We started off the year giving away a William Joseph Old School Pack so when Paul Swint and I talked this week he suggested we switch it up and give away a "New School" bag for this month's contest. His suggestion was a William Joseph Current chest pack which is a part of their MAG series which I am very impressed with.
The magnetic closures of the MAG series work flawlessly and really are an advance in fly gear technology.
THE RULES:
1. The contest will run from April 1st through April 30th, 2010.
2. Be a Fan of both T.F.M. and William Joseph on facebook.
3. Upload a photograph of your favorite piece of "Old School" gear along with your favorite piece of "New School" gear onto the T.F.M. facebook Fan page. This could be two reels, two rods, two accessories, or any other combination of fly fishing gear that shows the transition from vintage to contemporary. You may upload as many photos as you like but your name will only be put into the drawing once.
5. A winner will be randomly chosen and sent a William Joseph MAG series Current chest pack.
6. If you have any questions please feel free to email me at heddonpal@fiberglassflyrodders.org.
Let's see what you got in your collection. I tossed up an example today of a few reels that fit the rules of having both "Old School" and "New School" represented.
Wednesday, March 31, 2010
Sleeping In The Dirt - Issue 2
Aaron Otto and his growing list of photogs dropped another online issue of Sleeping In The Dirt.
Issue 2 is cleaner, sharper, and a step forward in A.O.'s vision for Sleeping In The Dirt. Check it out.
Issue 2 is cleaner, sharper, and a step forward in A.O.'s vision for Sleeping In The Dirt. Check it out.
Tuesday, March 30, 2010
Chris Stewart is...The TenkaraBum
It's no secret that besides an addiction to fiberglass fly rods and clicker reels that I also have come to enjoy tenkara angling a lot. There are few things as wonderfully simple as a tenkara rod, a long furled line, and fly.
Recently Chris Stewart started the website TenkaraBum which is a great reference for all things tenkara. Chris is using the site to review tenkara gear but also to educate about it as well.
Bookmark TenkaraBum and check back often as Chris has a lot to say about tenkara angling.
Recently Chris Stewart started the website TenkaraBum which is a great reference for all things tenkara. Chris is using the site to review tenkara gear but also to educate about it as well. Bookmark TenkaraBum and check back often as Chris has a lot to say about tenkara angling.
Sunday, March 28, 2010
T.F.M. Spotting - Scott Behn's Intruders
It's only fitting as I am flying home from Seattle back to the "Dirty South" that I would post up a photograph that Scott Behn, a.k.a. "harleydeen" from the Fiberglass Flyrodders forum, sent to me last week of a mess of intruders that he has tied up for me to try on the striped bass that will be running the rivers around Columbia, S.C. this spring and summer.
I am looking forward to giving these flies a go. I just feel bad that Scott and I didn't get a chance to link up while I was out in Seattle. Next time...
I am looking forward to giving these flies a go. I just feel bad that Scott and I didn't get a chance to link up while I was out in Seattle. Next time...
Friday, March 26, 2010
Marc Crapo's Leather Art
It's been awhile since I've dropped a post about the work Marc Crapo, a.k.a. "Rowdy", is doing and thought it was time to remind everyone of his mad leather working skills.
Marc and I caught up last month at the Fly Fishing Film Tour in Charleston, S.C. and I spied his briefcase in the back of the van.
I had seen this briefcase in photographs online but seeing it in person really reminds you that the quality of his work keeps getting better the longer he hones his craft.
Check out Rowdy's website and drop him an email at marc@flywallets.com if you have an idea that you'd like to see on leather.
Marc and I caught up last month at the Fly Fishing Film Tour in Charleston, S.C. and I spied his briefcase in the back of the van.
I had seen this briefcase in photographs online but seeing it in person really reminds you that the quality of his work keeps getting better the longer he hones his craft.
Check out Rowdy's website and drop him an email at marc@flywallets.com if you have an idea that you'd like to see on leather.
Thursday, March 25, 2010
T.F.M. Spotting - Eric at the Vise
Right before taking off on vacation Eric Weller sent along this photo as his submission for the T.F.M. Spotting Photo Contest. Great to see more submissions each month.
"This was a picture from our annual trout bum weekend in western Pennsylvania. I get together with my buddies and we tie flies, fish (weather permitting), watch fly fishing videos, and tie more flies."
"I was just starting to tie a new fly, a red pheasant tail. It was a killer pattern on the local streams last year and my buddies insisted that it's a must in my fly box. You use red dyed pheasant tail and red dyed peacock to tie it up. Different looking fly. Hope it works."
Red pheasant tail? I'll take a dozen!
"This was a picture from our annual trout bum weekend in western Pennsylvania. I get together with my buddies and we tie flies, fish (weather permitting), watch fly fishing videos, and tie more flies."
"I was just starting to tie a new fly, a red pheasant tail. It was a killer pattern on the local streams last year and my buddies insisted that it's a must in my fly box. You use red dyed pheasant tail and red dyed peacock to tie it up. Different looking fly. Hope it works."Red pheasant tail? I'll take a dozen!
Sunday, March 21, 2010
On The Beach in Tofino
This morning we left Bellingham, Washington and made our way over to Tofino, Vancouver Island by way of ferry and vehicle arriving at Long Beach Lodge Resort this afternoon. We situated the room and then took to the beach. It was great for the children to have a couple hours to enjoy running and playing on the beach.
Hadley was excited to have a pair of boots that kept her feet dry while she played in the tide wash. Finn has only been walking for a couple of days now and was so proud of himself walking in the hard packed sand of the beach.
