"Sometimes, you just need to go downstairs and waggle a rod..." - Scott Hanson

"Write what you know. If you don't know, make it up..." - Scott Hanson

"A dude can't live on just two fly rods alone..." - Scott Hanson

Man, I have some deep thoughts...

Thursday, February 23, 2023

The Sixes - 2023 Style

As you can probably tell from my previous posts, a majority of my fishing is done with 4- and 5-weight rods. I haven't fished for muskies in about 15 years. I keep thinking I will head over to fish for lake run trout and salmon some Fall, but I haven't done that in about 15 years, either. I fish for carp about once a year, and smallmouth bass less than 5 times a year. 99% of my fishing is for trout and panfish, so therefore a vast majority of my rods are built for those fish. But I do occasionally have reason to fish a larger rod, so here is my small batch of sweet 6-weights.


When I first fell in love with fiberglass rods, the best way to do it was find some fairly inexpensive vintage rods, so that's what I did. And when you find vintage glass, it's almost always a 6-weight or higher. Back in the day, they didn't have time for light line weights. Or maybe they didn't have the technology to make light line rods. Whatever the case, almost all rods were 6- or 7-weights. Or bigger. 5-weights were rare, and 4-weights were almost unheard of. So, I acquired a bunch of 6-weights from various vintage manufacturers.



I have owned 6-weights from Wright & McGill, Phillipson, Fenwick, Garcia, Berkley, Cortland, Heddon, Shakespeare, and on and on. A lot of them were good, serviceable rods, and I have caught a lot of fish with them. But I moved most of them on, since I would rather fish with a 4- or 5-weight. But I still have a few, which get fished every once in a while. Here they are, from shortest to longest:

7'6" Vince Cummings River Rat. Vince Cummings rods are fairly rare, and seem to have a mystical aura about them. Not sure about all that, but the ones I have acquired are all wonderful casting tools. I owned two of these at one point, and sold the other one for probably way too little. Oh well. This one can throw a 6-weight line a mile. I love it.

7'6" Berkley Shadow S-Glass. One of the few glass rods that I have not owned or even waggled is a Berkley Stream Specialist, which is supposed to be one of the best glass rods ever manufactured. I am still looking for a Stream Specialist, but in my searches I came across this vintage S-Glass Berkley rod. Since the vaunted Stream Specialists were purportedly built out of S-Glass, this rod got me to wondering if maybe it was built on the same blank, only with less expensive accoutrements, like Berkley was known to do back in the day... Not sure, but this rod is sweet! Nice and crisp action, almost fast. I can boom casts all day long.


7'6" Scott PowR-Ply. This is a new acquisition for me. I have only had it out in the yard so far. Like all Scott glass rods, it's a bit tip-heavy in the hand, but it is so smooth when casting. It will be a perfect streamer, nymph, and all-around rod. 


7'9" Sage 679SFL. All Sage glass rods are on the fast side, and this is no exception. And it is nice and light in the hand. This is a perfect smallmouth rod. I can cast Clousers and Buggers all day with this thing. I think I should do that more often this summer...



8' Berkley Para-Metric. This is the glass rod I have had the longest. I got it as part of a lot of four or five glass rods on ebay when I was first getting interested in glass. It's the only one from that lot I still own. Most Para-Metrics have the famous Berkley sleeve/spigot ferrule. This one is just a normal spigot ferrule. It feels extremely light in the hand, and it casts beautifully. I still am not sure what Para-Metric really means, but this rod is great. It seems that most 8' Para-Metrics are designated as 7-weights, but this one has "Recommended Line No. 6" written on the blank. It's a beaut! And look at the original medallion, still intact!



8' Fenwick FF806-4. I love this rod! I have had a bunch of vintage pack rods over the years, and this is the only one I have kept. It is a wonderful rod; it can handle any size fly I might want to use during a day of trout or bass fishing; it has a nice crisp action that casts beautifully; and I have caught a ton of fish with it! It will never leave my side. I love it.


OK, that's all my 6-weight rods. My collection is kind of slim compared to my 4- and 5-weights, huh? Well, if you thought the rods were slim, you should see the reels! There are just three of them, and two of those are the same reel! I have two Martin MG-7s, and both are filled with some sort of SA WF lines. These reels are perfect for vintage glass. They hold lots of line, they are ventilated so they are pretty light as far as vintage reels go, but they are heavy enough to balance nicely on most rods. They are a perfect 6-weight reel, in my opinion. Along with those two Martins, I also have a Redington CD 5/6 reel, spooled with some sort of AirFlo 6-weight WF line. The Redington weighs a little more than the Martins, so it balances well on a couple of the heavier rods, namely the Scott PowR-Ply.



OK, that's it for 6-weights. Check back in a week or two to read my even-shorter write-up of my 3-weights.


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