Hi AC,
many thanks for you efford.
I got many new informations about a fishing style I hadnot known before.
Think I try the Nottingham style on a small river next WE.
Thanks
Help!!!
- Tinca Tinca
- Grayling
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- Vole
- Rainbow Trout
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Re: Help!!!
That looks like the slip-cast (or whatever it's called) where the line-hand acts as a pulley, letting the line come off the side of the spool, as if it were a fixed-spool reel - good for a few casts, but , unless you've incorporated a swivel above the float, a bit of a kink-generator.
I'm not so sure the rod's that much of a tiddler-snatcher; that butt and lower middle don't look so much like Spanish Reed as one of the other canes, usually sold with the outer enamel scraped off - are those "power fibres" visible in the photo of the label, or just a digital artifact?
That long, spliced-in middle, split by the upper ferrule, was sometimes called "Thames action" in rod adverts of the day, if I recall aright; sometimes it was used to make reed-butted rods a bit less desperately tippy, but it was also used with stronger canes to give a sort of tip-to-middle action that would cope happily with chub and big (for the era) bream.
If my guess about the cane is correct, then it looks like a cousin to my "Rodrill", written-up here: viewtopic.php?f=308&t=7271&hilit=Rodrill - a rod that comes along when I feel "traddy" and carp are not too likely. The scraped-to-the-fibres effect (which I've never seen attempted with Spanish Reed) is clear on the close-up of the split butt-ring.
I'm not so sure the rod's that much of a tiddler-snatcher; that butt and lower middle don't look so much like Spanish Reed as one of the other canes, usually sold with the outer enamel scraped off - are those "power fibres" visible in the photo of the label, or just a digital artifact?
That long, spliced-in middle, split by the upper ferrule, was sometimes called "Thames action" in rod adverts of the day, if I recall aright; sometimes it was used to make reed-butted rods a bit less desperately tippy, but it was also used with stronger canes to give a sort of tip-to-middle action that would cope happily with chub and big (for the era) bream.
If my guess about the cane is correct, then it looks like a cousin to my "Rodrill", written-up here: viewtopic.php?f=308&t=7271&hilit=Rodrill - a rod that comes along when I feel "traddy" and carp are not too likely. The scraped-to-the-fibres effect (which I've never seen attempted with Spanish Reed) is clear on the close-up of the split butt-ring.
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- Tinca Tinca
- Grayling
- Posts: 719
- Joined: Wed Nov 20, 2013 7:56 pm
- 10
- Location: Aachen, Germany
Re: Help!!!
Hello,
I donot think its a spanish reed blank because my Martin James 12 ft Spanish reed rod is less heavy in weight than that Lee rod.
the "power fibres" are really there and I think it is Tonkin or an other cane,too.
The backbone of this rod is much harder than the Martin james match rod.
I thought its a cheap Avon rod in crabbtree style (Cane butt,Cane middle and split cane top)
If nobody has a catalogue of the 50s we will never exactly find out....
thanks
I donot think its a spanish reed blank because my Martin James 12 ft Spanish reed rod is less heavy in weight than that Lee rod.
the "power fibres" are really there and I think it is Tonkin or an other cane,too.
The backbone of this rod is much harder than the Martin james match rod.
I thought its a cheap Avon rod in crabbtree style (Cane butt,Cane middle and split cane top)
If nobody has a catalogue of the 50s we will never exactly find out....
thanks