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05-22-2011, 08:36 PM | #1 |
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Join Date: May 2009
Posts: 478
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Coffee Grinder for YT?
First of all, just let me tell you that I gave up on being cool in the 80s. Also keep in mind that this question is being asked by someone who knows with certainty that if a school of yellows boils more than 75 feet from my kayak (okay, maybe 100'), my current jigstick, in my hands, probably doesn't get the surface iron over the fish. So bring it on, you won't hurt my feelings. I'm comfortable with whatever lambasting I might get for even considering this, particularly if it results in me getting one of those boiling yellows.
Background: Grew up fishing spinners in freshwater and can cast those. Got into kayak fishing a couple of years ago and have pretty much figured out how to use the gear, with the exception surface iron casting. I have an 8' jigstick that is pretty heavy (no name brand) with a nice narrow saltist on it. When I try to get distance in a cast the result is mild to severe birds nesting, or no distance, sometimes both. I feel like the jigstick is not helping me much. Its heavy, doesn't load up. I hate stacking the line for the next cast. So I've been thinking about a new jigstick. I like the 8'0 and 8'6" shimano teramar cause they're really light which could help when casting sitting down. But I'm still concerned that I'll drop a couple hundred on a nice setup that I can't use well. Been looking at the youtube videos of kingfish fishing in Australia and NZ, and those dudes are using spinners, so..... I'm thinking that maybe I could pick up one of the newer heavy spinning outfits, (in the $150 range for a reel) load it with powerpro, and use that for the occasional surface casting. Hell, since I'm alienating myself from the traditionalists, maybe I'll even put a waxwing on it! So I have two options, A) Get a better jigstick with my current reel, suck it up and learn to use it. Risk screwing the pooch at the critical moment if I don't practice enough. Don't have a lot of time to practice. B) Get a heavy spinning outfit that I could toss a lot further and don't have to worry about stacking the line. What do you think? Also, for both options, what's the best setup for limited budget. Combo on the spinner? Any reasonably priced spinning reels that can stand up to saltwater on a kayak? etc etc. Thanks, Tom |
05-22-2011, 08:57 PM | #2 |
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Join Date: May 2010
Posts: 122
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LOL..... I have an 8 ft x80h terramar with a Cardiff 400a reel and I can cast that thing a country mile, love that poll! I have problems sometimes with my avet mc sx though. For whatever reason east coasters prefer spinning reels and we seam to prefer conventional but I do t really know why. I've also got a quantum cabo 80 real with a Boca rod ( rod is way to short) but I love the real. Casting is always consistant and the drag is unstoppable, with over forty pounds on tap. I love my avet but im don't think that drag on conventionals are as good as spinners....... Super smooth. At any rate I just recently happened to be in the right spot at te rigt time and destroyed a nice yellow on a coffe grinder and a waxwing! Those lures are pricey but they swim awesome and the double hooks are also awesome. Both hooks set and held firm through cutting bull kelp.
Final thoughts.. Fishing is supposed to be fun. If your spending all your time using gear that doesn't work for you than you just dont have as much fun and you lack confidence on the water. Those are the two most important things out there. Tackledirect had some good quantum cabo combo deals. I would suggest dropping down a couple sizes to what I have, many a sixty... Plenty enough for anything out there. |
05-22-2011, 09:01 PM | #3 |
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Join Date: May 2009
Posts: 478
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Yes, I know about your fish. I was out there too. Hence the post.... I went home wondering if I would have gotten it had I been in the same situation.
Congratulations by the way. That was a good one. Sashimi for dinner? |
05-22-2011, 09:02 PM | #4 |
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Join Date: May 2009
Posts: 478
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D50, what rod and reel models do you like?
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05-22-2011, 09:00 PM | #5 |
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Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: La Jolla Shores
Posts: 1,626
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I'm learning spinners right now along the Gulf states. They are big here. I'll be throwing top water plugs with spin reel and 8' stick at those yt off yak this summer.
