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Old 12-24-2012, 10:53 PM
Bhflyfisher Bhflyfisher is offline
 
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Prince George, BC
Posts: 1,190
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mtngiant View Post
Plenty of suggestions here and all are good.
The common denominator is TFO and I agree.
It's in your price range and the brand makes the top 10 best rods list w/ a lifetime warrenty.
The general rule of thumb for a beginner is a 6wt.
It will handle any situation and I use it for coho and steelhead too.
I bought my girlfriend a TFO combo to get started and even I luv it.
I personally don't use the drag system for anything more than stripping....I finger break my catches. As soon as the fish is on....I turn the drag off completely. So I'm sure the combo reel will last a long time.
The line I will use until it breaks. Then go to Rio brand.
The most important thing is that you like it enough to learn.
Your most important piece of the puzzle is getting good quality flies.
Check out the thread "highwood river" on here. Someone listed a very good assortment of flies to get.
And I gave you a few online sites to buy from earlier if you read it.
You'll know when your ready for a change in equipment and what brands.
A lot of sales are on now. It's yr end and the old stock has got to go...so check around.
Reddington is also good....it's a sister company by Sage
Good luck
I disagree with what was highlighted in bold. If you're learning to cast on your own, without lessons or help, you need a good quality line. Its one of those things that will frustrate beginners because they have trouble getting 10-15' of line out. A good quality line is crucial to learning on your own. Cannot stress that enough.
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