Cane wetfly rods
Posted: Wed Mar 21, 2012 8:57 pm
For years I enjoyed using a 10' Chubb 3/2 6wt wet fly rod. I eventually sold it, because I needed the money for other things, but I do miss it occasionally. I balanced the rod with a delightful early Pfleuger 1498 reel - the model with a drag that could stop a large Atlantic salmon yet also had a civilized click, not the usual Pfleuger sound of a 1950 Buick with gravel in the hubcaps.
I had replaced the 1890 vintage flip-ring guides with snake guides and rewound all the intermediate wraps. The result was a rod that could pick up twenty feet of line and throw forty feet with one backcast and little effort. Of course, the rod was so slow that I could begin the backcast, go home for lunch, and when I returned to the river there was still time for a casual cigarette before the forward cast.
In recent years due to illness, I have gone to shorter rods. This, I now understand, was a mistake. Last year I spent the first of the season with an 8' F.E. Thomas that was a medium action 5wt. Too much work. The latter part of the season I used an 8' 3/2 no-name slow-action 4wt, balanced with a heavy reel, and casting was much easier and more pleasant. Again the extreme slow action of the rod and the mass of the tip permitted me to perform better fly placement with no false-casting. It is also fun to do an upstream mend just by rolling the wrist and watch that tip swing the line over. Tip mass rules!
I might add at this juncture that most of my wet fly rods cost $50 or less. Of course, there was also usually some sweat involved in "restoring" them. TANSTAAFL Other wet fly rods were made for me in trade; so I always convince myself that those were free.
How many other forum members enjoy the easy grace of the old cane, straight-taper, wet fly rod?
Regards,
Reed
I had replaced the 1890 vintage flip-ring guides with snake guides and rewound all the intermediate wraps. The result was a rod that could pick up twenty feet of line and throw forty feet with one backcast and little effort. Of course, the rod was so slow that I could begin the backcast, go home for lunch, and when I returned to the river there was still time for a casual cigarette before the forward cast.
In recent years due to illness, I have gone to shorter rods. This, I now understand, was a mistake. Last year I spent the first of the season with an 8' F.E. Thomas that was a medium action 5wt. Too much work. The latter part of the season I used an 8' 3/2 no-name slow-action 4wt, balanced with a heavy reel, and casting was much easier and more pleasant. Again the extreme slow action of the rod and the mass of the tip permitted me to perform better fly placement with no false-casting. It is also fun to do an upstream mend just by rolling the wrist and watch that tip swing the line over. Tip mass rules!
I might add at this juncture that most of my wet fly rods cost $50 or less. Of course, there was also usually some sweat involved in "restoring" them. TANSTAAFL Other wet fly rods were made for me in trade; so I always convince myself that those were free.
How many other forum members enjoy the easy grace of the old cane, straight-taper, wet fly rod?
Regards,
Reed