Recently I have written about my current lineup of 4- & 6-weight rods and reels. I am equally smitten with my 5-weight rods, which have also changed quite a bit in the last year. 4- and 5-weight rods are the perfect fishing tools for my fishing, which is almost entirely made up of stream fishing for trout and lake fishing for panfish. Sure, I occasionally break out a 3-weight for those trout and panfish, and sometimes haul out a 6- or 7-weight for bass, but 99% of the time I use a 4- or 5-weight. Here are my fives:
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The Fives, from shortest to longest... |
I got this 6'6" Cortland FR-2000 glass 5-weight a few years ago, thinking that it would be perfect for stalking some of the small, overgrown local creeks, searching for carp and things like that. In the rare times I have done that, it has been perfect. It is also perfect for small brook trout creeks, too.
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Cortland 6'6" FR-2000 glass rod |
This 7' Phillipson Registered Epoxite 5-weight is as sweet as they come. It is one of the rare Phillipson rods made with a spigot ferrule. Did I mention that it is sweet?
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Phillipson Registered Epoxite |
I've got another Cortland FR-2000 glass 5-weight. This one is 7'6" in length. If you haven't tried any of these older Cortland rods, you really should. Much like Fenwicks, I have never cast one I didn't like. Their baby poop colored Pro-Crests were awfully nice, too, other than the color scheme...
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7'6" Cortland FR-2000 glass 5-weight |
If you read my previous post you would have seen my Scientific Angler System 4 rod, a 7'2" 4-weight. I also own their System 5 rod, which is a 7'7" 5-weight. Both of them are equally smooth and powerful.
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System 5 glass rod & bluegill |
My 8' 5-weight Sage SFL580 rod is also quite powerful. I can cast weighted Wooly Buggers with it all day long, which sounds like the makings of a great day, if you ask me!
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Sage 580SFL glass rod |
Another 8-footer is my old yellow Scott Pow-R Ply glass rod. I think I have written before that I wasn't sure about this rod when I first picked it up. It felt awkward and tip-heavy. Oh, and weird, too. But once I put a reel and line on it, it morphed from weird to luxurious! I don't know what happens exactly, but some kind of metamorphosis takes place. Then I take the reel off and it feels weird again. It's the weirdest thing, if you haven't already figured that out...
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Scott Pow-R Ply glass, surrounded by its friends. |
I got this 8' Winston 5/6-weight last year. It likes a 5-weight line the best, so it belongs in this post. Just like all my brown glass Winstons, it is silky smooth.
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Winston 8' 5/6wt glass |
I really wasn't looking for a graphite rod of any brand, but this Winston Pre-IM6 8-footer kind of fell into my lap. At first I had no plans to keep it, but it's too sweet to let go of. Besides, I am a Winston Man now. And Winston Men can't sell off their Winstons, can they?
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Winston Pre-IM6 Graphite |
Larry Kenney was one of the brain wizards in the Scott Rod Company back in the day. After his time at Scott, he started his own company, and builds high-end glass rods to his own specs. This 8'3" 5-weight is just as sweet as any of my Scott rods.
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Larry Kenney 8'3" 5-weight on a favorite stretch of water... |
I just got this beautiful 8'6" 5-weight from Bozeman Rod Company. As I wrote in my 4-weight post, Bozeman rods were made by Dusty Smith, who now sells his rods and blanks through his own company, the Livingston Rod Company. I wonder if there is also a Helena Rod Company and a Kalispell Rod Company...
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Bozeman 8'6" 5-weight |
Last but not least is my beloved Sage 586LL that I have owned for 20+ years. As smooth as graphite can be. It doesn't get as much use these days, but it has caught fish all over the USA. What a rod! |
Sage 586LL and a battered Mushroom & Swiss Bugger |
I don't have as many reels as I do rods, and I never will, because rods are just plain cooler than reels. But I do have a few, and here are my 5-weight reels:
First up is a Martin LM56. I had no idea about this reel, until I realized it has a cult following amongst fiberglass fans. Before that, the only Martin reels I had owned were a couple of the old tuna can models, the 61 and 63. This is just my opinion, but those old Martins might be the worst fly reels ever made. I love my LM56, though, which is known as a poor-man's Abel.
Next is my Ross Evolution #2, which purrs ever-so-smoothly. And last but not least is my Ross Cimarron #2. I am toying with the idea of adding another 5-weight reel to my reel bag. We will have to wait and see what happens I guess...
This is kind of fun, so I will probably write another post about my 3-weights in the near future. That will be short and sweet!