Reel for new rod?

Probably the fastest growing arm of the sport, here is a forum dedicated to the art. Beginners like myself welcome.
Message
Author
Bradan
SAI Megalodon!
Posts: 1077
Joined: Thu Sep 15, 2005 5:32 pm
Location: On a beach/lake/river somewhere..

Reel for new rod?

#1 Post by Bradan »

Just bought a Daiwa Wilderness 9' 6" 9wt rod for bass/pollack/pike, but haven't bought a reel or line yet. Any recommendations??
Anyone else got a saltwater reel they're fantastically happy with??
Also never bought a line for saltwater before, used regular 7wt lines before when estuary fishing for sea trout and never had a problem, are specialist lines really necessary?
Its called fishing, not catching. If it was called catching it wouldn't be fishing!

http://www.flickr.com/photos/bradan99
User avatar
lumpy
SAI Megalodon!
Posts: 1474
Joined: Mon Nov 21, 2005 6:22 pm
Favourite Rod: conoflex nemesis plus slr
Favourite Reel: Daiwa SL30SHV
Favourite Fish: Bull Huss, flounder
Location: clonakilty, co cork

#2 Post by lumpy »

for coastal saltwater flyfishing in my opinion specialist lines are vital. when bass, pollock, pike flyfishing i fish flies up to 8 inches in length. for these you need a very powerful front taper and head on your fly line to be able to get enough turn over to cast the fly effectively. also in an estury situation you are generally more shaltered than the open sea, where as in the open sea you are dealing with windy conditions 90% of the time, a specialist fly line enables you to effectively fish in these conditions where as a freshwater line will just collapse into the wind.
as regards reels i presently have an enigma matrix which i find perfect. not very expensive, have a good disc drag, and are ligh weight. the irish fly fishing companies reels are also very good value
shore species 2008(25):dogfish(3.1lbs), bull huss (12lb 2oz), bass, shore rockling, coalie, whiting, pollack, conger (22.4lbs),flounder, thick lipped mullet (4.8lbs),turbot,ling (11.2lbs),ballan wrasse(4.5lbs), cuckoo wrasse, pouting, poor cod, cod (9.5lbs), dab, 3 bearded rockling, long spined scorpion fish, corkwing wrasse, plaice, trigger fish, sea trout, garfish


regards neil
Bradan
SAI Megalodon!
Posts: 1077
Joined: Thu Sep 15, 2005 5:32 pm
Location: On a beach/lake/river somewhere..

#3 Post by Bradan »

Thanks lumpy, great info!
Its called fishing, not catching. If it was called catching it wouldn't be fishing!

http://www.flickr.com/photos/bradan99
pete
SAI Megalodon!
Posts: 1676
Joined: Fri Apr 23, 2004 3:04 pm
Location: Dingle/Donegal

#4 Post by pete »

You trying fly fishing in the salt cause you can't anything in the freshwater Bradan :lol: :wink: ?
User avatar
Tanglerat
Moderator
Posts: 3117
Joined: Wed Jun 02, 2004 12:45 am
Location: Co Donegal

#5 Post by Tanglerat »

lumpy wrote:. the irish fly fishing companies reels are also very good value


Yeah, they are. And they're very nice pieces of machinery too. I haven't used mine (#7/8) much yet, but I'm pretty chuffed with it so far.
User avatar
lumpy
SAI Megalodon!
Posts: 1474
Joined: Mon Nov 21, 2005 6:22 pm
Favourite Rod: conoflex nemesis plus slr
Favourite Reel: Daiwa SL30SHV
Favourite Fish: Bull Huss, flounder
Location: clonakilty, co cork

#6 Post by lumpy »

no problem problem bradan. if its any help to ya i fish a number 10 scientific coldwater stripped bass line. its a fast intermediate and sinks at 2.4-3.2inch/second. i find this covers 90% of my fishing. for the deep water stuff i use one of the jim teeny fast sinkers, it sinks at 9.5 inch/second
shore species 2008(25):dogfish(3.1lbs), bull huss (12lb 2oz), bass, shore rockling, coalie, whiting, pollack, conger (22.4lbs),flounder, thick lipped mullet (4.8lbs),turbot,ling (11.2lbs),ballan wrasse(4.5lbs), cuckoo wrasse, pouting, poor cod, cod (9.5lbs), dab, 3 bearded rockling, long spined scorpion fish, corkwing wrasse, plaice, trigger fish, sea trout, garfish


regards neil
Bradan
SAI Megalodon!
Posts: 1077
Joined: Thu Sep 15, 2005 5:32 pm
Location: On a beach/lake/river somewhere..

