Well, I went out this morning on the White. I was in the water by 9am. The water was low as I expected so I walked up stream just a little from where I parked. After a couple casts I landed one on an olive leech pattern. 2 more casts and I hooked another one. This one was real nice but I noticed that the water was on the rise and moving really fast. Needless to say I lost this one in the current. With the water now at my waist and still rising, I moved myself back about 10' and started again. 3 casts in and I hook another really nice fish. Needless to say to say with the water still rising and fast, he bolted toward the current then made a run straight at me, was in the air in a split second and spit the leech out of his mouth. After I pulled my line in and checked my streamer I had to move back even more and found myself right against the edge of the bank. I looked behind me and there is a big embankment a few feet back with trees, shrubs, etc…. literally no room at all and then I said to myself….. "WAIT A MINUTE!!! I HAVE A 2 HANDED ROD!!" So, I shrugged it off and went right back to fishing as if I had an empty 100' behind me. It was a great day. I spent a total of 6 hours in the water and loved every minute.
The main reason I stayed that long was that I wanted to practice on my casts since I'm still new to the switch rod. I changed out my scandi head and went with Rio Scandi Short Versi System that I ordered from Red's Fly Shop. I have a 7wt and ordered a 485gr head. I was concerned it would be a little heavy so I called the guys at Red's and they assured me it would be ok and said it all really depends on the individuals casting stroke. Since I'm still developing mine I decided to give it a shot. All I can say is that I should have picked this up from the beginning. It has a 23' Skagit style head that is looped to a 10' floating tip. I then put about 12' of 6lb Spider Wire Flouro to see how it would do. I bombed a few casts here and there but overall in the day, the head worked amazing. The guys at Red's also said that when they use this, they take off the 10' floating tip and put on a sinking Mow tip with about 4' of 12lb line (remember, they're in Washington state) and it responds as a Skagit head. Put the 10' floating tip back on and it lays out with scandi finesse. Kind of having your cake and eating it too.
Had a great day…. I learned a lot in my casting stroke, caught a few fish, lost a few that will always be "the big ones" to me and didn't freeze. I actually was quite comfortable.
Just wanted to share what seems to work and pass on the info that was shared with me.
Have a great weekend and happy fishing!