Forgot one thing-

STRIPPING BASKET !!!  Absolutely essential.  

 

JG

 

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Chuck Alexander
Sent: Friday, November 02, 2007 10:10 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [VFB] Back from California

 

Jerry: Thanks.. I'll order some of that line, print this out and take it
with Me and see what happens, Chuck

 

----- Original Message ----- 

From: Jerry Goldsmith <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  

To: [email protected] 

Sent: Friday, November 02, 2007 10:36 AM

Subject: RE: [VFB] Back from California

 

On Behalf Of Chuck Alexander
Subject: Re: [VFB] Back from California

 

I want to go to Panama City FL ASAP now that I got a car that I think will
make it ..... i too, have me some big ol flies to try, and my 9wt rod and
reel, but I'm wondering how in the world those guy cast into that EVER
PRESENT 20-30 MPH  wind coming in

[] 

 

I do a fair amount of surf casting and can pass on a few tips.

1.      I  use either shooting heads or Jim Teeny lines.  My favorite set up
for casting on the beaches in east central Florida is an eight weight rod
loaded with a 10 way intermediate shooting head.  When the bigger fish are
in.  I will go with a nine or even 10 weight rod, and 11 or 12 weight
shooting heads.  Even with the wind in your face.  The short amount of line
in the air as you gather speed for the final cast helps a great deal in
getting distance.

 

2.        you really do not have to make long casts.  I am constantly
surprised at surf casters, who will walk into the water up to their knees
and then try to cast 70 or 80 feet.  The vast majority of the fish that I
have caught were done by me standing on dry sand or  at most an inch or two
in the water and quartering my casts so that I was fishing the trough behind
the first wave.  Meaning that my most productive casts are no more than 40
or 50 feet.

 

3.         if the wind is really hard in your face. You have to adapt your
cast as follows.  On your initial forecast do not advance the line.  The
only thing you want from the first forward cast is to gather a little line
speed.  On your back cast you can  shoot  line. If you are using a shooting
head or a Teeny at this point,  You would simply cast forward. If you are
using a weight forward line,  you might false cast forward again, AGAIN NOT
SHOOTING OR ADVANCING ANY LINE INTO THE WIND, shoot more line on the next
BACKCAST, and then complete the cast in the forward direction. 

 

4.         A. Final technique that that is easier to do than TO describe
involves the same technique described as above. i.e. not advancing line, as
you forward cast, only on the back cast.  It also however involves keeping
the line moving in what I would describe as an elliptical orbit.  So you are
not stopping and starting as a means of loading the rod.  Rather the rod and
line are kept in constant motion much as one does in Spey casting.  I
believe this technique is called a Belgian cast, although I'm not sure.  I
do know it is remarkably successful.

 

Obviously, if the wind is hard at your back , you simply turn around, drive
the forward cast into the wind, and then just sort of throw your backwards
cast up into the winds and let it sail into the water.

 

Finally I think as you try surf casting with a fly rod, you will be amazed
at how many fish you catch making very short casts,  just beyond the first
wave break. 

 

 Hope that helps 

 

JG

 

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