whats a good setup for warm water fish
rod reel and fly line
whats a good setup for warm water fish
rod reel and fly line
What species, what water type/size (ponds, lakes, small streams, big rivers, etc.)? Without knowing the specifics, I'd probably recommend a 9' #7. That would cover Smallmouth and most Largemouth (except for heavy cover & really big bass bugs). It would be doable but light for Pike, and would be a good match for most Carp fishing. If you were only going to do Smallmouth, Carp and Panfish/Sunfish, a #6 would be fine as long as you weren't going to throw really big flies. If Largemouth and Pike are going to be your main quarry, a #8 would be my first choice, mainly to help you throw bigger, more wind resistant flies. The Sage Xi2 is one of the best rods in the eight weight, and the Z-Axis is excellent in the #6 & #7. If you want a "budget" rod in any of those weights, the Temple Fork TiCr is superb- I own the 7 weight in that and I love it.
A Redneck's last words, "Hold my beer while I do this...."
the setup I have is a Temple fork 9foot 8 weight and i have used it a few times in a small pond and the biggest fish i have gotten was a 1lb 14 inch large mouth bass
i need to break that rod in i think it needs a trip to the Salmon river or a bass trip in the summer or blue fish
Mike
So are you happy with that set up? BTW, SA makes a really good bass line, and Rio makes a Clouser line that I hear the smallmouth guys in Wisconsin love- I know a guy who has a shop there- Tight Lines Fly Shop. Smallmouth are a very popular quarry in WI.
A Redneck's last words, "Hold my beer while I do this...."
Im happy with it for the amount of times i have used it but i just need to break it in good with a big fish
what kind of leader setup should i have on my 8 weight
Depends what fly you are fishing and how you want to present it. Are we talking lakes or streams, big flies or small/medium, floating flies or subsurface presentations, smallmouth, largemouth, or pike? In general, a heavier leader in the 6-9' range is usually about right for use with a floating line. Shorter leaders are good for really big, bulky, wind resistant bass bugs. 9 footers are better if the fish are a little spooky or if you are fishing streamers or nymphs on a floating line and want to get them down a bit. If you use a sink-tip or sinking leader then keep your leader in the 3-4' range to keep your flies down deep. For smallmouth, think mostly 0x to 2x for tippets, depending on fly size/air resistance. For largemouth & pike, go on the heavier side- use a bite tippet for pike, either some wire or a short piece of very heavy mono.
A Redneck's last words, "Hold my beer while I do this...."
Torrey- Ever use the toothy critter leader by rio? Really turns those big flies over well.
Cannot actually say that I've personally tried it. We sell them, and I've never heard any complaints.
A Redneck's last words, "Hold my beer while I do this...."
This summer Im going to break this 8 weight of mine in
I will have to try that leader