The Long Beach Lodge Resort staff had a half bottle of bubbly on ice in the room for us to find upon arrival which was an excellent reminder that this trip was to celebrate our tenth anniversary.
We're here until Friday morning. It's going to be a stellar week in Tofino.
Hadley was excited to have a pair of boots that kept her feet dry while she played in the tide wash. Finn has only been walking for a couple of days now and was so proud of himself walking in the hard packed sand of the beach.
The Long Beach Lodge Resort staff had a half bottle of bubbly on ice in the room for us to find upon arrival which was an excellent reminder that this trip was to celebrate our tenth anniversary.
We're here until Friday morning. It's going to be a stellar week in Tofino.
The Z-REELS Arrives!
The afternoon before jetting out of town on family vacation I spent an hour chasing down the FedEx driver to get the box containing my Z-Reels Natural 5 and extra spool. I had been waiting the arrival of the reel for a few days and I sure wasn't going to let this box sit on my front porch for two weeks while I was out of town.

The Z-Reels Natural 5 is a smooth little machine in make and design. The leather drag pad is a very cool idea and a neat feature of this reel. I have several black fiberglass South Fork Rod Company rods to play with and this reel will be the perfect match.
Better photographs and a through report once I get back home and have some time to get this reel on the water.
Dan from K&T Equip, LLC was great to work with on this purchase. The dark red spool had to be special ordered from the Z-Reels factory in Germany and Dan kept me up to date with frequent emails. K&T Equip, LLC still has the Z-Reels introductory prices listed for both the Natural and Revolution reels on their website. This should be taken advantage of if you're thinking about adding one of these unique "wheels" to your collection.

The Z-Reels Natural 5 is a smooth little machine in make and design. The leather drag pad is a very cool idea and a neat feature of this reel. I have several black fiberglass South Fork Rod Company rods to play with and this reel will be the perfect match.
Better photographs and a through report once I get back home and have some time to get this reel on the water.
Dan from K&T Equip, LLC was great to work with on this purchase. The dark red spool had to be special ordered from the Z-Reels factory in Germany and Dan kept me up to date with frequent emails. K&T Equip, LLC still has the Z-Reels introductory prices listed for both the Natural and Revolution reels on their website. This should be taken advantage of if you're thinking about adding one of these unique "wheels" to your collection.
Thursday, March 18, 2010
To All My 206 (Coffee Geek) Peeps
Up In The Air
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
Packing for the P.N.W. Trip
Before we had children and the airlines started charging for the first and second checked bag each way, the wife and I would carefully plan the gear needed for our one to two week vacations. These packing and planning sessions prior to a trip would end with each of us carrying a suitcase and a large duffel bag crammed full of everything that we thought we might possibly need.
Fast forward five years, add two children to the mix, plane ticket prices jump a hundred dollars for two checked bags and our mindset now is go light. Our new goal is to fit everything into a single suitcase per person which is no small feat for two that like to pack heavy.
So on the eve of leaving for Seattle I am putting together the things needed for our ten day trip to the P.N.W. I am packing especially light with the fly gear and taking only the Gypsy built Steffen 5/6 weight, LOOP Opti Dry Fly reel, and the Goertzen Adventure Equipment Lanyard which will hold tools and flies. Add to this a small bag for few accessories and I should be set.
Twenty-four hours till we board our plane and I still have a long list of things to do...
Fast forward five years, add two children to the mix, plane ticket prices jump a hundred dollars for two checked bags and our mindset now is go light. Our new goal is to fit everything into a single suitcase per person which is no small feat for two that like to pack heavy.
So on the eve of leaving for Seattle I am putting together the things needed for our ten day trip to the P.N.W. I am packing especially light with the fly gear and taking only the Gypsy built Steffen 5/6 weight, LOOP Opti Dry Fly reel, and the Goertzen Adventure Equipment Lanyard which will hold tools and flies. Add to this a small bag for few accessories and I should be set.
Twenty-four hours till we board our plane and I still have a long list of things to do...
Tuesday, March 16, 2010
T.F.M. Spotting - Fly Obsession R&D
Nick Granato of the Fly Obsession blog recently took a fly box full of new streamer patterns to a secret location for a little "research and development".
T.F.M. Spotting on Nick's homemade fly box. I like.
A well stocked meat locker no doubt.
Winter caught brown with a Chubby Muffin hanging out of it's mouth. I guess the results speak for itself on that pattern and it passes R&D.
T.F.M. Spotting on Nick's homemade fly box. I like.
A well stocked meat locker no doubt.
Winter caught brown with a Chubby Muffin hanging out of it's mouth. I guess the results speak for itself on that pattern and it passes R&D.
Sunday, March 14, 2010
TEST - Blogging From My iPhone
Testing the BlogPress App. We leave for Seattle/Vancouver Island this week and I would like to keep The Fiberglass Manifesto updated while we are away. I think the BlogPress app just might let me do this.

It even lets me upload photographs from my iPhone Photo Albums. STELLAR!
- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone
T.F.M. Spotting - Kevin's Kerry Journal
T.F.M. friend Kevin McGuire sent these photos and copy along from Dublin the night before his flight home. We had both hoped for daily dispatches but internet access on The Emerald Isle was limited.
The Kerry Highlands of southwest Ireland are wild, filled with surprising twists and hair-raising turns around every tight, one-lane bend in the road...mind the sheep, now...