#7 Post by Bradan »

pete wrote:You trying fly fishing in the salt cause you can't anything in the freshwater Bradan :lol: :wink: ?


:lol: :lol: :lol: har har Pete, cos you're such an expert freshwater man yourself! We'll hit the river some night in July and see who gets more sea trout.... :D :P
Its called fishing, not catching. If it was called catching it wouldn't be fishing!

http://www.flickr.com/photos/bradan99
User avatar
Marty Harrison
SAI Hammerhead
Posts: 308
Joined: Mon Jan 12, 2004 3:51 pm
Location: Co.Down

#8 Post by Marty Harrison »

I use an Okuma Airframe large arbour 7/9 reel and find it fantastic. Being carbon it`s fully saltwater proof, has a great disk drag and comes in very cheap at around £30 leaving you plenty of change to invest in a good line to put on it. Couldnt reccomend it enough, beats alot of the competiton at far greater prices.

Marty
budding surfcaster

#9 Post by budding surfcaster »

what Marty said ..................i have been looking alot recently myself, and the Okumas seem like exceptional vfm .
I have tried a vision reel which was very good but not realy worth the dosh so i tried thr scierra edp ,much better but no spare spool . I ended up buying a mint ,secondhand Hardy Sunbeam 9/10 , complete with a spare spool , boxed with all paperwork for just under a ton .

whilst a saltwater proof reel would be desirable i dont think it is really nessessary IF YOU WASH THE REEL , when you get home .........and then again i could be wrong !

have any of the guys found a line they would reccomend ?........prob an 8# to 10 .........something salt proof that wil also double as a pike line

bs
User avatar
lumpy
SAI Megalodon!
Posts: 1474
Joined: Mon Nov 21, 2005 6:22 pm
Favourite Rod: conoflex nemesis plus slr
Favourite Reel: Daiwa SL30SHV
Favourite Fish: Bull Huss, flounder
Location: clonakilty, co cork

#10 Post by lumpy »

the scientific angler bass lines are brilliant, have 3 of them, cant recomend them enough

try this web site, this is where i get the majority of my fly stuff

http://www.sportfish.co.uk/product/3313 ... paque.html
shore species 2008(25):dogfish(3.1lbs), bull huss (12lb 2oz), bass, shore rockling, coalie, whiting, pollack, conger (22.4lbs),flounder, thick lipped mullet (4.8lbs),turbot,ling (11.2lbs),ballan wrasse(4.5lbs), cuckoo wrasse, pouting, poor cod, cod (9.5lbs), dab, 3 bearded rockling, long spined scorpion fish, corkwing wrasse, plaice, trigger fish, sea trout, garfish


regards neil
Bass Fisher
SAI Lug Worm
Posts: 29
Joined: Sat Jun 25, 2005 11:38 pm
Location: County Armagh

#11 Post by Bass Fisher »

I have a Scierra XDA,9/10 size, which is a brilliant reel. Extremely well made, saltwater proof, has a large arbor, and one of the best drags you will find. They are being discounted at the minute, and you might get one for £40 to £50.
User avatar
fogelberg
SAI Bait Ball
Posts: 127
Joined: Wed Dec 22, 2004 2:15 am
Favourite Fish: Sea Trout and Gar
Location: Malmö, Sweden

#12 Post by fogelberg »

Well.. since it looks like I'm the only Loop fan here I'll throw my opinion in..

The Loop CLW 5eight is great for coast and saltwater fishing since its brakesystem is built into a waterresistant case... The reel is very easy to just rinse under the water tap after fishing.

Return to “Saltwater Fly Fishing”