winners. The most popular length rod sold in the US today is 9' long. The most popular line size is #5. The most popular number of pieces is 4. I am not telling you that you should buy a 9' #5, 4 piece rod. I am just telling you that it is probably 50% of the market in most fly shops in the US. Today you can get a very nice fly rod to get started for $100 or less but why would you want to do that if you could afford a quality fly rod for $500 or more? Did I say that? When customers come in the shop, we try to explain the differences in fly rods from length (5' to 16'), line size (#0 to #16), number of piece (1 to 7), action, material (generations of graphite and fiberglass) and construction. Roughly there is the low end (~$100) that is OK if you need to be there. The mid-range ($200-400) which is the best dollar value. And then the high end ($500-$700) which are the best you can buy and if you can afford them, you should buy them unless you don't think you are deserving enough? Actually, the customers that buy the high end usually tell us that is where they want to be shopping. You don't sell customers $700 fly rods that are just starting out unless they decide that is what they want. My first car was an old 1956 Dodge that my grandmother gave me when I was 18 years old. My good friend who's dad was a judge got a new 427 Corvette for his 16th birthday. It's not fair. - Bill Kiene Kiene's Fly Shop Sacramento, CA www.kiene.com "Skeeter" wrote in message om... I am just starting out with the flyfishing bit and I am trying to get a feel for the best rod, for me, to buy. My brother guides quite a bit and he swears up and down by the Scott rod. What is everyone elses take. Skeeter |
#15
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![]() "Peter Charles" wrote in message ... On Fri, 07 Nov 2003 23:21:47 GMT, "Lennie Richardson" wrote: "Skeeter" wrote in message . com... I am just starting out with the flyfishing bit and I am trying to get a feel for the best rod, for me, to buy. My brother guides quite a bit and he swears up and down by the Scott rod. What is everyone elses take. Skeeter you need a 16' 14 wt. spey rod. two handed fishing for a real man... FRAUD!!! damn. sussed out again... nice advice snipped Screw the high priced **** I'm done cutting up, Skeeter. Decide what type of fishing you'll be doing (freshwater, panfish, bass, trout, large stream small stream, sal****er, inshore, offshore...) and then buy an outfit that fits the type of water and species you're starting out with. The only other advice I can give you is that life's too short to use a rod you can't cast well. Keep trying until you get one that YOU like. LR onnest |
#16
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Bill WAS around when you started fly fishing. He just wasn't around you!
"R. D. L." wrote in message m... Bill, Why weren't you around when I started fly-fishing???????? Richard "Bill Kiene" wrote in message . com... Hi Skeeter, There are way to many choices today. Thirty years ago most would have just bought a fiberglass Fenwick fly rod which was the most popular fly rod in the US at that time. They producing close to 500,000 fishing rods just before the original owner, Don Green, sold to Berkeley Company. Don Green then started Sage Rod Company so he could get out of those old discount stores and produce a very high quality fly rod and sell it in fly shops. Today Sage Rod Company sells more premium fly rods than anyone else. Other premium brands are Scott, Winston, T&T, Orvis and G.Loomis. Most of their fly rods are still made in the US. Orvis does now have some of their very low end rods made overseas. They have a very nice entry level rod this year that is 9' #5, 4pc for $98US. The latest changes in fly rods in the US are the imported rods like Temple Fork Outfitters and Redington. These are great values in the $300US and under range. Today in the US we actually have imported fly rods that are under $100 that "smoke" anything that was available 20 years ago. The net effect for my fly shop is that we are now selling fly rods and rod, reel, line combinations to customers that would have normally mail ordered them from Cabelas. After someone has fly cast/fly fished for a while, they will gravitate to a type of action that fits their casting style. Some like rods that are ultra fast/ultra stiff. Some enjoy the very soft/very slow action rods that feel more like the old split cane or fiberglass rods. Most are happy to have a medium action rod which is in between and will fit most situations. Unless a person knows your casting style/rod action preference well, they can't just tell you that a particular brand and model will be right for you. We carry more (300-400) fly rods than 90% of the fly shops you go into mostly because we are in a very large city that can support this inventory. Unless a customer has never cast a fly rod, we try to get them to pick 2 or 3 rods out in the size, action and price point that he or she is interested in and cast them outside in our parking lot. The only thing better than that is to somehow be able to take some fly rods out to the fisheries you will fishing and try them right on the stream/lake with the exact lines, leaders and flies. This is pretty impossible except for lottery winners. The most popular length rod sold in the US today is 9' long. The most popular line size is #5. The most popular number of pieces is 4. I am not telling you that you should buy a 9' #5, 4 piece rod. I am just telling you that it is probably 50% of the market in most fly shops in the US. Today you can get a very nice fly rod to get started for $100 or less but why would you want to do that if you could afford a quality fly rod for $500 