Showing posts with label Line System. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Line System. Show all posts

Line Systems and Storage

I use all kinds of lines. Yes, I primarily use fluorocarbon level lines and most of my lines are clear however, some of my favorite tenkara lines are tapered nylon. Other great choices are furled lines and the first line I used to learn tenkara was a lite fly line cut to length. At one time or another, I've used just about all the line type available. As I develop further, the different types of tenkara that I do (keiryu and honryu tenkara) I tend to choose a couple of different line types for specific types of streams and rivers. Yes, primarily I use a #3.5 line, if I had to choose one, that would be it but over the years, I have developed a systematic approach toward crafting lines for my type of technique. 

Sunline, Fujino and Nissin make the lines I use. Seaguar makes the conventional tackle fluorocarbon line that I create my favorite lines from. Seaguar InvizX in 15lb is the equivalent size of a #3.5 tenkara line. I cut a piece to length and add in a stepped downsize of fluorocarbon and then a tippet ring to terminate my line. This system helps presentation by making a lighter end line that transfers the energy easier as it loses energy. It also helps with accuracy and is a smaller presentation to the target fish I am going for. Thats the basic concept of my favorite line. I might use a Nissin Oni in PINK with a clear fluorocarbon tip or a different type of fluorocarbon main line suggested to me such as Seaguar Tatsu by a suggestion from Dr. Worthing. 


In the past, I might have made a line before I went fishing but that is not the case now. I have a trio of rods that I use for ALL of my tenkara. Rod lengths from 3m to 5m divided by 50 cm lengths with overlap. With my line storage system, I can easily travel and be prepared for all of my tenkara.

I use a wooden spool in the bag I carry. I keep the spool in my bag to stow the line when I am hiking and or moving with the rod nested. I also use it for any rod that I am using at the time. The line storage system allows me to choose a type and length of line, my wooden spool lets me store it as I move to and from the stream.

This is the totality of my tenkara system. I do the homework, put it all together and take it on the road. It is much better than figuring it out each time I go fishing. I choose a rod first, line length second and away I go.

"Tenkara is a game and you play the game by the rules you decide. Eiji Yamakawa"

If I travel with a couple of rods, I take the line storage system with me to choose lines from. Again, the wooden spool is what I use for the days fishing.

In my fishing bag, I have a spare line stored on a card spool as a backup. Again this is a pre made line in the configuration above longer than any line I would use on stream. I choose a backup that long in case I am using a 4.5m rod or a 2.4m rod. I can cut this backup line to the length needed. All of my tenkara rods are based on the ability to cast a #3.5 level line so that back up line can be used for any of my tenkara rods.

The line storage boxes I use are inexpensive and available from general online retailers. I did not purchase them from a tenkara specific store. I use a hair tie to hold the lines on the spools and a black marker to designate the line type.

If you are still reading, below is a list of other line articles that I have written that might be interest for you.




A Well Balanced Tenkara System


As simple as my tenkara is, every aspect of what I do is well thought out. I don't carry much so everything I use has to work well. That is the reason for my minimalism which I really don't think of that way. I just use what works and works well. It works so well; I don't have any need for anything else. Using well designed equipment promotes skill. Depending on the way you look at it, skill and well-designed equipment can be a chicken before the egg moment.

"Am I good because I use good equipment or am I skilled because of good equipment?"

I think that depends on where you are at in your experience.

In the beginning we buy a lot of rods for many reasons. Because everyone else has one, it's a new rod, people say they are the best, because there is a lot of noise about them on your favorite social media forum. Definitely a new angler behavior that sometimes follows people through their fishing lives.

Expert tenkara anglers don't use a lot of rods. 

And the rod they have, they have a lot of experience with it.

Experience is what makes you good at fishing. It's not the rod, it is all those fish and the years of experience casting. An expert can use just about any rod to cast and catch. That skill is what makes them good. 

That skill was earned, it wasn't bought.

So use any rod you want. Go to a forum, ask everyone what rod is the best, pick out an answer you like and get busy using it. Have fun any way you want, it's your life and the time you spend should be the most valuable thing you possess.

At some point, you may start to think about what makes a good rod.

Experience is still the answer.

Popularity is not experience. Popularity is the last thing that I use to choose a rod and in this point in my experience, I have found that it is the WORST choice for me. Rod salesmen remind me of car sales people. They just want to sell you the car, blah blah bla....