Anne and I first enjoyed a luxe couple of nights at The Malton Hotel in Killarney before embarking on our Highlands journey. The mussels were just amazing, fresh out of the Atlantic, and the creamy seafood chowders (and the more humble but outstanding fisherman's stews) were my mainstays throughout the trip...along with the Guinness and Jameson...
We drove from Killarney north along Dingle Bay and then hard south thirty minutes to Blackstone's Lodge outside of Glencar for the wee. A fantastic (and affordable at 250 Euro/weekly) cottage right on the pounding River Curragh. This is forty-five minutes from Kerry's south coastline, Ballen Skelligs, and Waterville I.E. at Waterville we met the Brain family, who showed us some nice ties by son Sion along with his brother Gareth.
Everywhere we went, those in the know said "there are no fish there right now." Severe and prolonged cold weather along with continuing drought has left this Off Season way, way off...and to make matters worse it's almost impossible to find accessible trout water without paying a monstrous fee through the local fisheries manager.
Thus Ireland at times seems all about hiring an expensive ghillie, and gearing up with their stuff for trophy fish on the lakes and in the salt. I came to understand that "no fish here" meant "no trophy fish here..."
So, Anne and I embarked on a wonderful journey through mountain passes to Killarney National Park, where we wandered and fished the windy lakes, but with no luck.
We then fished a local river and I managed one VERY wee 'bow on an olive nymph... but the stink was finally off, but just barely!!! I look forward to more time here with knowledgeable locals who can help me crack the code...
What an amazing countryside is Kerry, where my great-great grandparents lived and where I'll return again to enjoy the wonderful craiche (fun, enjoyment) and hospitality offered by this very kind and loving people.
Kevin was able to don his T.F.M. t-shirt for a day and submitted this photo for the T.F.M. Spotting Photo Contest.
The Kerry Highlands of southwest Ireland are wild, filled with surprising twists and hair-raising turns around every tight, one-lane bend in the road...mind the sheep, now...
Anne and I first enjoyed a luxe couple of nights at The Malton Hotel in Killarney before embarking on our Highlands journey. The mussels were just amazing, fresh out of the Atlantic, and the creamy seafood chowders (and the more humble but outstanding fisherman's stews) were my mainstays throughout the trip...along with the Guinness and Jameson...
We drove from Killarney north along Dingle Bay and then hard south thirty minutes to Blackstone's Lodge outside of Glencar for the wee. A fantastic (and affordable at 250 Euro/weekly) cottage right on the pounding River Curragh. This is forty-five minutes from Kerry's south coastline, Ballen Skelligs, and Waterville I.E. at Waterville we met the Brain family, who showed us some nice ties by son Sion along with his brother Gareth.
Everywhere we went, those in the know said "there are no fish there right now." Severe and prolonged cold weather along with continuing drought has left this Off Season way, way off...and to make matters worse it's almost impossible to find accessible trout water without paying a monstrous fee through the local fisheries manager.
Thus Ireland at times seems all about hiring an expensive ghillie, and gearing up with their stuff for trophy fish on the lakes and in the salt. I came to understand that "no fish here" meant "no trophy fish here..."
So, Anne and I embarked on a wonderful journey through mountain passes to Killarney National Park, where we wandered and fished the windy lakes, but with no luck.
We then fished a local river and I managed one VERY wee 'bow on an olive nymph... but the stink was finally off, but just barely!!! I look forward to more time here with knowledgeable locals who can help me crack the code...
What an amazing countryside is Kerry, where my great-great grandparents lived and where I'll return again to enjoy the wonderful craiche (fun, enjoyment) and hospitality offered by this very kind and loving people.Kevin was able to don his T.F.M. t-shirt for a day and submitted this photo for the T.F.M. Spotting Photo Contest.
Saturday, March 13, 2010
T.F.M. Joins the LOOP ARMY!
Recently I ordered a 2010 LOOP Opti Dry Fly reel to match a recent fiberglass build. Since Joe Roope of Castaway Fly Fishing Shop is still waiting for the new stock to arrive he graciously sent along a shop demo that I could carry along to Seattle and Vancouver Island next week.
I am hoping to put a few sea run cutthroats on the Gypsy Rod Works Steffen 5/6 weight build with the LOOP Opti hanging off it.
So...I guess this makes me part of the LOOP ARMY now. So cool...
I am hoping to put a few sea run cutthroats on the Gypsy Rod Works Steffen 5/6 weight build with the LOOP Opti hanging off it.So...I guess this makes me part of the LOOP ARMY now. So cool...
Friday, March 12, 2010
8th Annual "SPEY DAYS"
T.F.M. Reporter Rich Schaaff is at it again and sent along some copy with one of his "fly fishing still life" style photographs about the upcoming Spey Days held March 26-28 at the Howard Miller Steelhead Park in Rockport, Washington.
Just when I thought I was starting to take my single hand casting to another level after all these years. I moved to the Pacific Northwest and soon wanted to join the religious ranks of the two-handed spey rodders.
Living in the NW and flyfishing for steelhead only meant one thing would have to happen....I would have to humble myself and start a completely different style of fly fishing for Steelhead.
I would have go through the embarrassment & frustration of picking up a two-handed spey rod and giving it a whirl in front of experienced anglers. I could see the grimace in there face when I came within 50yds of them and they would move downriver at a frightening pace.. It was a tough pill to swallow for me and still has its moments to this day.
In the past I had fished the Deschutes River several times alongside my accomplished Spey casting buddy Mike O'Toole. The only difference was I was still not willing to jump out of my single handed- single minded comfort zone. But after you spend enough time taking photographs of your fishing partner holding beautiful Steelhead in the water with the sun setting on the canyon behind. It was a Kodak moment that I desperately desired to be part of.
