These fly rods party like it’s 1971
I skipped school on a May morning to fish with my uncle Jon and his bride. That was 1985. You might say they were a bad influence on a teenager, but if I had it to do over again, I’d skip my whole senior year and go steelhead fishing. Wouldn’t you?
I took two rods to the lake and when, at the end of the day, I put the gear away, I realized I had left the fly rod leaning against a tree. Someone else ended up with my 7-weight Wallace fiberglass and a Pflueger Medalist.
That Wallace rod was equal to or superior to the more popular Fenwicks of the day and looked like a Fenwick, except in a medium brown color.
That was 1985 and my next fly rod was a custom 5-weight graphite my uncle built. In the 1980s, graphite rods were lighter and a bit more responsive, but there were qualities glass rods had the graphite rods lacked.
Summers back
A couple of summers back, I floated the Williamson with Craig Schuhmann and our friend Larry Zeilstra. I brought a custom 5-weight McFarland fiberglass built by Uncle Jon. Before I had even wedged my knees into the casting brace of Craig Schumann’s sweet Clackacraft, he was ribbing me about bringing an “old” fiberglass rod on a serious big trout trip. I pointed out this fiberglass rod was more modern than his attitude as well as the graphite rod he was fishing; also, his boat was made out of fiberglass.
I try to keep a small stable of fly rods, seven or eight in rotation. If I’m not using a rod, I give it to a kid. Over the last couple of years, I’ve given half a dozen rods to teenagers. Fly rods don’t do anyone any good unless they are fishing.
Truth be told, I own two fiberglass fly rods. The other one is an 8-1/2-foot tobacco-brown Wright & McGill 3-A Champion I bummed off a friend for zero dollars. I gave the same amount of no money for the reel and bought a new Cortland floating line off eBay for $13. Thirteen bucks. That’s all the money I have into this rig. It parties like it’s 1971. Whenever a new acquaintance talks me into taking them fishing and they want to use one of my rods, they get the old-school glass. You want me to take you fishing? You want to use one of my thousand-dollar graphite rods because you’re too cheap to buy your own? Nope. You get the Wright & McGill treatment. You don’t even get to touch my Orvis magic wand Helios, the Cabela’s Rogue rod, or my custom-antlered mule deer Loomis IMX.
Using a 7-weight Wright & McGill, seven-year-old Little Smokey fishes a wet fly to small brook trout in the Cascades.
This Wright & McGill has bested a boatload of rainbows in the last few years in the hands of grandchildren and other mooches. I even fish it from time to time. It’s a pretty good rod, and rugged too.
Glass rods are heavier, which is not a disadvantage. My granddaughter who is 8-years-old has never complained, Grandpa, this rod is too heavy! The heft of a glass rod, along with its to-the-cork action, allows the angler to sense the weight of the line as it shoots through the guides. Weight and slower action tend to slow the casting stroke, which contributes to faster casting competency for a novice.
Advantage
Another advantage is the forgiving nature of glass. Opt for a glass rod when fishing still waters where trout will be girthier. With a fiberglass rod in hand, the rod absorbs hard strikes better than graphite, which translates to fewer fish lost to broken tippets.
Fiberglass is durable too, which means fewer broken tips. That’s why, if you want to use my tackle, you get to fish my $13 wonder.
What my collection lacks is a bamboo option. I have owned and fished bamboo and know what I’m missing. Fiberglass rods rival bamboo for liveliness, power, and balance in hand.
If I had it to do over again, I would not lean that Wallace against that fir tree. If you picked up a medium-brown 7-weight at Battleground Lake in the spring of ’85, you got a nice rod. I hope you fished it hard.
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