Fishing with Rod Discussion Forum
Fishing in British Columbia => Fly Fishing Cafe => Topic started by: Troy_604 on February 02, 2007, 10:03:30 AM
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And iv never touched a fly rod in my life :D its a martin 8 foot 7/8 wt rod. could i use it for pinks, springs, and steelhead? how do i know what reel i should get?
im fairly new to the fishing thing, let alone fly fishing.
thanks
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Hi Troy: IMO since you are just getting into flyfishing you should probably try for an inexpensive reel with a disc drag. For instance, Fenwick has some reels in that category and so does Dragonfly. That should put you back about 70 bucks including taxes, and then a floating and sink tip line for the reel plus backing. All told including the reel you will probaby be spending at least 200 bucks for those items. Also, if you are not in a hurry to use the rod, keep your eye on the "Buy and Sell" section as some real good deals on used stuff shows up every now and then. The Martin fly rod shoud be able to get you into some pinks. However, the rod being only 8 feet long will make it a challenge IMO if you are planning to use it on the Vedder River to punch out those long casts for Steelhead. In addition, I would not try it on Springs as they would stress that rod to the max and beyond. My two cents worth.
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awsome, thanks for the advice.
should my reel 7/8's wt too?
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Yes that would be a good match for the rod that you have.
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IMO that rod is a bit short for a 7/8wt. You want a 9' rod. I would NOT target springs on that rod as you will stress the fish trying to play them or break your rod. My buddy broke his 7wt Loop this year on a Harrison Spring. I use a 9/10wt for springs. For pinks this rod would be fine but does it have a fighting butt on it? I know some of those shorter 7/8wts dont have that on them.
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thanks for the insight guys. bbronswyk, my rod isnt a fighting butt model
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i'm going to use a 6wt for pinks this year...but an 8 wt for springs is a little light...i'm 9wt for that too...
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i'm going to use a 6wt for pinks this year...but an 8 wt for springs is a little light...i'm 9wt for that too...
I use a 6wt for pinks as well but its a 9' rod. One a longer rod give you more control, two it loads the line better making it easier to cast. Someone new to flyfishing is going to have a longer learning curve on a shorter rod. Usually the shorter rods are for the lighter weight rods. I would never buy a rod shorter than 7'6 personally. Just bought a new St.Croix 8' 4piece 4wt for cutthroat.