brownsbask
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Posts posted by brownsbask
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use a "lite" rod finish and inject or let it flow into the gap if you're not into removing the rings. I've had to use this method on repairs where the grip and seat are replaced but the customer doesn't want the signature area removed, so the grip has to come up from the butt end. Always leaves a bit of a gap which I fill with dry wall tape shims and epoxy. very solid fix with no movement.
Colin
Thanks, I'll give this a shot.
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I broke in my new (to me) G. Loomis 8 weight last week, and noticed a bit of an annoyance.
The cork at the top of the handle has a bit of play. It is the uppermost 2 rings or so, where my thumb sits, and where I transfer a fair bit of power during the cast. It moves maybe 2-3 mm, enough to be noticeable, as if there is a space between the cork and the blank under the rings.
Any ideas on a quick home repair job? Inject some epoxy or some other material?
Thanks!
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I just found this in my search to answer a similar question. You can add all the stocked lakes/sterams in BC as placemarks in Google Earth.
Once added, you can click on any placemark, and it will give you the option to link through to another page, and there you can click on the stocking report. Some lakes also have bathymetry data.
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I've always found much better definition using brown or amber lenses for my polarized sunglasses.
I actually prefer the way grey doesn't "artificially" exaggerate colours, so my non-fishing sunglasses all have grey lenses. But when it comes to picking out structure and fish, it is much easier with the brown.
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Nice! That is a solid looking fish.
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Great photos.
Love that pic of the whitefish, with the fine detail.
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Thanks for all the advice (on here and by PM), this is exactly what I need.
I'll make sure I get into it properly, and start by talking to some of the experts.
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I am looking to add an 8 weight to my quiver, as the heaviest line I currently cast is 5.
The main force behind this desire is a late summer trip to the Bulkley Valley BC, for some salmon and summer steelheading. Something I have never done, and I'll be out there for a wedding.
Other reasons I'm looking for an 8 is the occasional pike trip, bass in the east, something for big streamers, etc.
I have been interested in trying my hand at spey casting, so I was thinking of killing two birds with one stone.
Would a switch rod be the answer? What length? Model recommendations? What kind of investment would I be looking to make in the line department?
Note: I know very little about spey, and I would want to be able to use the rod as a traditional single hand a bunch of time.
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I actually picked one of these (590) up in the fall from the seller that has most of them up there (IdahoJoe208). He was great to deal with, and the rod looks beautiful. Haven't cast it yet though...
Though had I known the whistler shop deal was coming up I might have done that instead.
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The worst line I've bought is a 6Wt floating rio mainstream. It is awful stuff, it seems like it is about the weight of a regular 4wt. You need SOoooo much line out to load the road- it is useless for a faster action rod. I bought some rio grande to try but if that is a dud I'm going back to SA lines.
This is my exact story, except with a 5wt line. Terrible to load, until you get a ton of it out there. I'm hoping the Rio Grand does the trick...
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Read this:
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article....rarian-nonsense
If opinions remain unchanged and skeptics remain skeptical (which is what I expect) we are in just as much trouble as it appears.
But really, what does it matter, because the article is just another piece of the grand "climate scheme", right?
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Goggle/helmet fit compatibility is important too, or you can end up with the dreaded "gaper gap".
I have a pair of Smith Phenom goggles that fit excellently with my Giro helmet. But I would try the goggles you are looking to buy with the helmet you may also be buying.
FWIW I really like the Smith Phenom goggles (more so than oakleys), they've never fogged on me, and the lenses are great. They fit a small-medium face the best. They can be a bit pricey, though, if you can't find them on sale.
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Heh... I know those girls. At least two of them used to work in the lab where I'm doing my MSc.
Nice video, I miss summer.
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Just got back from a trip with the father and bro to Newfoundland, and came a cross a couple really interesting viewing opportunities.
The first was the Fluvarium in St. John's. 19 years ago they decided to redirect a stretch of creek in the city to pass by a series of windows in a trout interpretation centre. They have not touched it since it was built, except to clean the glass (and clearly not often enough). The results have been an incredible opportunity to view a population of resident brown trout (stocked in the late 1800s) as they go about their daily existence.
Watching the browns feed and interact was really fascinating, as I'm used to seeing this behaviour from above.
The second was a salmon ladder on the Exploits River in Grand Falls. Pretty self explanatory, but it was built by the paper company that put in the hydro dam, and the run sees annually around 30-40 thousand Atlantic salmon. There are windows into the top pool on the ladder, where the fish often stay to rest after the climb.
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Glad you guys are as stoked on the fish as I was.
I can email off hi-res copies of any of the above shots (but I'm pretty sure I know the only one people would be interested in). I have already done so for someone who asked, and with Silver Doctor's comment about painting I'm sure a hi-res image would be preferred as a 'model'. If you pm me an email address I can send it off when I am back home in a week or so.
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BTW, where is "back East"?Im guessing "back is" is somewhere on earth, in the solar system, which is part of the milky way
Hey! Nowhere did I imply that these photos were taken on Earth.
I will confirm that the fish was caught in this solar system, however... heh.
I was glad I brought the camera along that day, might not see another one like that for a while...
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I'm back East at the folks place for a month this summer, and have been checking in on the creek where I first learned to toss a fly.
The reward so far (other than nostalgia) has been the nicest looking brown I've yet laid eyes on...
The creek.
The ride.
A little guy.
The nursery (view from a boardwalk) - spent some time watching trout fry swim in the current.
The beauty.
Going...
Going...
Gone.
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The colours (and fish) are great. This pic is my favourite, lots of motion, cool composition.
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Sweeeeet.
Awesome fishes, and that is one hell of a white fish...
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A young bull
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A few photos from a couple days on the FTR. Good fishing, and not a soul in sight.
Best 3 Or 4 Wt, Small Stream Rod
in General Chat - Fishing Related
Posted
Wholeheartedly recommend the St Croix Legend Ultra, 7'9" 3 wt.
If you can find one to take out and cast, do it. That was all the convincing I needed. St. Croix calls it fast action, but I would say it is closer to medium. Just my opinion though.