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i am with you on this one. i have guided steady until last year and spooled
up new maxima only when the reels ran low enough to justify it. that was mostly due to spoons snagging and having to be broke off, clients casting into log jams from 60 yds away and wondering why crankbaits don't run though the timber like on tv, and other various snags and hangups. very seldom would i ever have to change line due to it wearing out, and that includes the hybrid guiding i did using live shad and 10 pound test line. the real reason pros and magazines stress respooling is to sell line. i know guys so cheap they flip the line after a full year and fish the other end of it another year. i don't go that far, but i sure don't change line after every trip and never will. this year for the first time i plan on hitting a few local tournaments, and i still am not going to change line every week. crownliner "Bob La Londe" wrote in message .. . I was just reading a couple of fishing magazines I picked up in the supermarket earlier today. One thing I noticed was a bit of a pro attitude that I just can't see a weekend angler being able to go with. One is line strength. Most of the pros listed said things, like, "the amateurs I fish with use 12-14lb line and think they are fishing with heavy lines when I am am using 25-40lb line." I can see why a pro would want to use heavier line after he has had some really nice fish break off. What I fail to see is why they can't see why most of us amateurs like to use lighter line. Its simple. We don't fish 3-5 days a week, and if we ever did it was during our week of vacation last summer. We get more hits on lighter line. With the skills we have we get more hits. Aybody remember a pro ever saying anything about confidence? Nah. I have more confidence in gettign a hot onlighter line. Another thing I noticed was that a lot of the pros change line on a daily basis. If they used a rig they put new line on it before going out with it again. Cool. That makes sense if Yo-Zuri or Berkely or Power-Pro is your sponsor and giving you free line or even at a substantial discount. It also makes sense if that is what you are doing for a living, and your off the water time is also being dedicated to earning a living from recreational sport fishing. For an amateur angler its is tough. Relatively speaking its not that big of an expense, but think about it. Most of us semi serious amateurs have 30 or 40 rods that get regular use. Some a lot more. When I go out in my own boat I usually have about 15 - 20 rods in the boat. If I am taking out friends, family, a visiting tackle rep, or the owner of a cool local tackle shop every rod in my boat will see some use. That can add up. Now I go out an prefish a tournament. Then I fsih the tournament. Then next week I stop by the canal bank on the way home to convince myself I can still catcha fish since I blanked the tounament, or to revel in my own personl glory becasue I won it. Thats a lot of line to change. I remember when I was a kid. I had a Zebco 606 on a buggy whip fiberglass pole. I had it spooled with 14lb mono. I caught 10" trout, 4-6" bream, and 5lb channel cats on that rod. If I was lucky that line got changed once a year. If I got a snarl in my line, no matter how bad, I sat down and carefully unsnarled it. Did I break off a lot fo fish. No. I did not. Admittedly I didn't catcha lot of fish compared to what I can catch today, but I didn't break them off. In fact the first decent fish I remember breaking off was a catfish in the vVermillion River when I was 15. Guess what broke? It was the snelled leader on the hook. You know what the next decent fish I had break off on me was? It was a big striper off the cliff face outside of Oak Canyon on Lake Powell. You know what broke? It was the hook. I was using cheap 17lb line by then, but it wasn't the line that gave. Now I understand that going after largemouth bass in heavier cover or over rock piles subjects a line to a lot more abuse than open water striper fishing or floating a minnow under a bobber, but think about it. That generic 10 or 12lb mono I had spooled on my spincaster took more than ten times that much abuse after a year and a half. If from nothing other than siting in a storage shed in the Arizona desert soaking up heat and solar radiation and breaking down. Now to be honest. I can pretty much afford whatever I really want. Maybe not every thing I want, but those things I am willing to work for I can get. Its still hard to break to the idea of throwing away a hundred dollars worth of line every time I go fishing. -- Bob La Londe www.YumaBassMan.com All about fishing in Yuma, Arizona Promote Your Fishing Website FOR FREE |
#2
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the real reason pros and magazines stress respooling is to sell line.
You're partly right and partly wrong. Yeah, pros want their sponsor's line to get sold. Magazines want their advertisers to sell line. Pros on the other hand, MUST get every bite in the boat they can. They CANNOT afford ot lose a fish. One lost fish could cost 10's of thousands of dollars and a trip to a championship or to another circuit. They usually do not pay for line or pay full price, so they can afford to change line every day. Why lose fish to bad line when there is no reason not to? I'm far from a pro. I have 14 rods I use all the time. I fish one or two club tourneys each month during our season. I respool rods before each and every tourney, but not in between. I use three sizes of line, 6 on spinning, 10 for cranks/topwaters and 15 on everything else. I buy a small bulk spool of 6 and a large bulk spool of 10 and 15 each year. I spend about $65.00 a year on line. Not a bank breaker by any means. Brad |
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