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05-22-2011, 09:02 PM | #6 |
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Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: Wildomar, CA.
Posts: 294
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Tom,
Not sure what type of reel your are using now, but have you tried any of the Avet MC style reels or a Newell? I have an old Newell that I learned to cast on, and oh my the free spool on it (back in the '80s) was awesome and it still casts great almost 30 years later. I have also watched some of the current videos on the Avet and I'm impressed. Here is one of them: http://youtu.be/dmp0JdVDsRE |
05-22-2011, 09:09 PM | #7 |
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Join Date: May 2009
Posts: 478
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Avet had a casting demo at fred hall in LB, so I got to try their best reel on a nice rod, in a standing position so I could really lean into it. I didn't birds nest it and the distance wasn't bad. The problem was that with the the same setup sitting down I don't think it would have helped much. I think they're pretty pricey too.
Still could be an option with a different rod.... |
05-22-2011, 09:37 PM | #8 |
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Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: San Carlos
Posts: 202
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Tom,
I grew up with spinning reels too, and this whole conventional reel thing was new to me. One thing I learned, no matter how good the fisherman, they all get a birds nest once in a while. I was out yesterday, and I used for the first time my curado 300ej. its a bait caster, but the same concept, and cost a pretty penny. I have never casted a smoother set up in my life...but I still had a couple of birds nest. I had 100 ft of mono top shot, and almost every cast I casted into the braid (with a wax wing too). I have heard that the Talica IIs are amazing casters for a level drag. The one thing I would be concerned about is making sure you get an aluminum ( i think thats what they are making them out of) spinning rod if thats the way you go and you spool it with braided. And for the people that knock the wax wings, they are missing out. Those things swim like nothing else. Its amazing.
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if your brain had fists, you could only hurt yourself! |
05-22-2011, 10:35 PM | #9 |
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Join Date: May 2009
Posts: 478
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Hmm... Nobody said to get an Ulua yet...
Anybody going to try and talk me down? The other thing I'm wondering about is spectra cutting into the index finger on the cast. I have a little penn slammer setup that I cast in the kelp for calicos with 25 pound power pro and that stuff starts to cut into the fingers from casting. What about that? Go heavier, like 80 pound so its not so sharp? |
05-23-2011, 08:45 AM | #10 |
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Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Alhambra
Posts: 506
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my question is, will the braid start to twist up when you retrieve it onto a spinning reel? i know when i use fluorocarbon on my freshwater spinning reels it starts to twist up when i troll and also on the retrieve. just concerned that this would happen on the saltwater spinners.
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05-23-2011, 10:58 AM | #11 | |
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Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Bay Ho
Posts: 1,382
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Quote:
If the demo rod had a tennis ball, or something similar it will not give you an accurate example of its capability. You can fly a jig a good distance with one of these reels and the right rod. Maintenance of the bearings comes into play - but its easy service.
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05-23-2011, 11:45 AM | #12 |
Banned
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: on the road...
Posts: 598
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Good point Billy!
I can't imagine trying to fight a 30lb YT on a 9ft rod with heavy drag and not using "the rail"....talk about a back breaker!!! I'm sure with the right reel (expensive) you could stop and turn a local YT but the price, cost to service, and back-breaker fights are some neg's I can't really deal. For a cheap mag reel for spectra take a look at the Penn 525mag. It holds about 200yrds of #65 and is rated at around 12-14lbs of drag. Charkbait had some for 100 bucks a while back...good reel for the price and easy to service. |
05-23-2011, 11:54 AM | #13 |
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Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Waiting to launch
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Spinning
There is a video by" palm beach people" on here I believe. He pulls AJ's and sailfish with a Penn conquer. The saltwater experience guys use Quantum cabo pts reels exclusively and pull up big fish.
