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#1
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Check out this video and tell me what he means at the part about 20
seconds in when he says "I'm not breaking my wrist..." http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oc2PQ...1&feature=fvwp :-) --riverman |
#2
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On 2011-02-18 03:27:58 -0500, riverman said:
Check out this video and tell me what he means at the part about 20 seconds in when he says "I'm not breaking my wrist..." http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oc2PQ...1&feature=fvwp :-) --riverman .....means keeping it straight, aligned with the arm, not moving it up and down. Personally my wrist moves on every cast. d;o) I'd be much more concerned with his statement, "streamer floating on the water." And his mending is abysmal. Dave |
#3
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On 2011-02-18 03:27:58 -0500, riverman said:
Check out this video and tell me what he means at the part about 20 seconds in when he says "I'm not breaking my wrist..." http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oc2PQ...1&feature=fvwp :-) --riverman In this video, Joan Wulff moves "breaks" her wrist in a downward motion on the forecast, but does not break it on the backcast. http://www.midcurrent.com/video/clip...namics_04.aspx (Sheeeze. I'm beginning to sound/act like youknowwho!) Dave (aka wobbley wrist) |
#4
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![]() (aka wobbley wrist) I completely suck at fly casting .... and wobbly wrists are only one of my problems .. but for that one, I find grips modified like this http://kimshew.com/BFP/firehole04-7.jpg help me a bit ... get the heal of the hand right over the reel and there is much less leverage on the wrist, it's far more comfortable to do so with cork there I move my hand up, even onto the blank at times, for short little flicks ( a lot of my fishing ) but back down over the added section of cork when I want to put more power into my wind knots brief how to: get three cork rings, glue them together, drill out the middle to fit you real seat, cut the whole thing length wise through the center hole, but so one piece is larger than the discarded one, rough shape off the rod, glue to rod, carry a piece of sandpaper with you for a long time, occasionally taking off a bit of cork until you are happy. I like it, YMMV for sure |
#5
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On 2/18/2011 3:43 PM, Larry L wrote:
(aka wobbley wrist) I completely suck at fly casting .... and wobbly wrists are only one of my problems .. but for that one, I find grips modified like this http://kimshew.com/BFP/firehole04-7.jpg help me a bit ... get the heal of the hand right over the reel and there is much less leverage on the wrist, it's far more comfortable to do so with cork there I move my hand up, even onto the blank at times, for short little flicks ( a lot of my fishing ) but back down over the added section of cork when I want to put more power into my wind knots brief how to: get three cork rings, glue them together, drill out the middle to fit you real seat, cut the whole thing length wise through the center hole, but so one piece is larger than the discarded one, rough shape off the rod, glue to rod, carry a piece of sandpaper with you for a long time, occasionally taking off a bit of cork until you are happy. I like it, YMMV for sure i admire the art of a good flycast. i've seen it, recognize the mechanics of it, and appreciate the effort of the artist who can perform it. i'll never cast with the beauty and efficiency of roger o. or gene c. i watch some of the sal****er guys here and get discouraged about my poor performance with a flyrod. it's a ballet, a waltz, a poem, a novel, a painting i'll never create. at one time it was a scar i tried to hide. now, as with some of my other imperfections and spasms of being, i think i've come to terms with it. i'll toss a fly line passably at times, miserably at other times...but the excitement and passion i feel when chasing the great mystery...hell, i'm a fukkin van gogh, cormac, cummings. i'm a first grader's fingerpainting! jeffie |
#6
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On Feb 18, 2:43*pm, Larry L wrote:
(aka wobbley wrist) I completely suck at fly casting .... and wobbly wrists are only one of my problems .. This business of keeping the wrist locked in position and keeping the elbow tight against the body may be good advice for beginners (minimizing variables and all that), but I'm not entirely convinced. One thing is certain, though; anyone who adheres to that advice rigidly throughout a career of fly fishing will never be a very good caster.....let alone a great one. The human arm, with it three major joints, the wrist, elbow, and shoulder allows a literally unlimited range of motion in three dimensions, elevation, azimuth and skew will do as well as any other names. For elevation, think of the arm held against the side with the hand moving up and down through an arc. Azimuth refers to what is achieved with the arm held in the same position but with the hand moving from side to side. And skew is accomplised by holding the arm in the same position, once again, but no change of position for the forearm.....the wrist simply turns, which, incidentally doesn't really involve motion in any of the joints....it's a matter of how the muscles, bones, tendons and ligaments are attached at the wrist and the elbow. There is more than one way to achieve each of these motions using the various joints. The wrist alone allows nearly 180 degress of range in one plane and a bit less in a second. Which two of the three motions depends on the orientation of the wrist, which is in turn controlled by the other two joints. The elbow is the most limited, allowing a substantial range of motion in only one plane. But, like the wrist, its plane of motion is variable depending on the position of the upper arm, controlled by the shoulder. The shoulder is the most versatile in terms of range of motion, it can point the upper arm to any point in a hemisphere. Now, imagine yourself standing inside a sphere (shouldn't take much imagination.....you ARE standing inside a sphere) holding a stick (or a fly rod, if you prefer) just long enough to reach the inside surface of the sphere. Using all three joints, there is no point on the sphere you can't reach with the arm in any of several to many different positions. Do the same experiment with