by Baughb » September 3rd, 2012, 11:53 am
Orvis Hydros 9' 4 wt tip flex; surprisingly good rod with backbone for long dry fly casts and fish so far into the 20" range.
about 70% 0f the time.
I wish I could find the same thing in a 6wt... pity they discontinued the Hydros rods.
Joe Bradley bamboo 4 wt 7'6"; when I wanna be cool and catch wild fish. Tougher to cast (SLOW DOWN) but handles fish so well... 7%
Tenkara 13'; Sierra brookies and goldens, bigger fish get hard to land... not like I'm complaining.THE backpacking rod for Sierra streams (imho)... 7%
Sage 8'6" 4wt LL 3 pc.; Love this rod on calm days, I tend to overpower it in the wind and it protects tippets so well that 7x and big boys have come to the net...7%
Sage 9' 6wt XP; drift boat rod and Loooong dry fly casts. Great rod...9%
6wt 8.5' Waterseal impregnated bamboo; heavy rod but fun... rarely bring this out anymore but I'm keeping it.
7pc 6wt Orvis traveler rod... she comes with me for the lakes on backpacking trips, easy to pack and a really far reach... just in case.
Just a note... I am very impressed at the quality of recent Orvis fly fishing products. I'm no longer embarrassed to use their gear that I have found to perform really well. I really don't care where it comes from anymore but, if it is quality and it works, I like it.
Bob
"He told us about Christ's disciples being fishermen, and we were left to assume, as my brother and I did, that all first-class fishermen on the Sea of Galilee were fly fishermen and that John, the favorite, was a dry-fly fisherman."