God Bless You Jimmy, I'm a Bamboo Man Too and you hit it right on the
head. I'm copying your statement and putting it on my wall in my
Office.Thanks. 

________________________________

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of Jimmy D. Moore
Sent: Tuesday, November 13, 2007 11:13 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [VFB] On Bamboo vs Graphite, etc. Fly Rods


Hey Gang,  how bout an old fashioned VFB/FFW discussion?  One like we
used to have on "spine vs spline" and "furled vs mono" leaders. Those
continued for days, until everyone had their say.  Are you partial to
bamboo or had you druther fish with graphite, boron, etc. I'm a bamboo
man myself  because I get more feel of what's going on down my fly line
and even the fly and with the fish.  The smoothness with which a bamboo
rod casts compares to sipping good scotch or sour mash.  To enter this
discussion you must have fished a bamboo rod.  If you haven't, shame on
you!  The quotes below refer to fiberglass fly rods, but by substituting
graphite, etc. where glass appears  the rest will be pretty much the
same. Sparse Grey hackle said this about glass.. " Not untill someone
plays a glass stradivariius in Carnege Hall will I fish glass."  Pretty
strong stuff!   OK, why Bamboo?  Why Graphite, etc.?  You tell us.  I
must confess, I do fish graphite on occassion.

"As to glass or bamboo, I've always preferred bamboo and am still
considered a holdout. I've fished with many glass rods that I've
designed myself for the manufacturers, so one would think that I've
arrived at the perfect rod at least for myself. Not so.. When I think
glass, I unconsciously begin to push hard and slash at the water,
fighting the elements. Bamboo, on the other hand, sets me calm and
quiet, and I find that if I "feel" the rod and almost go along with what
it wants to do with the particular rig that I have attached to the line
at the moment, my efforts are more than rewarded."
"Tactics on Trout" by Ray Ovington

"In other words, with a glass rod, which is round, the tool accentuates
casting errors by heading the motion in the direction of the error. ...
With bamboo, on the other hand, the construction of sides tends to keep
the motion going more in a straight back-and-forth pattern." "In the
second place, bamboo is solid and fiberglass is hollow. This gives a
cane rod more sensitivity and feel. If your rod is transmitting casts,
fish or whatever through its whole diameter, it is going to tell more of
the "story" than if the impulses are being carried only through the
shell."
"Fly Tackle" by Harmon Henkin

Tight Lines, JIMMY D

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