fly rod

What would be a good beginner salt walter fly rod combination for under 200. I am looking to catch red fish and drum by means of shore fishing.

Sorry, I am not a salt water guy. You might post this also in the salt water section. However, I would keep asking around a bit and do some reading. I am guessing that a longer type rod --maybe a 10 footer would be beneficial and perhaps in the 8 wt. class --but again, I am only guessing. I would also be looking for an anodized reel – something that will hold up in the salt.

As for rod and reel combinations — maybe check Cabela’s for combinations. Probably better to buy seperately – looking perhaps at rods like Echo or Temple Forks.

Hope you get some better answers than I can offer.

Not to promote any particular company. But I know personally that the Cabelas Traditional 9’6" 4-piece 7wt Prestige plus combo is a great steelhead/bass rod.

$125

http://www.cabelas.com/cabelas/en/templates/product/standard-item.jsp?_DARGS=/cabelas/en/common/catalog/item-link.jsp_A&_DAV=MainCatcat20431-cat20457_TGP&id=0051121320539a&navCount=4&podId=0051121&parentId=cat20457&masterpathid=&navAction=push&catalogCode=9IS&rid=&parentType=index&indexId=cat20457&hasJS=true

Fender,

As noted above, if you check the big stores, Cabela’s, Bass Pro, etc., you can certainly buy a combo that will work well for you. Both sell sets that will fit your budget. You may find tht, if you go and talk with them, even a local fly shop may be able to put something together for you within your price range.

But you are going to have to decide first what weight rod you want. Depends a bit on what species you’d be fishing for and where you’d be using it.

Good Luck!

Buddy

The problem will not be the rod but finding a salt water rated fly reel that will fit into that price class with the rod included. I’d pay more and make sure that the reel has a durable drag and is hard annodized so that it will last more that a few trips.

It is a big mistake to think that a freshwater rod and reel combo will handle saltwater on a continued basis.

Redington Crosswater. $130 at Cabelas. The rod is good. The Crosswater Reel is made from the composite material and has a really good drag for the price. Its plenty good enough for bonito, barracuda we catch locally. I know people who have used it for salmon. It doesn’t look great but it will get the job done. Cabelas Three Forks reel appears to be the same reel with diffrent label. You can always upgrade the reel later.Or the Redington Red2.fly (included Red2.fly reel is same as Crosswater except with aluminum frame) or Red.X combos (Red2.fly rod with crosswater reel).

Also the Cabelas Traditional II with Three Forks or Redington Surge combo.

Scientific Anglers Saltwater Combo. usually around $110. Another composite reel with this package but not as robust as the Crosswater/Three Forks reel.

Or get a Temple Fork Outfitters Signature or Pro series rod, or St. Croix Rio Santo series rod and match with the reels described above.

If you want a better reel get a Pflueger Trion reel ($130 or less) and match with a 2pc Redington Crosswater rod ($70 or less) or other rod.

If you’re fishing for non-Louisiana reds you can go down to a 6 or 7 wt. Albrightflyfish.com still has great sales.
For larger reds you want at least an 8 probably a 9. Again Albright has GP rods for $60. They have matching 7/8 or 9/10 reels for about $80.
Number one rule is use one line weight heavier than the rod. Number two rule is have plenty of backing.

A little more;

I help out at a local fly shop and the Redington Crosswater reel has been very popular with folks getting started in the salt. I am not aware of a single dissatisfied customer, though many do later upgrade. We often pair these with a St Croix Triumph, TFO Signature, or Cortland GRX rod. Other popular reels have been the Orvis mid Arbor (equiv to Trion), Orvis Battenkil Barstock,and the recently discontinued Redington SLV.

I would recommend the Albright GP 90892 9 foot 8/9 weight rod for $44.95 and a Scientific Angler System 2 8/9 reel from Dick’s Sporting goods for $139. The combined total is around $200 and will be a very servicable outfit for what you’ll be doing.

Jim Smith

A 7 or 8 wt 9’ rod is sufficient for redfish and drum. A 9wt is overkill for all but 25lb plus redfish. The TFO rods are excellent but will not leave you any money left over for the reel. A decent saltwater reel will cost you around $150. Buy a cheap one now and you will be needing another in a few years. I have many saltwater reels under $200 that are used exclusively in salt any look brand new. Your best bet is to save up a bit more money and get something that will last you a lifetime.