So I decided to jump in feet first on our next float down the Deschutes. I struggled with it most the day but somehow through the grace of God I caught more Steelhead in one day than I had in a long long, long did I say long time...... needless to say I was converted that day..
The 8th annual SPEY DAYS presented by Kaufmann Streamborn will be the perfect event to get you up to snuff for the upcoming summer steelhead season
It is being held March 26-28 on the Skagit River at the Howard Miller Steelhead Park in Rockport, Washington. It is billed as THREE DAYS OF THRILL, CHILLS & SKAGITOPIA. The best in the Northwest will be there to guide you along.
I highly recommend that when you decide to enter the arena of the two-hander that you do whatever it takes to develop a solid basis for a proper casting stroke. I have been fortunate to spend some time with Mike Kinney one of the masters in the NW with a spey rod. A good teacher is a great way to get your feet wet and to keep you honest. Mike will be one many seasoned professionals that will be available to instruct you and get you off to a good start. Here is the link to the event schedule. www.speydaysnw.com. Due to low returns of steelhead the river will be closed to fishing which is a harsh reality to many including myself. But all the more reason to get out there and practice.
Congrats to Rich Schaaff for one of his stellar photographs being used on the official Spey Days poster!
Just when I thought I was starting to take my single hand casting to another level after all these years. I moved to the Pacific Northwest and soon wanted to join the religious ranks of the two-handed spey rodders.Living in the NW and flyfishing for steelhead only meant one thing would have to happen....I would have to humble myself and start a completely different style of fly fishing for Steelhead.
I would have go through the embarrassment & frustration of picking up a two-handed spey rod and giving it a whirl in front of experienced anglers. I could see the grimace in there face when I came within 50yds of them and they would move downriver at a frightening pace.. It was a tough pill to swallow for me and still has its moments to this day.
In the past I had fished the Deschutes River several times alongside my accomplished Spey casting buddy Mike O'Toole. The only difference was I was still not willing to jump out of my single handed- single minded comfort zone. But after you spend enough time taking photographs of your fishing partner holding beautiful Steelhead in the water with the sun setting on the canyon behind. It was a Kodak moment that I desperately desired to be part of.
So I decided to jump in feet first on our next float down the Deschutes. I struggled with it most the day but somehow through the grace of God I caught more Steelhead in one day than I had in a long long, long did I say long time...... needless to say I was converted that day..
The 8th annual SPEY DAYS presented by Kaufmann Streamborn will be the perfect event to get you up to snuff for the upcoming summer steelhead season
It is being held March 26-28 on the Skagit River at the Howard Miller Steelhead Park in Rockport, Washington. It is billed as THREE DAYS OF THRILL, CHILLS & SKAGITOPIA. The best in the Northwest will be there to guide you along.
I highly recommend that when you decide to enter the arena of the two-hander that you do whatever it takes to develop a solid basis for a proper casting stroke. I have been fortunate to spend some time with Mike Kinney one of the masters in the NW with a spey rod. A good teacher is a great way to get your feet wet and to keep you honest. Mike will be one many seasoned professionals that will be available to instruct you and get you off to a good start. Here is the link to the event schedule. www.speydaysnw.com. Due to low returns of steelhead the river will be closed to fishing which is a harsh reality to many including myself. But all the more reason to get out there and practice.
Congrats to Rich Schaaff for one of his stellar photographs being used on the official Spey Days poster!
Thursday, March 11, 2010
Surfcaster's Journal - Issue 2
The second issue of the Surfcaster's Journal arrived in my email inbox a couple days ago and even though I haven't spent any time on the beach or rocks fishing, this tome of an online magazine will get you psyched about it.
At 224 pages it should get you through the next couple days of cubicle life.
At 224 pages it should get you through the next couple days of cubicle life.
Island (Out Of) Focus
John Sisco, a.k.a. ratfacedmcdougal, is more old school than most. Not only does he mostly fish glass (in the salt too) but still shoots film and builds wooden boats on the coast of Maine.
This is March's second T.F.M. Spotting Photo Contest entry...
John and his wife Lucy recently returned from a few days of fly fishing in Punta Allen, Mexico. He didn't realize until he got his film developed that his macro switch was turned on and all his photographs where slightly out of focus. I don't mind at all and thought that they were still worth posting.
John completed a "Mayan Slam" with bonefish...
Snook...
And Palomete Maya (Mayan Permit) caught...
It looks like John and his wife didn't go hungry either...

Good times indeed and neat to see someone take all these salt species on with vintage glass.
This is March's second T.F.M. Spotting Photo Contest entry...
John and his wife Lucy recently returned from a few days of fly fishing in Punta Allen, Mexico. He didn't realize until he got his film developed that his macro switch was turned on and all his photographs where slightly out of focus. I don't mind at all and thought that they were still worth posting.John completed a "Mayan Slam" with bonefish...
Snook...
And Palomete Maya (Mayan Permit) caught...
It looks like John and his wife didn't go hungry either...
Good times indeed and neat to see someone take all these salt species on with vintage glass.
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Fishy Kid Writing Contest
Fishy Kid is excited to announce the first contest of the year with a writing contest which is sponsored by NuCanoe and a growing list of other sponsors.
Check out the writing contest rules, register, and get your Fishy Kid putting some words to paper!
