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2007 Fishing Gear Buyer's Guide: Flyfishing Gear
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St. Croix Triumph
$90-"$120 ¿¿ 800-826-7042 ¿¿ stcroixrods.com

The new Triumph series is full of great deals for the budget-minded angler. All 19 graphite models have quality components, including full-cork grips. Each carries a five-year warranty. You can choose among two- and four-piece versions for line weights 4 through 9.
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How To Choose Flyfishing Gear:


Small-Stream Trout/Panfish: Seven- to 9-foot fly rods taking 4- or 5-weight lines will cast any fly you need. Longer versions are easier to cast; shorter versions make more sense on a brushy creek. Note that the superlight zero- to 3-weight rods you may see are more difficult to cast, meaning for experts only. Choose the lightest possible reel that's about 3 inches in diameter and use ample backing under the fly line.

Larger Rivers/Lakes/Light Saltwater: A 9-foot, 6-weight is THE all-around rod for trout flyfishing. It's light enough for dry-fly delicacy and heavy enough to throw medium-size streamer flies. It will also work for smaller bass bugs, but larger bugs and big trout streamers cast more easily with a 7- or 8-weight. That same 8-weight will work for pike, salmon, steelhead, bonefish, redfish, and smaller stripers. Match to a quality, large-arbor reel holding at least 100 yards of backing.

Big Water/Big Fish: Fly rod sizes 9- to 12-weight match to big stripers, huge salmon, and bigger tarpon. The greater the line weight, the bigger the fly you can cast with it. Nine-foot rods are an industry standard. Reels with sophisticated center-drags, preferably cork-based, will take 200 yards or more of 30-pound-test Dacron backing.

-- John Merwin

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