OldMedUser
Well-Known Member
All this talk of using bait, jigs and float fishing for trout is raising my bile. Save that for salmon and coarse fish thank you very much.
A fly rod with a floating line and dry fly is the way a true fisher catches trout or salmon and the way my grandfather taught me in the classic manner. I resort to spinners when they won't rise to the fly but would never stoop to slinging bait at them. Bottom bouncing or float fishing with spin-n-glows on a 4/0 barbless hook for the larger salmonids works great for me. Single barbless for all fish is more sporting and a better test of skill.
I'm off to the trout lake and want to be in the water by 5 as it's dark by 7:30 now. Going to try out the new rod on a fish or 5 hopefully and get one or more to add to my dugout.
I have the rod all ready to go for trials with nothing glued or epoxied in place so changes will be easy. I'm thinking the smaller but thicker Martin Mountain Brook 56 looks better on the rod than one of my two older Berkley reels so have a bid on Ebay for another just like it. $20US and has a fly line on it without backing so likely no good and no mention of weight. Should be $60 with exchange and shipping so the same as that one I got a couple months ago from the reel repair shop in BC.
I need to use some U-40 Cork Seal on the little fighting butt to match the grip as well.
I got the headset magnifier and it works great with the finer size A threads without swinging the little glass in place to get 10X. I can remove the LED light to lower the weight and the whole thing is pretty comfortable to use with reading glasses on.
A fly rod with a floating line and dry fly is the way a true fisher catches trout or salmon and the way my grandfather taught me in the classic manner. I resort to spinners when they won't rise to the fly but would never stoop to slinging bait at them. Bottom bouncing or float fishing with spin-n-glows on a 4/0 barbless hook for the larger salmonids works great for me. Single barbless for all fish is more sporting and a better test of skill.
I'm off to the trout lake and want to be in the water by 5 as it's dark by 7:30 now. Going to try out the new rod on a fish or 5 hopefully and get one or more to add to my dugout.
I have the rod all ready to go for trials with nothing glued or epoxied in place so changes will be easy. I'm thinking the smaller but thicker Martin Mountain Brook 56 looks better on the rod than one of my two older Berkley reels so have a bid on Ebay for another just like it. $20US and has a fly line on it without backing so likely no good and no mention of weight. Should be $60 with exchange and shipping so the same as that one I got a couple months ago from the reel repair shop in BC.
I need to use some U-40 Cork Seal on the little fighting butt to match the grip as well.
I got the headset magnifier and it works great with the finer size A threads without swinging the little glass in place to get 10X. I can remove the LED light to lower the weight and the whole thing is pretty comfortable to use with reading glasses on.