When Fishy Kid was in the planning stages we were contacted by Montana Guides and Outfitters, Ron Snow and Joel Thompson, who said that they were working with NuCanoe to donate a NuCanoe to Fishy Kid to be used as a prize. We were astounded at the commitment of this donation and are very excited to be starting 2010 with this writing contest.
Check out the writing contest rules, register, and get your Fishy Kid putting some words to paper!
T.F.M. Spotting - Myles Fisher and Fishing
Last week Brian Ebert sent along a stack of photos of a quick trip to a nearby pond where he caught a few trout before picking up his son, Myles Fisher, that evening. Little Myles Fisher had been in the hospital for the past month so this was quite a homecoming.




Looks like a great way to spend the day on both accounts!




Looks like a great way to spend the day on both accounts!
Tuesday, March 9, 2010
Larry Kenney Fiberglass Fly Rods
Recently Larry Kenney announced on the Fiberglass Flyrodders forum that he was building fly rods again on fiberglass blanks of his own design. Larry graciously forwarded a few photographs of his builds along with an explanation of the process to create these blanks, the models offered, and his reasons for why fiberglass is still an excellent material for trout weight fly rods.
This past fall I had the opportunity to cast the four weight model and was very impressed. This fly rod felt like dry fly magic. I have to get on the Kenney list soon!
Why Fiberglass?
Fiberglass, bamboo and graphite are all excellent rod building materials, but my experience is that each of them has characteristics that make them good for some fly fishing applications and less good for others. Graphite for example, in it’s multiple incarnations, is very stiff and strong for its weight, and excels as a material for rods of longer lengths. A 9 ft. #4, #5 or #6 line graphite rod will almost certainly be more responsive and less tiring to cast than a glass rod of similar length. At 9.5 or 10 feet for an #8 or #9 line the difference in perceived weight and performance will be even more noticeable.
I’m not suggesting that good glass rods can’t be built for heavier line weights, but go much beyond eight and a half feet and a 7 weight line and, with rare exceptions, you’re courting either image or nostalgia. There’s nothing wrong with either, of course, but compared to a graphite rod, you’re going to work harder for, at best, the same performance. Where I believe fiberglass really shines is as a material for light line fly rods in lengths up to 8 feet or so for line weights #5 and under. It can also make some very nice #6 and #7 line rods at around 8 and a half feet.
In those lengths, a fiberglass rod’s additional weight isn’t enough to be noticeable, and indeed the extra flex in the butt and swing weight in the tip can be both pleasant-feeling and helpful. Built right, on the right mandrels, a glass rod in those line classes will be acceptably quick and responsive, able to handle repeated accurate casts at all normal fishing distances, and will have a suppleness of feel that’s just innately pleasing. Moreover, by virtue of the greater elasticity of the fibers, the superior hoop strength inherent in their woven rather than unidirectional character, and the generally larger diameter of the blanks, fiberglass provides both durability and superior control of hooked fish without endangering light tippets.
Similar advantages apply to split bamboo fly rods, of course, and bamboo offers an additional design advantage over rods of tubular construction in that both external taper and internal hollowing can be used to fine tune rod action. The only downsides of rods from bamboo are their greater weight (due as much to metal ferrules as anything and of little consequence in light line rods), a frequently long delay getting them from the best makers, and significant expense. The understandable desire to keep a pristine and expensive new bamboo rod out of harm’s way rather than risk damaging it while fishing can be another problem. It’s silly, of course, not to use a fine tool, but fishing a multi-thousand dollar rod in rough conditions can take your mind off the game. Fiberglass rods require relatively little maintenance, are extremely durable, and are relatively inexpensive compared to bamboo. Good ones cost about the same as top-line graphite rods and provide exceptional performance. They deserve to be treated well, of course – wiped dry before storing for example, and the ferrule areas occasionally cleaned and lubed with paraffin - but there should be little temptation to turn a good glass rod into a closet queen.
It’s All In How It Bends And Unbends
Resistance to bend in a tube – and that’s what most fly rods are – is dependent on three things: the material from which the tube is made, the tube’s diameter, and its wall thickness. If you increase the stiffness of the material or the blank’s diameter or wall thickness, the rod - or a part of the rod where you’ve made that change - will be harder to bend.
Regulating bend is at the heart of performance fly rod design. Fly rods store and release the energy put into them when we bend them by moving them through the motions of a cast. Good fly rods bend and unbend efficiently – load and unload if you prefer. Bad ones don’t.
To get good accuracy, good leader turnover, and decent tippet protection from a light line rod, particularly a short one, you need a supple but controllable tip section, supported by mid and butt sections that let the tip do its work at short range and accept increasingly more of the load as casting range or fish resistance increases. You can build that tip section from graphite, but getting the suppleness you need demands either a very small diameter or a reduced wall thickness. There are problems with both choices. If you choose a thin wall, you risk creating a fragile blank. If you reduce diameter you need very small diameter mandrels around which to roll the graphite, and the resulting skinny graphite tip sections frequently don’t fare well in the rough and tumble of real-life fishing.
There are some pretty decent light line graphite fly rods available at 8 feet and longer, but in shorter lengths I’ve generally not been impressed. The path too many graphite makers have taken to make shorter #3 and #4 line fly rods has been to put the bend necessary to move the line into the butt section. The results, to my way of thinking, are pokey rods with stiff, slow moving tips that make for poor near-range accuracy – one of the very qualities you want a short rod for in the first place. Fiberglass’s greater flexibility and more reasonable diameters lead more directly to light, supple, effective and durable tip designs.
