
BradFromPotter
Well-known member
- Joined
- Oct 18, 2006
- Messages
- 1,328
so what are you going to do?You all are awesome!! Thanks for the advice. I have a better understanding of how to fish bluelines on the fly now.
so what are you going to do?You all are awesome!! Thanks for the advice. I have a better understanding of how to fish bluelines on the fly now.
I do a fair bit of small stream, rhodo tunnel fishing.
My main tool is a 7'6" Cortland in a 4/5 weight, and I throw 7 wt line on it. If the stream is a little bigger or the canopy is more open I use 5 wt line. For slightly larger streams I have an 8' St. Croix Imperial 5 wt, again either with the 7 wt or 5 wt line.
I've never been one for finesse on brookie streams. Finesse is for fishing tricos and midges on slow spring creeks with complicated currents. On a brookie stream I wanna throw a size 12 dry usually, under that thar branch, and a little micro drag is no big deal. I want some line speed and tight loops, but I also want it to load with just a few feet of line off the rod tip, and I want it to be able to roll cast and bow and arrow cast well. In my experience, a stiff rod with a softish tip, and a heavy line is the answer. I"ve considered adding something a little shorter to the arsenal, in the 7' range.
You're rod seems fine. Maybe a touch long for the thickest places.
Hello all, just a quick update! One of my dear coworkers at L.L.Bean gifted me a 3 weight rod. I suspect he made it for me. So I'm getting there! I also agree that my current 5wt is probably fine, and I just need to hone my skills. Any reel recommendations for a 3wt? thanks and tight lines
What the length?
I personally like click pawl.
You can use most anything but a hardy featherweight or an old jw young would be good.
A CFO 123 or CFOlll would be excellent as well.
No, there are still more than a few right handed folks that prefer to switch hands when winding. Fortunately for right handed klutzes like me, there are plenty of LHW options....Out of curiosity, is left-hand retrieve the standard for right-handed fisherman? thx
Hi sixfootfenwick, thanks for the quick reply! the 3wt rod from my coworker is 7'4" from butt to tip, and narrow rod part 6'4". Thanks for the recommendation. I heard someone else recommend the battenkill II, so I'm also flirting with that. Out of curiosity, is left-hand retrieve the standard for right-handed fisherman? thx
...the 3wt rod from my coworker is 7'4" from butt to tip, and narrow rod part 6'4". Thanks for the recommendation. I heard someone else recommend the battenkill II, so I'm also flirting with that. Out of curiosity, is left-hand retrieve the standard for right-handed fisherman? thx
I yield to Bamboozle, as I suspect his time on the water if more extensive than mine. My actual fishing time is limited.Glamcaster:
Is the rod graphite or fiberglass??
FWIW - All of my short rods (5'0" - 7'0") are fiberglass or bamboo. Excluding the bamboo, and not knowing much about anything shorter than 7'6" in graphite, the reels I use on my rods around 7' are all click & pawl with a STATED weight of around 3.20 to 3.40 ounces and a narrow spool with a diameter of around 2-3/4".
All of these reels balance my rods nicely at the winding check and ALL of them hold a DT3 line and some backing with absolutely no problem. If you were inclined to over-line, I would imagine you can easily get a WF4 on anything that diameter because I used to have a WF4 spooled on my much smaller vintage CFO II (2-9/16" diameter).
Obviously if your rod is graphite you may want a lighter reel. However finding something an ounce or two lighter WITH the line capacity you are after can be tricky. For that reason more than a few folks that fish small streams using short casts buy a double taper line and cut it in half or they buy a weight forward line and cut off most of the running line to get fatter lines to fit on smaller reels.
I wouldn't even consider that option or the need to over-line until you try you new rod with a 3wt line at the distances you expect to cast.
Have fun!!!
Whatever you are comfortable with. I learned holding the rod in my left hand and stripping with my right.Hi sixfootfenwick, thanks for the quick reply! the 3wt rod from my coworker is 7'4" from butt to tip, and narrow rod part 6'4". Thanks for the recommendation. I heard someone else recommend the battenkill II, so I'm also flirting with that. Out of curiosity, is left-hand retrieve the standard for right-handed fisherman? thx
...I always kind of laugh if I go down to the beach and go out on a boat or something, with those big rods. They all reel on the right side, so you pump the rod with your left. This is all backwards for me. I can hardly do it!!! And it's like, oh yeah, I'm an avid fishermen, and then I feel all awkward and like an idiot when they hand me a rod.