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Red Devil
01-04-2010, 08:36 AM
Alright guys. Now that I am on the same hitch with someone I can fish with, I figured it's time for me to start getting my saltwater gear in line. What is a good length and action rod for trout? I've been strictly a bass fisherman all my life, so most of my rods are med/hvy. Also, what is a good gear ratio to fish with? Any help would be greatly appreciated.

SULPHITE
01-04-2010, 09:58 AM
trout rod = 6.5 to 7ft med light action with a fast tip... the action you need will vary for throwing top water or plastics...

fishmaster911
01-04-2010, 10:09 AM
All I fish with is 7ft med & med light for trout. 7ft med/heavy for reds!

Jordan
01-04-2010, 10:09 AM
7.1 ratio curado 200e7

Montauk17
01-04-2010, 03:53 PM
Any good name brand rod with a medium action is a good all around trout/redfish rod. Most people prefer a medium light or even light action rod for trout. For the reel,you can't go wrong with any shimano product.

outcast
01-04-2010, 08:07 PM
7' Okuma C3 medium light Spinninng Rod, Okuma Inspira 30 Spinning Reel.

fishmaster911
01-04-2010, 08:24 PM
7' Okuma C3 medium light Spinninng Rod, Okuma Inspira 30 Spinning Reel.

i love my Inspira 30 Spinning Reel, i have a new Okuma Trio 30 Spinning Reel on the way!

fishinpox
01-04-2010, 08:37 PM
falcon cenderi ti 7ft light with a shimano chronarch or curado for jig rod

st.croix tourney ledgend 7ft med. with a chronarch or curado for topwater, jerkbaits,

fritz20
01-04-2010, 09:19 PM
Same setup as pox for jigs (with Curado 200E7)
7ft medium "Cajun Limb" feels like fast action for jerks, tops etc... w/curado 200E7
7'2" Shimano Crucial medium spinning with Shimano Saros 3000 for popping cork

All of my bass stuff is 7ft medium heavy or heavy / fast or extra fast. I use 20lb powerpro for salt and 50lb for bass.

LaAngler
01-05-2010, 12:17 AM
Alright guys. Now that I am on the same hitch with someone I can fish with, I figured it's time for me to start getting my saltwater gear in line. What is a good length and action rod for trout? I've been strictly a bass fisherman all my life, so most of my rods are med/hvy. Also, what is a good gear ratio to fish with? Any help would be greatly appreciated.


i tell you what man if your looking to budget it's hard to beat the 50 dollar all star and castaway medium light academy specials. put a shimano citica on it and go to town.

i have a couple all star 6'-5" wader specials that are a light sensitive little stick for 49 bucks.

i use a medium action for throwing plugs. medium light can do jigs and plugs

Gerald
01-05-2010, 12:49 AM
Alright guys. Now that I am on the same hitch with someone I can fish with, I figured it's time for me to start getting my saltwater gear in line. What is a good length and action rod for trout? I've been strictly a bass fisherman all my life, so most of my rods are med/hvy. Also, what is a good gear ratio to fish with? Any help would be greatly appreciated.

Any gear ratio of 5:1 or higher will do fine for saltwater fishing. I have the "green" Curado which has a 6.2:1 ratio.

For fishing line......most trout fishermen use a 12 mono [sometimes a little heavier] or some use 20 or 30 lb braided line. If you go with too heavy of a line.....you will not get as many "hits". Light line = more lure action.

Most of your "Bass" lures will catch Reds.....but the hooks need to be changed to something made for Saltwater so it will not rust after the first time you use the bait. Use a strong hook.......a big Red will staighten out most "Bass" hooks. Set the drag light helps.

