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On Aug 26, 11:30*pm, wrote:
On Aug 26, 11:47 am, wrote: Of course there are lots of people who love cane rods, and everything associated with them. That too is just fine with me. Each to his own. So one day this past July I had tied my mule up a few miles back in the Pecos Wilderness, along a beautiful meadow section of a stream up there. I had my 3forks 3wt with me but the skies were growing ominous so it was going to just be a lunch break and then head out. A few minutes later a couple of guys ride in on horses, tie up and start stringing their rods. One of them had seen my rod on the back of my saddle and politely came over and asked which way I'd be fishing. I told him I wouldn't be, but noticed he was carrying a very fine bamboo fly rod. To understand how out of place it looked, he was kinda scruffy in cutoffs and holey canvas sneakers, and normally a person who rides up on horseback is going to have a 10-year-old spinning rod at best, with equally old 10lb line, and will either collect some worms or use powerbait. We chatted a bit, he had lived in the area all his life and said his family had been there more than 400 years. Always interesting the characters you meet in various places. Not that this has anything to do with secondhand stores or anything else in this thread. Jon. PS: I agree that, despite Wayne's once-a-decade find, a rod in a secondhand store is 98% likely to be junk. I've seen a few, anyways. (margin of error: +/- 37.2%) An interesting point actually. A couple of weeks ago I had a visit from a chap who was going to spend a few weeks in Norway salmon fishing. He wanted me to copy a few flies he had bought elsewhere for a lot of money, ( 40 euros and upwards per fly for relatively simple tube flies). I told him I couldnīt do that, but I could show him how to do it himself. He came around a few nights and eventually dressed a few fleis he was satisfied with. While sitting and discussing various things over a "parting glass", shortly before he was due to leave, I asked him why he had bought such extremely expensive flies in the first place. He sat and thought about it for a while, and then he said. "Well, there must be some reason they are so expensive, maybe special material or something, and I just feel I have a better chance of a fish with them. The whole thing is so expensive [the fishing holiday itself], and I donīt want to risk a failure by not having the right flies. Compared to the cost of everything else, even though they are very expensive, they are only actually a small part of the outlay". When he came back, he showed me the two salmon he had caught, one about 6 lbs, and one of just over 8. He had caught them both on the flies he had dressed himslef, after losing a few expensive ones, and not wanting to lose any more on a bushy stretch, he had used his own flies "as it would not be such a tragedy to hang them in a tree". Those were the only fish he got in three weeks of intensive fishing. The moral? Hell who knows? |
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