Spey Rods on the Spokane
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Forum Post Guidelines: This Forum is rated “Family Friendly”. Civil discussions are encouraged and welcomed. Name calling, negative, harassing, or threatening comments will be removed and may result in suspension or IP Ban without notice. Please refer to the Terms of Service and Forum Guidelines post for more information. Thank you
- Lotech Joe
- Commodore
- Posts: 1139
- Joined: Sun Apr 29, 2007 6:19 am
- Location: Liberty Lake, Washington
Spey Rods on the Spokane
Anybody ever see anyone fishing spey rods of the Spokane River? I'm seriously thinking about getting one. If I can work myself into a descent cast with a spey, maybe I can reach some of the unreachable water. My wading ability has all but disappeared.
Where you go is less important than how you get there.
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Lotech Joe
Fish With A Friend
Lotech Joe
-
fish4brains
- Warrant Officer
- Posts: 184
- Joined: Tue May 22, 2007 6:42 pm
- Location: Post Falls, ID
RE:Spey Rods on the Spokane
If it is moving water you can spey fish it. I have some buddies who spey that river a lot with great success. They usually throw streamers on sink lines or soft hackles on floaters. Instead of a Spey why not a Switch Rod? I am thinking of adding a Switch to the group. TempleFork makes some nice ones for reasonable money. An 11' 6 or7wt would rule on all trout and some Steel around here. Plus you can overhand cast as well. And man can you throw some line with them. I threw one at the Orvis shop last fall and was tossing 120' with no problem. I doubt you have enough room for the back cast down there though. I could still Spey cast a good 80' with it even though I have no experience at the spey cast. Food for thought.
RE:Spey Rods on the Spokane
6 or 7 wt true spey rated rods will over power trout. Great for steelhead but overkill on trout. I have 4 switch rods (2 11' TFO's and 2 10'-6"Beulahs). The TFO's are true speys. The Beulahs are really just long AFTMA rated rods. If you understand that AFTMA rod/line ratings are based on a rod being 9' long. The Beulahs being 10'-6" rods are 18" longer than the AFTMA standard so they cast best up lined 2 wts. My 5/6 rod performs best with 7 wt lines & some 8's. My 7/8 rod performs best with 9's & 10's. My TFO 7 wt is a true spey and if I would want to overhead cast it it would cast best with an 11 wt line. My TFO 9 wt if overhead cast would cast best with a 13 wt.
I use my 5/6 Beulah to fish for cutties, pinks, and resident silvers in saltwater, and pinks in freshwater. It overpowers most trout and I only fish it for trout in large rivers.
I use my 7/8 Beulah for adult silvers, both in salt and fresh water, and for summer run steelhead in larger rivers.
My 7 wt TFO is my winter steelhead stick.
My 9 wt TFO is my river king rod.
I just swapped for a Sage 11' 6 wt switch rod. Haven't cast it yet, but It will probably get most of its use on summer steelhead in the smaller rivers. I'm currently mulling over getting a true trout spey. Probably a 4 wt, but I to be honest I need another spey rod like I need another hole in my head. I justify the purchases because I've had 2 rotator cuff surgeries and 2 hand casting is a LOT easier on the body than 1 hand casting is.
To get the best info on spey type rods you have a real gem over your way. Call Poppy at Red Shed Fly Shop over in Peck, ID.
He can answer all your questions and get you a set up that really works for what you want it to do.
I use my 5/6 Beulah to fish for cutties, pinks, and resident silvers in saltwater, and pinks in freshwater. It overpowers most trout and I only fish it for trout in large rivers.
I use my 7/8 Beulah for adult silvers, both in salt and fresh water, and for summer run steelhead in larger rivers.
My 7 wt TFO is my winter steelhead stick.
My 9 wt TFO is my river king rod.
I just swapped for a Sage 11' 6 wt switch rod. Haven't cast it yet, but It will probably get most of its use on summer steelhead in the smaller rivers. I'm currently mulling over getting a true trout spey. Probably a 4 wt, but I to be honest I need another spey rod like I need another hole in my head. I justify the purchases because I've had 2 rotator cuff surgeries and 2 hand casting is a LOT easier on the body than 1 hand casting is.
To get the best info on spey type rods you have a real gem over your way. Call Poppy at Red Shed Fly Shop over in Peck, ID.
He can answer all your questions and get you a set up that really works for what you want it to do.
Life's short - fish hard!