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A few years ago a very good friend of mine that is a cook on ocean boats bought me a 5.38 meter Shimano Telescopic Rod. This figures out to a little over 17.65 ft. He bought while his ship was in port in Japan. All the righting on it is in Japanese except the word Shimano. It is surprisingly light for its length, and it's a ball to fish with. It Also has a reel seat, although I have never put a reel on it. The tip section is very fast. Could this be a Match Fishing Rod? I I have tried researching this rod online but with no luck. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
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John...my limited experience has been with the 10, 12 and the 13 footers by B&M and Bass Pro. I like each of them for dropping baits on spawning gills or dock hugging crappies. But like David say, the longer poles tend to be unwieldy and can be tough to master, especially from the banks.
I also like the 13 ft Cabelas Crappie pole...about as long as I feel comfortable with. Abney has about 25 different poles from 10 to mostly 16 ft, utilizing the 10 and 12's most often for swamp work.
I use Black Widows for all my instructional/childrens classes on begining fishing classes at the local parks. Most of them are tens' and I restring them often. This year, I'm upping the lin to Magna Thin 10 lb mono in clear, so the kids can land the ocassional 3-4 pound bass they hook.
I am curious about wading a creek and using a pole of this nature to limit casting but don't know if it 'll work out .Everyone talks about using these in a boat or from the bank . I am conceiving wading a small stream and dapping in snags and pockets .How uncomfortably heavy and awkward that can be I don't know . If it telescopes I'm wondering if it could be effective while your constantly moving and working a stream and getting to pockets and spots you cant cast to.
John
Wading does work. I actually used a 5 and 9 foot pole in small streams ( first time this year) and either dapped flies or used very small hooks to bait fish. I would recommend a carbon fiber pole if your plan on fishing a 20 foot pole for any length of time since fiberglass is pretty heavy. You would be surprised at the reach of a standard 10 foot pole . Since you would be swinging out, you should average about a 18 foot radius. You can either line up or down depending on what you plan on catching. I'm pretty much standard on one lb test test with a dry fly between #12 - #16, nymphs between #20 - #26 and hooks between #8 - #32. I used size #20 -#32 for micro fishing.
Hope this helps
JDA
Thanks Joe ,for your input .
Ya know Dave I could mess with it from the bank but I was thinking wading shallow water and dapping in creeks. Now I'm thinking its too heavy a proposition carrying that length around while trying to silently wade a stream .
Thanks David .I wanted something long and light to dap not cast . I use the 8' flyrod on the stream in mind and it works well .Just thinking about a non casting long pole in certain areas .Appreciate your responses .
At that length it might be bolognese which is a longer rod "pole" used for fishing over the edge of drops - many times for moving water to hold back against the current. You can fish this the same as a cane pole with the small fish- hook them and then lift them to hand. When you hook something more substantial - it's game on with the super long rod and a reel - you have a bigger advantage on fish making a run - a massive sweeping radius.
Shimano manufactures on nearly all Continents and they had a great affordable take apart pole I was interested in. I have a 12 meter pole which is a ton of fun on catfish and carp it is a blast!
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