Material and Rod Action
The blanks for my glass rods are rolled from a high quality e-glass/epoxy-resin prepreg on my own, proprietary, one-piece, compound taper mandrels, by a New Zealand fabricator with many years’ blank making experience. These rods feel supple - you can feel them bend throughout their length - but their actions are what I’d call progressive. They work a short line sweetly off the tip alone, then bring more and more of the butt into play as you extend line. They’re ideal for light line trout fishing.
Ferrules
Ferrules have a major impact on rod action because their stiffness, their mass, and the way they alter blank diameter all affect the way a rod bends. Out toward the tip additional mass tends to slow a rod down. Down near the grip ferrules can add useful stiffness but they can also shift flex to where you don’t want it. And a center ferrule in a 2-piece rod can easily detract from smooth rod action. Good rod design takes advantage of and compensates for these effects.
L. Kenney fiberglass rods are built with lightweight internal (spigot) ferrules. I’m convinced that this ferrule design, rather than the more common tip-over-butt versions, makes for a better balanced, smoother-casting rod. Rather than having a significant disparity in diameter on either side of the ferrule, internal ferrules provide continuity of diameter across rod sections.
My current models are also all of 3-piece configuration. Why? Fine 2-piece rods can certainly be made with a single center ferrule, as can multi-piece rods with three or four ferrules. My experience, however, is that well-designed 3-piece tubular rods, particularly in shorter light line lengths, effectively distribute the mass and stiffness of their two ferrules along the blank and actually help promote fast-damping tips and smooth casting loops. There’s no added mass in the middle of the rod, or well out from the grip, to slow down the tip or let it bounce at the end of a stroke. Neither is there, as with 4 piece rods, a stiffened section not far above the grip to complicate progressive flex. 3-piece rods also break down into sections short enough to transport easily.
Blank Finish
L.Kenney fiberglass fly rod blanks are unsanded. That means the ridges from the shrink tape used to secure the fiberglass material on the mandrel while the blank is being oven-cured are still visible on the surface of the blank. This isn’t a cost-cutting measure. Any sanding runs the risk of removing material that shouldn’t be removed, and regardless of how I correct prepreg patterns for material removed by sanding, I simply don’t get the blank-to-blank consistency with sanded blanks that I require. With an unsanded blank, the material I design into the blank, stays in the blank. After curing and shrink tape removal, my blanks are coated with a durable, heat-cure epoxy paint in a coffee-with-cream in color. Call it “latte” if that makes you feel more contemporary. The result is a rod that’s conservative, unobtrusive, and attractive without being showy. For me, those are all good features.
Grips and Hardware
Grips are hand turned from individually glued, high quality cork rings to a rather flat Wells shape, in lengths and diameters that vary according to rod length. Bronze-brown anodized aluminum slide band or uplocking reel seats with cork spacers are light in weight and classic in appearance.
Tungsten carbide stripping guides and black nickel snake guides are wrapped with chestnut nylon thread, accented with modest tan spirals within the wraps at the top of the grip, at the ferrules and tip-top. I don’t have much use for hook-keepers, but I’ll put a strap and ring keeper on a rod if you really feel you need one. Wraps are coated with 4 coats of spar urethane to a smooth, translucent, glossy finish and are labeled above the grip with length, rod weight, line designation, my serial number and (if desired) owner’s name. Tip and mid sections also show the rod’s serial number. The look is clean and understated rather than showy.
Availability
I build a very limited number of rods to order each year. Delivery is generally within 60 days but can be substantially more or less depending on my schedule and order backlog.
L. Kenney Fly Rod Models
Model 733 7’3” 3 piece. #3 line 2.0 oz.
A light, delicate, responsive little rod designed for small flies and accurate casts from a rod length away out to 35 feet or so, though it will cast longer if you must. Its medium-soft progressive action makes it a great choice for anglers who fish small streams. Fitted with my down-sliding cork spacer slide band reel seat. $550
Model 794 7’9” 3-piece #4 line 2.4 to 2.8 oz. depending on reel seat.
A supple, easy casting progressive action rod that I think hits a sweet-spot for fiberglass in both length and line weight. It’s long enough for medium size waters, short enough for smaller streams, delicate enough to handle light tippets, but with sufficient power to handle a #10 dry or a reasonably sized weighted nymph. Built with a down-sliding cork spacer slide band reel seat, or a cork spacer metal uplocking reel seat.
$560 with slide band seat. $575 with uplock.
Model 813 8’1” 3 pc #3 line 2.6 oz.
A very light, smooth, long 3 wgt., built at the urging of some friends at the Golden Gate Angling and Casting Club Soft and supple yet by no means a noodle, it can nonetheless achieve the line speeds needed for accurate, delicate presentations out to 45 feet or so. A killer rod for small dries and nymphs. Built only with my downlocking slide band reel seat. $580 Available after April 2010
Model 835 8’3” 3-piece DT4/WF5 3.0 to 3.25 oz, depending on reel seat.
This rod, which is about as long as I can build on my light line tapers, has become a favorite of mine. It’s a particularly pleasant, well-balanced, all-around trout rod for all but very large rivers that require deep wading, or where very large flies are necessary. Supple in the tip and mid for close-in casting and light tippet work, it has enough diameter and punch in the butt to reach out to 60 feet, turn over a wide range of fly sizes, and control larger trout. You can cast smooth open loops easily, or push the rod to tighten up without it becoming unstable. I fish it with a WF5F, but some good casters I know prefer a DT4 - choices that reflect casting style and the specific characteristics of the lines being cast as much as the rod itself. Built with either a cork spacer metal uplock reel seat or a down-sliding cork spacer slide band reel seat.
