Switch or Spey?

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Viewing 14 posts - 1 through 14 (of 14 total)
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  • #5946
    Avatar photoPeter E.
    Member

    So if I want to do some skagit casting or something a long those lines, should I go with a spey rod or could I use a switch? Think big river striper fishing with fast currents and deep runs.

    Any thoughts would be awesome.

    #52373
    Avatar photoJustin Witt
    Member

    I’d go with a Spey rod, all the way.  Just be advised that you are opening a door that leads into a maze of hallways; you’ll likely fall in love with the new place right away, but then you’ll get a little lost.  Once you navigate your way to the end of it though it will open up into a whole new space you never imaged existed…

    Then maybe you’ll come back around to the switch idea.

    #52374
    Zach Matthews
    The Itinerant Angler

    Yeah go Spey.

    #52375
    Avatar photoJustin Witt
    Member

    I’ll happily capitalize Spey, since it is the name of a river after all, but switch is going to have to stand on its own as a lower-case non-proper noun.

    #52376
    Zach Matthews
    The Itinerant Angler

    Any thoughts would be awesome.

    Peter is definitely getting his money’s worth out of this thread.

    #52377
    Avatar photoPeter E.
    Member

    I do every time. Keep it up, i’ll take thoughts on line selection too

    #52378
    Avatar photoTim Angeli
    Member

    I agree with Justin and Zach.  Spey sounds like the ticket for what you are wanting to do.  As far as lines, a Skagit taper with a head length of 2.5-3x the rod length would be a good place to start.  That should be fairly easy to learn with and will turn over a good size sink tip to get deep in the situation you mentioned.

    #52379
    Zach Matthews
    The Itinerant Angler

    This is an excellent learner line for striper fishing:

    http://buy.scientificanglers.com/skagit-extreme-with-integrated-tip.html

    It would be better if the tip was an INT instead of a fast sinker but there are plenty of places you can make it work and it practically teaches you to Spey cast by itself.

    #52380
    Avatar photoPeter E.
    Member

    I was thinking this might be the best bang for the buck.
    http://buy.scientificanglers.com/lines/spey-lines/skagit-extreme-head-multi-tip.html

    Anyone have any experience with TFO’s Deer Creek rod? Or what is a good starter rod?

    #52381
    brian carr
    Member

    Peter –

    Living in the middle of the country it probably sounds funny for me to recommend a spey rod.

    #52382
    Zach Matthews
    The Itinerant Angler

    Spey is a bit of a different animal rods-wise from the normal market.

    #52383
    brian carr
    Member

    Zach that was spot on!

    #52384
    Avatar photoTim Angeli
    Member

    Anyone have any experience with TFO’s Deer Creek rod? Or what is a good starter rod?

    TFO’s Deer Creek rods are nice.

    #52385

    I’ve been fishing the TFO Deer Creek rod for about 4 years now. Which is to say that I get to use it in the back yard for 2 months practicing for western steelhead in October for a couple weeks.

    I think it’s a great value. The first year I had a regular Rio Spey line, spent hours studying Simon’s video and even had him give me a pointer or two. Never go the hang of it.

    Then I stitched to Rio’s Skagit line with the multi tip system. Worked my way through Ed Ward’s video this time, and was fishing respectably the first season. I think the TFO and Skagit are definitely the way to go for a beginner.

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