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Looking to pick up a couple packable trout rods, without spending a bunch of money. Maybe 30-70$ per rod.Just want them for random pack trips, and to leave under the seat of the truck for some opportunistic fishing.Anyone have any recommendations for something that works well? In my head a 5 piece rod is better then a telescoping rod, but that's just a lightly educated guess
Quote from: syoungs on March 08, 2025, 09:37:40 PMLooking to pick up a couple packable trout rods, without spending a bunch of money. Maybe 30-70$ per rod.Just want them for random pack trips, and to leave under the seat of the truck for some opportunistic fishing.Anyone have any recommendations for something that works well? In my head a 5 piece rod is better then a telescoping rod, but that's just a lightly educated guessI've got an ugly stick gx2 that I always keep in my truck, just in case. Good rod.
Quote from: fowl smacker on March 09, 2025, 09:22:06 AMQuote from: syoungs on March 08, 2025, 09:37:40 PMLooking to pick up a couple packable trout rods, without spending a bunch of money. Maybe 30-70$ per rod.Just want them for random pack trips, and to leave under the seat of the truck for some opportunistic fishing.Anyone have any recommendations for something that works well? In my head a 5 piece rod is better then a telescoping rod, but that's just a lightly educated guessI've got an ugly stick gx2 that I always keep in my truck, just in case. Good rod.Do you have the 5' or one of the 2 6' versions?I was looking into that one, thinking I'd go with the 5' as it's a little lighter action.
A 4 or 5 piece rod is only marginally worse than a regular rod (many high end fly rods are 4 piece.)I have a couple cheap 6 foot 4 piece spinning rods that have been around long enough that the brand appears to be long gone so I don’t have a brand recommendation—but there’s a ton in your price range. My beater rod goes just about everywhere with a little box of buzz bombs and jigs. Always in my car, boat, or travel bag.I’m going to make the controversial claim that you use a cheap fiberglass 6 foot rod and whatever the cheapest spinning reel you can find spooled with 20 pound braid, and catch any sport fish in Washington relatively effectively. I’ve caught everything from perch on up to oversized lingcod and a few really nice kings. Once when I dropped a downrigger rod over the side and didn’t have a spare, I fished the travel rod for the rest of the day off the rigger. Ideal? No. Effective? At least moderately so. It’s always around, so it gets used a lot. And rods that get used a lot tend to catch a lot of fish for that reason alone.The cheap telescoping rods are more convenient (since they pack down smaller) and work fine for trout and other small stuff. Mine have always broken after a few uses and I’m sure they’d explode if you hooked into something big. Usually an eye falls off or they get jammed. They’re fine for what they are.If you can tolerate something slightly bigger than the telescoping rods, I would recommend a 4 or 5 piece rod rather than the telescoping rods.
I bought an Eagle Claw Trail Master from Cabelas last summer before my Alaska caribou trip. I used the rod quite a bit to catch Grayling. Awesome little rod. I want to say I paid $60 at Cabelas but amazon has it for $79https://www.amazon.com/Eagle-Claw-TMML70SF6-Trailmaster-Spin-Fly/dp/B003L45X68/ref=asc_df_B003L45X68?mcid=e63b0f95bac13f7da119376a4c25d5e2&hvocijid=4065059224649073777-B003L45X68-&hvexpln=73&tag=hyprod-20&linkCode=df0&hvadid=730434177080&hvpos=&hvnetw=g&hvrand=4065059224649073777&hvpone=&hvptwo=&hvqmt=&hvdev=c&hvdvcmdl=&hvlocint=&hvlocphy=9033663&hvtargid=pla-2281435177658&psc=1