I could go on about that but I want to get to the point of what I want to write about.

Several years ago, I used this idea to build my quiver.

Tenkara for me starts at the headwaters and covers the whole of stream and fishing all the way to the river. Small trout to large river born fish that have grown large and fight hard because they have lived their entire lives in the strong current. I want a small line up of rods that can cover everything from the headwater stream all the way to river. 

Genryu - Keiryu - Honryu.

I want one or maybe two rods for each of those disciplines. I might have a specialty rod or two extra. I don't have an exact number but let's say it is eight. Once I find a rod I like for that specialty, I won't get rid of it unless I find one that I like better but I have to get rid of the rod if I'm going to add a rod. I've made mistakes with this system by buying rods that were based on popularity and had to re-buy the rod that I replaced. I once bought a fantastic rod that I loved but had to get rid of it because the O-ring broke rendering the rod useless. This was one of the most expensive tenkara rods I have ever owned.

This system of building my quiver is based on my own experience and makes me really think about buying new, it places the emphasis on experience. It makes me think about why I want a rod before I bring one into my quiver.

In short, my favorite rods are the Suimu EX line, 400, 450 and 500. These are zoom rods, the 400 and 450 are triple zoom and the 500 is a double zoom. These are the rods that helped me understand what a good rod is at my experience level. Not many people have the experience in tenkara as I do. That's not bragging, it's just the truth. I'm speaking from experience, and I could care less about popularity. I am not a salesman, I bought these rods full price and I have no affiliation with Gamakatsu. I don't even care if you buy one or not, this is about my experience.

Your experience is what is most important. What you do, what you choose. Tenkara is not a competition.

The Suimu helped me understand why zoom rods are what they are and why they were designed the way they are. I owned the Suimu 500 for a few years and it alone could not make me understand why zoom rods exist. I added in the 400 and began to understand but once I owned all three, it hit me on the head and it became clear.

I could get rid of ALL of my rods and just use those three rods for all my tenkara. 

The Suimu helped me understand that Zoom rods are designed to be used at their shortest length. The longer lengths are for reach. A rod that is specifically designed for a certain (shortest) length should be cast that way most of the time. I often fish each of these rods without ever lengthening them. 

But that isn't always the case and that's the beauty of a finely designed Japanese tenkara rod.

Yesterday, I chose the 400 EX to fish a stream that had very large brown trout in it but most of the stream has small browns. In certain areas, the stream is tight but most of the stream is wide open. I chose the 400 because at it's shortest length, it is 300 centimeters or 3 meters, that's a short rod. I fished the stream mostly at it's longest length of 4 meters. That's a long rod. I did it opposite and that worked so well. It casts nicely at it's longest length but shines at it's shortest length. It will catch a 6" brown and put a bend in the tip but a 16" fish handles nicely on this rod as it is a progressively designed 6:4 - 7:3 rod. 

It is a specialty rod that has a wide range of uses.

And that is just one of the three rods in the system.

Now I have this rod(s) and am I going to cut a length of level line and go with that?

Hell no, I wouldn't dare shortchange this rod like that. A finely balanced system demands a line that will also do it all. Fishing that stream above, I chose a 3.7m mainline. That line is made with 15lb clear Seaguar InvizX with a 70cm clear #3 fluorocarbon tip. I use premium tippet and that line casts like a dream. It loads the rod nicely, it is clear for stealth, the tip is a finer diameter and keeps the kebari looser in the water but the balanced system is highly accurate and handles the wind well. At 4m stretched length, the line was just slightly longer than the rod, essentially a short line at length and longer than the rod at it's 3m length. It's a fantastic rod that is very specialized, yet it offers a broad range of stream widths and fish size.

This isn't even my favorite rod out of the three...

The Suimu 500 EX is and it is a monster big rod that can whip a large rainbow in strong current. I cast it at it's 4.2m length and it is super nice. I use lines from 5 - 10m on it that are properly designed for feel, accuracy and stealth.

The Suimu 450 is a light honryu rod or a big stream rod or a long reach rod and it too gets the balanced line approach.

Designing a line for your rod enhances it's usefulness. It takes that rod and creates a system tailored for your application.

Or you could buy a popular rod and cut a level line as long as the rod and off you go.

One is not better than the other.

Tenkara is about developing your fishing skill.

That's what it is all about.



FC Systems: Tenkara Level Line