Went out yesterday to find that all of the ponds I fish are totall frozen over, so I went to a couple trout honey holes I know of to get my fix. Just spooled up one of my smallie spinning setups with the above mentioned line, #6 mist green, and....
First of all, I'm hoping it's the cold weather, but it's one of the least manageable lines I've used, so not great for cold water. The line really coils off the spool so you can't leave any slack. I didn't mind too much because I've gotten good at either not leaving slack or keeping my left hand on the spool to prevent this, but if you're used to leaving slack sometimes or if you don't manually close the bail, I'd stay away from it in cold weather (I'm talking freezing temperatures).
That said, it is the most sensitive non-braid line I've ever used, and I can't wait to try it out in the spring. I was fishing gin-clear rivers for some finicky trout and ended up catching 13 (12 browns, one rainbow), 3 over 2 lbs - my PB trout fishing day for numbers + quality ;D. So it seems this line performs well in clear water situations.
It casts really well, as I was shooting a little 1/8 oz jighead with a PowerBait minnow as far as I wanted, and it seems very abrasion-resistant.
Do you guys know if the mist green is less soft than the clear line? Also, will the stiffness go away once it's warmer out? If the stiffness goes away, I may start straying far away from braid for most applications...I like this line a lot so far.
Last question, any ideas on how to get cell phone pics onto this site? I'm not sure if I can email from my phone...
Thanks
P.S. At one spot I was fishing alongside a couple flyfishermen who weren't having any luck, and I was just killing 'em with my little Powerbait minnow ;D The fish were ONLY biting the PowerBait minnow in 030 color - I tried a couple others with no luck. I could tell these trout fishermen were a little annoyed by a "bass guy" coming in, no waders, just casting from shore, pulling them out one after the other 8-)