10-25-2013, 06:48 PM
Nice Steelhead! I just started hooking up on them this week after days and days without a single hit from one. They are crazy fun fish and man are they delicious!
The first well documented Centre-pin reel was introduced by Samuel Allcocks in 1894 after the patent for its design was granted to JW Young in 1893 so I'm pretty sure they've been around for a long time.
Maybe the last few years has seen a resurgence? It's true, it's not a necessary but I find it way more fun to fight fish that 'run' on a centre pin like carp or trout. I've used it all summer for everything, even boat fishing for walleyes and it just makes fishing fun for me. Personally, I feel like I'm cheating in a way when I use spinning reels because it makes my life so much easier. I like the challenge the pin adds and really makes you work not only for your fish, but even just to cast LOL to each their own though of course!
(10-25-2013 10:39 AM)MuskieBait Wrote: [ -> ]A longer rod allows you to control your drift much more effectively, and it allows you to extend your drift much further WITH CONTROL.That's true, and it also helps if your rod is 15' that way you can fish over other people at combat fishing spots lol but in all honesty, I feel way more control using a longer rod for bigger fish you need to 'turn'. Once I switched from 9' to 12' for carp it changed the whole game for me. And then now using 13'6" for steelhead and salmon has been great. When holding it at the store it feels way too long, but once you're on the river it's totally different. I could see myself using a 15' at some of the rivers I fish at
(10-25-2013 03:55 PM)OldTimer Wrote: [ -> ]While float rods and reels are the latest fad and are quite stylish perhaps,.... but "really really" - they are not necessary. They've only been out a few years.......... and guess what?............. we ALL caught LOTTSA fish prior to them being dreamed up
The first well documented Centre-pin reel was introduced by Samuel Allcocks in 1894 after the patent for its design was granted to JW Young in 1893 so I'm pretty sure they've been around for a long time.
Maybe the last few years has seen a resurgence? It's true, it's not a necessary but I find it way more fun to fight fish that 'run' on a centre pin like carp or trout. I've used it all summer for everything, even boat fishing for walleyes and it just makes fishing fun for me. Personally, I feel like I'm cheating in a way when I use spinning reels because it makes my life so much easier. I like the challenge the pin adds and really makes you work not only for your fish, but even just to cast LOL to each their own though of course!