No, only the "big guys", which means very seldom 

Thomas
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-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:majordomo-owner@;troutnet.com]
On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, November 14, 2002 6:57 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [VFB] Landing a fish - stripping vs. cranking


I've got a question to ask the list.  Since I normally fish water which
holds a decent abundance of fish but very few large ones, I've gotten
into
the habit of retrieving line by hand when bringing in a fish.  Having
spent
so many years fishing with spinning and baitcasting reels prior to
picking
up on fly fishing, I don't really see any sort of mechanical advantage
in
the use of a fly reel (at least not the lower-quality reel I've got on
my
rod) since the drag is all but non-existant.  Therefore, my reel is more
or
less just a place to store my line when I'm not using it.

I'd like to get an idea of what the generally used method is.  If I've
got
15 or 20 feet of line laying in the water in front of me, do I really
have
the time to take up all that slack on a reel with no mechanical
advantage
(i.e. no improved gear ratios to speed the uptake)?  Generally speaking,
I
also fish the lightest tippet I have available - normally 7x or 8x.
I've
never had a fish break off (although once or twice the fly has come
untied,
but that problem is on me).

Anyhow, whats the verdict?  When a fish can be landed just as easily by
retrieving line by hand, do you all pull it in or reel it in?

Thanks for any comments!

John

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