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From the posts I read, you are getting lots of advice that is clustered
together and I cannot determine a consensus. So if I were in your shoes, I'd do one or all of the following: 1. Hire a guide to take you to one of your favorite places and have him bring along those rods and tapers to field test. If he will, have him load the lines on identical reels to eliminate that variable. 2. Solicit your favorite fly shop to provide you with several identical demo rods/reels loaded with the various lines and go fishing on your lake with the fly shop owner. 3. Convince BOTH guide AND fly shop owner to go fishing with you on your favorite lake and bring along their rod/reel/fly line combinations. You might have to agree to buy a new rod and reel but if you get exactly what you want, it's a win/win deal for you, the guide and the fly shop owner. If you are lucky enough to get option 3 on the water, I'll bet you learn enough tips about fishing your favorite lake to make the trip "The Trip Of a Lifetime." On subsequent trips alone back on your favorite lake, betcha you'll have lots of good memories that make whatever you wound up paying priceless. If you choose to do this, give us some feedback. Good luck. John -- Remove FLY to reply "Larry L" wrote in message ... I fish two or three places, Hebgen gulpers, Davis Lake damsel hatch, and others similar, where I have yet to feel I've "solved" the casting requirements of the situation. Specifically, you have a long line out on the water and want to pick it up and lay it down quickly in a new direction to cover a riser that has cruised into range. All stripping in of line to get to the 'head," and false casting use up valuable time ..... cover these fish quickly and you've got him ... take a while and you probably guessed wrong on where he was headed. I need to be able to pick up a long floating line off a stillwater and maximize my minimal abilities doing so. My question, as my post season tackle check shows my lake floating line cracked and ready for replacement, is there a specialty taper available that will help in this situation? For kickboating stillwaters, I, usually, fish an 25++ year old Scott 10ft 5wt that is lovely for the work, in general, and I have a wide variety of lines for it. But it's rather slow in action ... maybe one of the 'modern' broomstick rods would be best for this special situation? I doubt I'll invest in a special rod, but if I did, what 5wt rod would be best, period ? best for the buck? is the TFO 5wt TICR suitable? |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Newbie Question Budget Fly Reel and extra Spools | No Left Turn | Fly Fishing | 11 | August 12th, 2004 06:52 PM |
fly line setup advice | Andy | Fly Fishing | 5 | May 9th, 2004 05:38 PM |
Fly line recommendation | riverman | Fly Fishing | 10 | May 7th, 2004 10:27 PM |
Bad Fly Line | Chas Wade | Fly Fishing | 17 | April 20th, 2004 06:54 AM |
Loading new fly line. | DV Cockburn | Fly Fishing | 3 | March 14th, 2004 07:21 PM |