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sal****er fly fishing



 
 
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  #1  
Old January 28th, 2005, 11:44 PM
fantom
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Default sal****er fly fishing


wrote:


Whereabouts in weymouth would be safe to flyfish? Chesil beach?


Great, ill try the main beach first light, dont fancy trying chesil at
all,
i personally dont feel confident enuff to fish it in waders. Thanks for
the
info, much appreciated


Looking back, the first fly caught bass of the year always seems to come
around april from either the Bowleaze - Osmington area or Portland Harbour
north shore. There will be pollock and gar off the Bill rocks before then
but that's not suitable for beginning flyfishing (*BIG* flies, rocks still
slippery from winter.) Or you can join the regular band of hopeful
Kimmeridge visitors but I find that area rarely wakes up before June.

Cheerio,

--
derek.moody



Concerning reels,
I was looking at the Ron Thompson X-cite and the Ron Thompson Large Arbor
Airstream reel, any good for sal****er?

I think rod is no probs but not sure about the reel,
thanks


  #2  
Old January 29th, 2005, 12:14 AM
Derek.Moody
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Posts: n/a
Default

In article , fantom
wrote:

Concerning reels,
I was looking at the Ron Thompson X-cite and the Ron Thompson Large Arbor
Airstream reel, any good for sal****er?


No idea, probably.

I always use the cheapest graphite reel available. The last couple I bought
were under ukp 20 by Shakespeare. I don't look after reels properly: I know
I ought to wash the salt and sand out and relubricate every trip but I tend
to leave 'em festering in the bag... They last 3 - 5 years with my level of
abuse. Aluminium reels don't last even a full season.

I think rod is no probs but not sure about the reel,


To be realistic. The largest fish you can expect is about 10lb, the longest
run will be no more than 100 metres so no need for hi-tech gear. If you
could stop big seatrout with it it'll be ok.

Make sure the rod has a good fighting curve with a bit of backbone.
Nowadays I mostly use a nominal 5 weight which bends dramatically in a big
fish but the butt section has a -lot- of reserve power. With big flies you
learn to strike with the stripping hand rather than the rod tip. Start out
with something around #8 though 'til you're used to it.

[ I once took a local casting instructor down to the salt: He was
astonished to have a take first cast - "I've got one! Oh look, it's
running. Hey, all my line's gone!" then he clamped down on the fish and
the hook pulled out. My guess is that he hadn't struck properly (if at all)
being used to trout taking small flies and the fish was never really hooked.
If he'd bent into the fish from the start it probably wouldn't have taken ten
yards.
]

Cheerio,

--


  #3  
Old January 29th, 2005, 11:34 AM
fantom
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Derek.Moody" wrote in message
...
In article , fantom
wrote:

Concerning reels,
I was looking at the Ron Thompson X-cite and the Ron Thompson Large Arbor
Airstream reel, any good for sal****er?


No idea, probably.

I always use the cheapest graphite reel available. The last couple I
bought
were under ukp 20 by Shakespeare. I don't look after reels properly: I
know
I ought to wash the salt and sand out and relubricate every trip but I
tend
to leave 'em festering in the bag... They last 3 - 5 years with my level
of
abuse. Aluminium reels don't last even a full season.

I think rod is no probs but not sure about the reel,


To be realistic. The largest fish you can expect is about 10lb, the
longest
run will be no more than 100 metres so no need for hi-tech gear. If you
could stop big seatrout with it it'll be ok.

Make sure the rod has a good fighting curve with a bit of backbone.
Nowadays I mostly use a nominal 5 weight which bends dramatically in a big
fish but the butt section has a -lot- of reserve power. With big flies
you
learn to strike with the stripping hand rather than the rod tip. Start
out
with something around #8 though 'til you're used to it.

[ I once took a local casting instructor down to the salt: He was
astonished to have a take first cast - "I've got one! Oh look, it's
running. Hey, all my line's gone!" then he clamped down on the fish and
the hook pulled out. My guess is that he hadn't struck properly (if at
all)
being used to trout taking small flies and the fish was never really
hooked.
If he'd bent into the fish from the start it probably wouldn't have taken
ten
yards.
]

Cheerio,

--



thanks, i was looking at a deal on ebay for both that rod reel combo, was
cheap when i asked, gone up to silly money now, so i think i will do the
same, and get a cheap graphite one. Thanks


 




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