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05-23-2011, 03:44 PM | #14 | |
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Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Orange
Posts: 207
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Quote:
X3. Imagine you have a pig YT straight up and down and it decided to go home to the rocks or deep kelp, with spectra it would be like a bandsaw to your leg or yak. |
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05-22-2011, 09:34 PM | #15 |
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Join Date: May 2010
Posts: 1,155
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curious on the reply's too, i have been wanting to get a spinner for YT class fish and im leaning towards the diawa saltist 4500H.
the baitrunners & black bait n run also look interesting, it would be a nice option to have an adjustable free spool for live bait. dont laugh but i thinking of going to get a ugly stick custom USCS1170-M opinions of the combo? obviously im looking at the lower end reels $150-200 range dont mean to hijack your thread but this may help us both choosing the right size reel.
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Last edited by roadx; 05-22-2011 at 10:00 PM. |
05-23-2011, 10:43 AM | #16 | |
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Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Bay Ho
Posts: 1,382
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Quote:
The Cast itself is only as good as the experience and knowledge of the person operating the rod/reel. -Take a salty deckhand for instance, using a homemade wrapped 90J that sits on the deck of a sport boat 365 days a year. Nothing special, no special Fuji SIC guides. This equipment doesn't see a drop of fresh water unless it rains, but he can fire off a long cast every time. Its his technique, not necessarily the tools he is using. If I wanted to cast like a deckhand - I would ask a deckhand to teach me how use the long rod. Its an invaluable resource and its available to anyone who wants to walk down to a local sport boat and ask. -What's it gunna cost ? Lunch, maybe some beer money. These guys are the local experts on using the long rod. (The neurosurgeons of casting) You can become proficient with the right instruction. You have to decide if your ready to take your casting to the next level. This is my recommendation before spending anymore money on a New Jig Stick or crossing over into spinning reels just yet. ------------------------------------------ I started as an east coast guy with spinning reels with 12' surf rods, but we are Not surf fishing here. Case in point: I have a spinning outfit here and thought I would try it on the kayak for awhile because I wasn't good at casting a conventional reel. I thought it would work good enough to get by - until I hooked a yellowtail and got smoked on the set up. -The 7 ft. tiger ugly stick 20-50 was too parabolic to turn the fish - and I could not use "the rail" so to speak because the spinning Reel is on the bottom of the rod - unlike a conventional which sits above your legs/knees. You have to high stick the entire fight and its not easy. (Even a 100J was easier to deal with on a kayak because you can lay the rod down on "the rail" ) Casting a spinner does tear up your finger a bit, but can can tape it with rescue tape or 3m Vet Wrap and its helps. IMO there is not a good enough factory rod available yet where you can bolt up a Saltist spinner ($209), or Penn Battle ($109) but you can certainly have one wrapped if you want....... You need at least 8 ft. of rod to make this work. -Some time this year I will give this a try just for the fun of it. Build a 690J or a 270H with spinning guides as a project - --------------------------------------------- All in All - I am firm believer of the 10 ft. So Cal jig stick and conventional reel because I took the time to learn how to use one, but I learned to walk before I began to run. It was the Calstar 270H (an 8 ft. 15-40 glass rod) that I used to learn, and still enjoy fishing. -Aside from actual practice one on one with a person, there is very little information posted on video that can teach this. The bulk of the stuff available deals with Loooong Distance pendulum style casting more applicable to Surf Casting. Jim Sammons has a brief YouTube Vid that touches on some basic technique that carries over to longer rods as well. I agree with the principles and its a good starting point. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1s1Rwwcmkzc
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05-23-2011, 02:32 PM | #17 | ||
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Oh, Tom...
You'll shoot your eye out!