or more? Did I say that? When customers come in the shop, we try to explain the differences in fly rods from length (5' to 16'), line size (#0 to #16), number of piece (1 to 7), action, material (generations of graphite and fiberglass) and construction. Roughly there is the low end (~$100) that is OK if you need to be there. The mid-range ($200-400) which is the best dollar value. And then the high end ($500-$700) which are the best you can buy and if you can afford them, you should buy them unless you don't think you are deserving enough? Actually, the customers that buy the high end usually tell us that is where they want to be shopping. You don't sell customers $700 fly rods that are just starting out unless they decide that is what they want. My first car was an old 1956 Dodge that my grandmother gave me when I was 18 years old. My good friend who's dad was a judge got a new 427 Corvette for his 16th birthday. It's not fair. - Bill Kiene Kiene's Fly Shop Sacramento, CA www.kiene.com "Skeeter" wrote in message om... I am just starting out with the flyfishing bit and I am trying to get a feel for the best rod, for me, to buy. My brother guides quite a bit and he swears up and down by the Scott rod. What is everyone elses take. Skeeter --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.536 / Virus Database: 331 - Release Date: 11/4/2003 |
#17
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![]() "Skeeter" wrote in message . com... I am just starting out with the flyfishing bit and I am trying to get a feel for the best rod, for me, to buy. My brother guides quite a bit and he swears up and down by the Scott rod. What is everyone elses take. Skeeter What kind of fishing are you doing? Your best bed is try to cast the rods yourself plus tell the shop what you are fishing for, for instance you will want a different rod for catching 10 inch native trout than catching 40 pound salmon. At about $80 the temple fork outfitters 6 weight would be a good generic rod, imho. |
#18
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In article ,
"Bill Kiene" wrote: Today you can get a very nice fly rod to get started for $100 or less but why would you want to do that if you could afford a quality fly rod for $500 or more? Is their really that much of a difference between a TFO and a $500 rod? |
#19
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Hi Steve,
That is a good question. Actually it is hard to see the difference just like in rifle scopes today. The import scopes that won't shoot in the same place twice and will fog up in conditions normal to Elk hunting look about the same to most as the high end scopes that are built to last and 5 times as much money. Most all the premium US fly rods are made one at a time, by hand, by American citizens. They have very controlled environments, use the best materials, don't let anything by that is not perfect and R&D these rods with some of the best casters in the world. After all that said are they a bargain or are they as good a dollar value as some of the import rods. Who knows......but they are better made with better materials with more care. In America we have low end, mid-range and high end. The low end today will work fair and will hold up for a while. The mid-range is probably the best value for the buck. The high end is better but you have to pay lots more to get a little more so it might not be worth it for everyone. This is true in cars, cameras, motorcycles, boats, airplanes etc. The reality to coming into a fly shop with $700 in your wallet for a fly rod is the fact that you can now cast anything on the rack and pick the one you feel cast the best for you. I think that entry level rods are great for people that are not sure they will like fly fishing or even be able to do it well or people that are on a budget or people who's big challenge in life is to see how cheaply they can get by. Now what the hell are they going to do with all the money they did not spend? First off, I hope they never win the lottery because they will have nothing to spend that money on. Think about it. Pretty funny.............. -- Bill Kiene Kiene's Fly Shop Sacramento, CA www.kiene.com "steve" wrote in message ... In article , "Bill Kiene" wrote: Today you can get a very nice fly rod to get started for $100 or less but why would you want to do that if you could afford a quality fly rod for $500 or more? Is their really that much of a difference between a TFO and a $500 rod? |
#20
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Thanks for the honest tip. I went ahead and bought a Loomis GLX. It
feels ok at the moment. I haven't been able to get to much fishing in because of school. Thanks again. Skeeter "Lennie Richardson" wrote in message .com... "Peter Charles" wrote in message ... On Fri, 07 Nov 2003 23:21:47 GMT, "Lennie Richardson" wrote: "Skeeter" wrote in message . com... I am just starting out with the flyfishing bit and I am trying to get a feel for the best rod, for me, to buy. My brother guides quite a bit and he swears up and down by the Scott rod. What is everyone elses take. Skeeter you need a 16' 14 wt. spey rod. two handed fishing for a real man... FRAUD!!! damn. sussed out again... nice advice snipped Screw the high priced **** I'm done cutting up, Skeeter. Decide what type of fishing you'll be doing (freshwater, panfish, bass, trout, large stream small stream, sal****er, inshore, offshore...) and then buy an outfit that fits the type of water and species you're starting out with. The only other advice I can give you is that life's too short to use a rod you can't cast well. Keep trying until you get one that YOU like. LR onnest |
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