$580 with slide band seat: $595 with uplock
• All rods come with partitioned cloth liner and aluminum rod case.
• Add $20 for shipping in the Continental USA via USPS Priority Mail, insured, with delivery confirmation. Shipments to Alaska and Hawaii may be higher. Shipments outside the USA will be by USPS Priority International, with rates quoted on request.
Larry Kenney can be contacted at lmkenney@earthlink.net.
This past fall I had the opportunity to cast the four weight model and was very impressed. This fly rod felt like dry fly magic. I have to get on the Kenney list soon!
Why Fiberglass?
Fiberglass, bamboo and graphite are all excellent rod building materials, but my experience is that each of them has characteristics that make them good for some fly fishing applications and less good for others. Graphite for example, in it’s multiple incarnations, is very stiff and strong for its weight, and excels as a material for rods of longer lengths. A 9 ft. #4, #5 or #6 line graphite rod will almost certainly be more responsive and less tiring to cast than a glass rod of similar length. At 9.5 or 10 feet for an #8 or #9 line the difference in perceived weight and performance will be even more noticeable.
I’m not suggesting that good glass rods can’t be built for heavier line weights, but go much beyond eight and a half feet and a 7 weight line and, with rare exceptions, you’re courting either image or nostalgia. There’s nothing wrong with either, of course, but compared to a graphite rod, you’re going to work harder for, at best, the same performance. Where I believe fiberglass really shines is as a material for light line fly rods in lengths up to 8 feet or so for line weights #5 and under. It can also make some very nice #6 and #7 line rods at around 8 and a half feet.
In those lengths, a fiberglass rod’s additional weight isn’t enough to be noticeable, and indeed the extra flex in the butt and swing weight in the tip can be both pleasant-feeling and helpful. Built right, on the right mandrels, a glass rod in those line classes will be acceptably quick and responsive, able to handle repeated accurate casts at all normal fishing distances, and will have a suppleness of feel that’s just innately pleasing. Moreover, by virtue of the greater elasticity of the fibers, the superior hoop strength inherent in their woven rather than unidirectional character, and the generally larger diameter of the blanks, fiberglass provides both durability and superior control of hooked fish without endangering light tippets.Similar advantages apply to split bamboo fly rods, of course, and bamboo offers an additional design advantage over rods of tubular construction in that both external taper and internal hollowing can be used to fine tune rod action. The only downsides of rods from bamboo are their greater weight (due as much to metal ferrules as anything and of little consequence in light line rods), a frequently long delay getting them from the best makers, and significant expense. The understandable desire to keep a pristine and expensive new bamboo rod out of harm’s way rather than risk damaging it while fishing can be another problem. It’s silly, of course, not to use a fine tool, but fishing a multi-thousand dollar rod in rough conditions can take your mind off the game. Fiberglass rods require relatively little maintenance, are extremely durable, and are relatively inexpensive compared to bamboo. Good ones cost about the same as top-line graphite rods and provide exceptional performance. They deserve to be treated well, of course – wiped dry before storing for example, and the ferrule areas occasionally cleaned and lubed with paraffin - but there should be little temptation to turn a good glass rod into a closet queen.
It’s All In How It Bends And Unbends
Resistance to bend in a tube – and that’s what most fly rods are – is dependent on three things: the material from which the tube is made, the tube’s diameter, and its wall thickness. If you increase the stiffness of the material or the blank’s diameter or wall thickness, the rod - or a part of the rod where you’ve made that change - will be harder to bend.
Regulating bend is at the heart of performance fly rod design. Fly rods store and release the energy put into them when we bend them by moving them through the motions of a cast. Good fly rods bend and unbend efficiently – load and unload if you prefer. Bad ones don’t.
To get good accuracy, good leader turnover, and decent tippet protection from a light line rod, particularly a short one, you need a supple but controllable tip section, supported by mid and butt sections that let the tip do its work at short range and accept increasingly more of the load as casting range or fish resistance increases. You can build that tip section from graphite, but getting the suppleness you need demands either a very small diameter or a reduced wall thickness. There are problems with both choices. If you choose a thin wall, you risk creating a fragile blank. If you reduce diameter you need very small diameter mandrels around which to roll the graphite, and the resulting skinny graphite tip sections frequently don’t fare well in the rough and tumble of real-life fishing.
There are some pretty decent light line graphite fly rods available at 8 feet and longer, but in shorter lengths I’ve generally not been impressed. The path too many graphite makers have taken to make shorter #3 and #4 line fly rods has been to put the bend necessary to move the line into the butt section. The results, to my way of thinking, are pokey rods with stiff, slow moving tips that make for poor near-range accuracy – one of the very qualities you want a short rod for in the first place. Fiberglass’s greater flexibility and more reasonable diameters lead more directly to light, supple, effective and durable tip designs.
Material and Rod ActionThe blanks for my glass rods are rolled from a high quality e-glass/epoxy-resin prepreg on my own, proprietary, one-piece, compound taper mandrels, by a New Zealand fabricator with many years’ blank making experience. These rods feel supple - you can feel them bend throughout their length - but their actions are what I’d call progressive. They work a short line sweetly off the tip alone, then bring more and more of the butt into play as you extend line. They’re ideal for light line trout fishing.
Ferrules
Ferrules have a major impact on rod action because their stiffness, their mass, and the way they alter blank diameter all affect the way a rod bends. Out toward the tip additional mass tends to slow a rod down. Down near the grip ferrules can add useful stiffness but they can also shift flex to where you don’t want it. And a center ferrule in a 2-piece rod can easily detract from smooth rod action. Good rod design takes advantage of and compensates for these effects.