Short version: If you value your time and would like to know my honest opinion of using modern spinners for catching surface-iron Yellowtail---skip all the superfluous information I wrote below and simply read the last comments on both of these previous posts. . . . . . Quote:
. . . . . . Quote:
. . .Longer version: If somehow, someway, all the guys banging Yellowtail on a regular basis...using the rods and reels we use isn't motivating enough...blaze your own damn trail. And I mean that in all seriousness without one iota of a hidden slam directed at you. I fish with a Seeker Ulua because I absolutely love that rod. I fish with a Calstar 100J and 10' Super Seekers because I love them, too. I love fishing them when casting from the deck of a sportie and I love fishing with them sitting in a kayak as well. If you learn how to cast standing up on a sportie, dock, pier, football field etc, you'll typically lose about 10% of that distance casting while sitting down. Which isn't crap if you can cast a mile standing up! Now, which is often the case, with anyone enticed by fishing spinners from what I've seen---if you can't cast for $h!t with a conventional reel standing up---than forget about it, if and when you're trying to cast sitting down! These are simply the facts, but use that information however you like. The Yellowtail and I are stoked if you never take the time to learn how to cast properly (unless I'm spending eight hours spotting schools of fish for you ). Short casts with bait rods or giant backlashes using your $400 proper jig-stick, lead to one thing: more fish for me! So, obviously, you have two choices. One option is to learn how to cast and quit blaming the rod and reel your using (this advice is for the guys who already own the popular West Coast jig-sticks and proper reels: Calstar 90J, Calstar GG90J, Calstar 100J, Seeker Ulua 93H, Super Seeker bla bla bla, etc). That said, you'll have no idea of your true potential if you're trying to cast some, nonsense, 7' bait set-up; or nonsense 8' bait set-up for that matter! Some blanks are specifically designed for casting optimum distance; some clearly are not. Same for using properly sized reels, proper jigs---so on and so forth. All of which is completely, worthless, over priced crap if you don't ever practice casting in the first place, though. The other option is to buy "a higher end spinning reel and popping rod" (crazy $$$ from my research). I've been researching this for clients lately and have been grossly disappointed in the market as a whole. After putting guys on school after school of Yellowtail---only to watch these guys blow their shot at a trophy fish---over and over and over again---I'd be the last person on the planet right now telling you not to buy a freakin' spinner! From what I've seen there's a ridiculous gap in the market and I can't believe for the life of me why Calstar and Seeker (for example) haven't jumped on this. The same way you should be paying attention to the guys casting over one hundred yards, in the bow of a sport-boat, with the pre-mentioned jig-sticks---I looked to the Japanese guys using top of the line "popping rods" with spinners for my starting point in my research. These rods are sick, no doubt, but you could buy a brand new Hobie with less money than the rod and reel these guys use. I'm talking about one set-up! Almost all the blanks and rods designed for spinning tackle, that I've either found on the internet or that I could find locally---in my opinion, completely suck for catching Yellowtail. They're either a short rod with the proper rating (30-60 lb), or some terribly unbalanced surf-rod blank with complete junk components. From what I've seen locally and on the internet, going custom wrapped is pretty much your only option if you're interested in a quality product designed to handle the task at hand. A friend of mine recently showed me a 8' spinning set-up with spectra that cast a Tady 45 seventy yards with ease. After checking out the blank a little more closely---brand, line rating and such---while it could no doubt put that jig in the proper spot with ease---it would be no match for the local crop of fish. Kelp paddy, rat-yellows, is one thing; thirty pound class, pissed off fish in heavy structure is another! Why in the hell isn't there a Calstar 90J on the market with larger titanium guides and a reel seat, designed for modern day spinning tackle? I'm thinking something along the lines of a Calstar 690J, due to it's whippier tip, would be perfect for a West Coast spinner (I'm not a fan of this blank for a conventional reel jig-stick, though). The same question goes for Seeker? In my humble opinion, it makes no sense. The obvious answer using my limited education---would be lack of demand on the West Coast. Unfortunately, having a job that somewhat relies on a guy being able to cast when we get our shot---after trying to create that shot for ten hours, I'm all for guys buying a proper spinning set-up! As long as there's guys who can't cast, or simply can't cast when they actually come face to face with a full on 'foamer of feeding fish, or a Football field sized school of free-swimming fish---there's a time and place for having a nice spinning set-up if you asked me. Which is the reason why I'll be rockin' one here soon as well. While my time is incredibly inexpensive, it's valuable to me.
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