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#1 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 186
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I have a zebco spincast rod that can pull a greased string out of a dead cat's ass. will that work on LJ yellows?
by the way, don't ask me how I know that ![]() ![]() ![]()
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#2 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2010
Posts: 736
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HAHAHAHAAHHAAHAHAHAHAHAHAAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA HAHA
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#3 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: newbury park ca
Posts: 2,323
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Quote:
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#4 |
Senior Member
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Chula Vista
Posts: 1,589
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You don't need every rod in the shop to get started LJ kayak fishing. But that said, a surface iron/bait stick combo is a tough thing to do. Surface iron rods don't tend to make very good bait sticks and vice versa. Most of the local surface iron sticks are 8-10 feet long with a slower action or are even parabolic. The terramars that the guys have mentioned would be good. And a Daiwa reel to go on it, you can't go wrong with a sealine 40 of 50. I like the 40 with the slower gear ratio. There is also the saltist reels too. As for bait sticks, I like a rod that is long enough to let you go around the bow of the yak. Any thing much longer than that just puts the leverage on the fish's side. 6-7 feet is good. As to a shimano rod like that I'm not too familiar. Fast action, graphite, maybe rated 20-40lbs. The best reason I can see to have seperate jig and bait sticks is you always want to have your surface iron rod ready. And if you're trolling a mackeral on it it's not ready. Some times the fish are only up for a few seconds or it's one fish tailing along. That jig stick needs to "locked and loaded" and where you can reach it. Mike
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