L. Kenney fiberglass rods are built with lightweight internal (spigot) ferrules. I’m convinced that this ferrule design, rather than the more common tip-over-butt versions, makes for a better balanced, smoother-casting rod. Rather than having a significant disparity in diameter on either side of the ferrule, internal ferrules provide continuity of diameter across rod sections.
My current models are also all of 3-piece configuration. Why? Fine 2-piece rods can certainly be made with a single center ferrule, as can multi-piece rods with three or four ferrules. My experience, however, is that well-designed 3-piece tubular rods, particularly in shorter light line lengths, effectively distribute the mass and stiffness of their two ferrules along the blank and actually help promote fast-damping tips and smooth casting loops. There’s no added mass in the middle of the rod, or well out from the grip, to slow down the tip or let it bounce at the end of a stroke. Neither is there, as with 4 piece rods, a stiffened section not far above the grip to complicate progressive flex. 3-piece rods also break down into sections short enough to transport easily.
Blank FinishL.Kenney fiberglass fly rod blanks are unsanded. That means the ridges from the shrink tape used to secure the fiberglass material on the mandrel while the blank is being oven-cured are still visible on the surface of the blank. This isn’t a cost-cutting measure. Any sanding runs the risk of removing material that shouldn’t be removed, and regardless of how I correct prepreg patterns for material removed by sanding, I simply don’t get the blank-to-blank consistency with sanded blanks that I require. With an unsanded blank, the material I design into the blank, stays in the blank. After curing and shrink tape removal, my blanks are coated with a durable, heat-cure epoxy paint in a coffee-with-cream in color. Call it “latte” if that makes you feel more contemporary. The result is a rod that’s conservative, unobtrusive, and attractive without being showy. For me, those are all good features.
Grips and Hardware
Grips are hand turned from individually glued, high quality cork rings to a rather flat Wells shape, in lengths and diameters that vary according to rod length. Bronze-brown anodized aluminum slide band or uplocking reel seats with cork spacers are light in weight and classic in appearance.
Tungsten carbide stripping guides and black nickel snake guides are wrapped with chestnut nylon thread, accented with modest tan spirals within the wraps at the top of the grip, at the ferrules and tip-top. I don’t have much use for hook-keepers, but I’ll put a strap and ring keeper on a rod if you really feel you need one. Wraps are coated with 4 coats of spar urethane to a smooth, translucent, glossy finish and are labeled above the grip with length, rod weight, line designation, my serial number and (if desired) owner’s name. Tip and mid sections also show the rod’s serial number. The look is clean and understated rather than showy.
Availability
I build a very limited number of rods to order each year. Delivery is generally within 60 days but can be substantially more or less depending on my schedule and order backlog.
L. Kenney Fly Rod ModelsModel 733 7’3” 3 piece. #3 line 2.0 oz.
A light, delicate, responsive little rod designed for small flies and accurate casts from a rod length away out to 35 feet or so, though it will cast longer if you must. Its medium-soft progressive action makes it a great choice for anglers who fish small streams. Fitted with my down-sliding cork spacer slide band reel seat. $550
Model 794 7’9” 3-piece #4 line 2.4 to 2.8 oz. depending on reel seat.
A supple, easy casting progressive action rod that I think hits a sweet-spot for fiberglass in both length and line weight. It’s long enough for medium size waters, short enough for smaller streams, delicate enough to handle light tippets, but with sufficient power to handle a #10 dry or a reasonably sized weighted nymph. Built with a down-sliding cork spacer slide band reel seat, or a cork spacer metal uplocking reel seat.
$560 with slide band seat. $575 with uplock.
Model 813 8’1” 3 pc #3 line 2.6 oz.
A very light, smooth, long 3 wgt., built at the urging of some friends at the Golden Gate Angling and Casting Club Soft and supple yet by no means a noodle, it can nonetheless achieve the line speeds needed for accurate, delicate presentations out to 45 feet or so. A killer rod for small dries and nymphs. Built only with my downlocking slide band reel seat. $580 Available after April 2010
Model 835 8’3” 3-piece DT4/WF5 3.0 to 3.25 oz, depending on reel seat.
This rod, which is about as long as I can build on my light line tapers, has become a favorite of mine. It’s a particularly pleasant, well-balanced, all-around trout rod for all but very large rivers that require deep wading, or where very large flies are necessary. Supple in the tip and mid for close-in casting and light tippet work, it has enough diameter and punch in the butt to reach out to 60 feet, turn over a wide range of fly sizes, and control larger trout. You can cast smooth open loops easily, or push the rod to tighten up without it becoming unstable. I fish it with a WF5F, but some good casters I know prefer a DT4 - choices that reflect casting style and the specific characteristics of the lines being cast as much as the rod itself. Built with either a cork spacer metal uplock reel seat or a down-sliding cork spacer slide band reel seat.
$580 with slide band seat: $595 with uplock
• All rods come with partitioned cloth liner and aluminum rod case.
• Add $20 for shipping in the Continental USA via USPS Priority Mail, insured, with delivery confirmation. Shipments to Alaska and Hawaii may be higher. Shipments outside the USA will be by USPS Priority International, with rates quoted on request.
Larry Kenney can be contacted at lmkenney@earthlink.net.
Monday, March 8, 2010
SLURP!
With temperatures supposed to be pushing into the 70's this week I'm ready for pushover bluegills looking up.
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