your elbow held tightly to your side and the wrist locked in any position you choose. Comparing the results should send a very clear message. But, of course, this isn't fly casting. Well, no, it isn't. And thus it doesn't matter.....as long as you fish only in places and situations in which you always cast directly in front of you in a very limited range of distances on a nice flat piece of water with no obstructions in front of or behind you.....and there's no wind. Tools. Use 'em. but for that one, I find grips modified like this http://kimshew.com/BFP/firehole04-7.jpg help me a bit ... get the heal of the hand right over the reel and there is much less leverage on the wrist, it's far more comfortable to do so with cork there "much less leverage" is ambiguous.....at best. Personally, I'm inclined to the believe that it's flat out wrong. I move my hand up, even onto the blank at times, *for short little flicks ( a lot of my fishing ) but back down over the added section of cork when I want to put more power into my wind knots Whatever works. brief how to: *get three cork rings, glue them together, drill out the middle to fit you real seat, cut the whole thing length wise through the center hole, but so one piece is larger than the discarded one, rough shape off the rod, glue to rod, carry a piece of sandpaper with you for a long time, occasionally taking off a bit of cork until you are happy. I like it, YMMV * for sure It's interesting. Never gone to that extent myself, but I've done serial modifications in the field. giles |
#7
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On Feb 18, 5:41*pm, jeff wrote:
On 2/18/2011 3:43 PM, Larry L wrote: (aka wobbley wrist) I completely suck at fly casting .... and wobbly wrists are only one of my problems .. but for that one, I find grips modified like this http://kimshew.com/BFP/firehole04-7.jpg help me a bit ... get the heal of the hand right over the reel and there is much less leverage on the wrist, it's far more comfortable to do so with cork there I move my hand up, even onto the blank at times, *for short little flicks ( a lot of my fishing ) but back down over the added section of cork when I want to put more power into my wind knots brief how to: *get three cork rings, glue them together, drill out the middle to fit you real seat, cut the whole thing length wise through the center hole, but so one piece is larger than the discarded one, rough shape off the rod, glue to rod, carry a piece of sandpaper with you for a long time, occasionally taking off a bit of cork until you are happy. I like it, YMMV * for sure i admire the art of a good flycast. *i've seen it, recognize the mechanics of it, and appreciate the effort of the artist who can perform it. *i'll never cast with the beauty and efficiency of roger o. or gene c. i watch some of the sal****er guys here and get discouraged about my poor performance with a flyrod. *it's a ballet, a waltz, a poem, a novel, a painting i'll never create. *at one time it was a scar i tried to hide. now, as with some of my other imperfections and spasms of being, i think i've come to terms with it. i'll toss a fly line passably at times, miserably at other times...but the excitement and passion i feel when chasing the great mystery...hell, i'm a fukkin van gogh, cormac, cummings. i'm a first grader's fingerpainting! jeffie That's the nice thing about art. It may not look good.....but it's still art. ![]() giles who, now he thinks about it, has done impressionism, cubism, dadaism, pointillism, abstract expressionism.....and a host of others with a fly rod. |
#8
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![]() "much less leverage" is ambiguous.....at best. *Personally, I'm inclined to the believe that it's flat out wrong. Put a rod together and grip it as you normally would (everyone seems to have his own grip, but, I assume your whole hand is on cork, often towards the tip end of that cork ) and wave it back and forth ... concentrate on feeling it trying to bend your wrist as you wave now grip it with the heal of your hand over the reel on the reel seat ( i.e. grip as close to the butt as possible still using all your fingers ... my little finger is actually touching the front of the reel and is behind the cork, under the rod ) .... wave it back and forth, feeling as above If you don't feel a clear difference in the amount the rod tries to bend your wrist .... what I have called less leverage ... then you certainly wouldn't like the modification I do to grips ..... which just adds cork where I want the heel of my hand and cork doesn't normally exist FWIW, this is not my idea, I saw it on a website 8 or 10 years ago ... tried it on my stillwater rod ( the one I want power with, most often ) and have added it to all my rods except the 2 wt ... There is/ was a fly shop somewhere offering new Sage rods with a grip like this, custom made ... can't find a link in my bookmarks ... |
#9
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On Feb 18, 10:11*pm, Larry L wrote:
"much less leverage" is ambiguous.....at best. *Personally, I'm inclined to the believe that it's flat out wrong. Put a rod together and grip it as you normally would (everyone seems to have his own grip, but, I assume your whole hand is on cork, often towards the tip end of that cork ) and wave it back and forth ... concentrate on feeling it trying to bend your wrist as you wave now grip it with the heal of your hand over the reel on the reel seat ( i.e. grip as close to the butt as possible still using all your fingers ... my little finger is actually touching the front of the reel and is behind the cork, under the rod ) * .... wave it back and forth, feeling as above If you don't feel a clear difference in the amount the rod tries to bend your wrist .... what I have called less leverage ... then you certainly wouldn't like the modification I do to grips ..... which just adds cork where I want the heel of my hand and cork doesn't normally exist FWIW, this is not my idea, I saw it on a website 8 or 10 years ago ... tried it on my stillwater rod ( the one I want power with, most often ) and have added it to all my rods except the 2 wt ... * There is/ was a fly shop somewhere offering new Sage rods with a grip like this, custom made ... can't find a link in my bookmarks ... I have no problem with the idea. As I said, if it works, do it. But the less leverage part is wrong. I've held many a fly rod in many ways.....but I also know how a lever works. g. |
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