Hier Soir
01-05-2010, 11:25 AM
i tell you what man if your looking to budget it's hard to beat the 50 dollar all star and castaway medium light academy specials. put a shimano citica on it and go to town.

i have a couple all star 6'-5" wader specials that are a light sensitive little stick for 49 bucks.

i use a medium action for throwing plugs. medium light can do jigs and plugs

Sums up the way I go also. Leave any heavy action stuff at home unless you like rippin' lips and loosing fish. Just make sure you take a good look at the eye placement of those "specials". They can look like the guy that put them on was smokin' some serious green leaf! I bought a 7' 6" Allstar and had to really search for one that had the eyes properly aligned. Looked at about 7 different rods before finding one with the eyes lined up. I prefer the Castaway 7' SLX 3 Series medium action matched with my Curado 201e7. This baby has survided some brutal fish and even been totally sumerged in Big Lake and has never given me an ounce of trouble. A durable combination with a great feel for those light bites you tend to get with larger trout or on those cold days when its like you're jig fishing for bass and the only indication of a fish on the end of your line is the movement going upstream. My rods all range in date from about 10 years old to 2 months old and my reels are all Shimano (mostly Curados) rangeing from about 15 years to 2 years old. You can get far better quality rods from a custom rod builder but will pay a good bit more also. I tend to budget more for my reels than I do the rods because if someone or something lands on one of my reels, I'm quite certain it will survive better than the rod. I'm sure they are really nice by all the testamonies on this site, but a little out of my reach for right now. If you can afford a custom rod, stick with someone like BillyStik. This guy has offered to go beyond what is needed to get your business. Obama's change and life's unexpected surprises keep me away from the customs so I make do with what I can afford.

Gerald
01-05-2010, 12:45 PM
Red Devil........another tip. When catching Specked Trout, forget Bass style "set the hook" jurk on the rod. This will just pull the hook out of the fishes mouth.

There was a thread on this subject a few months ago. Most Trout fishermen just reel up the slack fast and raise the rod tip to straight up.....not "jurk" the rod tip.

Salty
01-05-2010, 12:54 PM
Red Devil........another tip. When catching Specked Trout, forget Bass style "set the hook" jurk on the rod. This will just pull the hook out of the fishes mouth.

There was a thread on this subject a few months ago. Most Trout fishermen just reel up the slack fast and raise the rod tip to straight up.....not "jurk" the rod tip.

Unless you're fishing a jerkbait like a Bomber Long "A". With 9 hooks, you want to stick as many as possible because they will throw 'em.

fritz20
01-05-2010, 02:58 PM
Unless you're fishing a jerkbait like a Bomber Long "A". With 9 hooks, you want to stick as many as possible because they will throw 'em.
I agree with Salty on this one. I set the hook about 1/4 as hard as I do on bass, but I definitely set the hook. My light action rod absorbs a lot of the shock so the hook does not tear the fishes mouth. When fishing treble hook baits I tighten the line and put pressure on the fish.

"W"
01-05-2010, 03:01 PM
Red holla when you have nothing to do!!! Will go to Academy and hook you up under$300 with some good stuff

Salty
01-05-2010, 03:33 PM
Red holla when you have nothing to do!!! Will go to Academy and hook you up under$300 with some good stuff

Just give him the $300 and let him do it himself. :smokin:

Red Devil
01-05-2010, 03:36 PM
Red holla when you have nothing to do!!! Will go to Academy and hook you up under$300 with some good stuff
Cool deal guys. Thanks for the input. W, I'll let ya know.

fishinpox
01-05-2010, 05:42 PM
I agree with Salty on this one. I set the hook about 1/4 as hard as I do on bass, but I definitely set the hook. My light action rod absorbs a lot of the shock so the hook does not tear the fishes mouth. When fishing treble hook baits I tighten the line and put pressure on the fish.


why dont you tell us about your hook set that ended the cumaras life.....on a 3/4b white trout *****!!!!

that is an understatement!! i have never seen you catch a trout that hasnt suffered for sever neck and lip trauma!!!!!!!:rotfl::rotfl::rotfl:

fritz20
01-05-2010, 06:20 PM
:grinpimp::grinpimp::grinpimp::grinpimp::grinpimp: