When you change technique you are readjusting your style anyway, I like to be in control much as possible so having a faster reel can do that much easier than a slower reel. Everyone is different, I don't have a problem slowing down a reel for a slower presentation but others might.
I'll have to check the replay on that, I want to watch the 2 minutes of romo crying on the turf
The Eagles game was horrible, merrill reese commentating was the only good part.
It's the wrong people that are in position of them. There's more people who own guns that use them for defense and hunting than there is for gun violence, if you look at the statistics for gun use you'll see much more good is done with protection than with associated violence.
A gun is just an instrument, school attacks are also done with knives, box cutters axes etc.
Many people forget or even know their was another mass school attack the same day sandy hook took place, it was in china and 36 people mostly children were stabbed.
It's not the instrument (gun) it's the person.
I have rods/reels for each side that are very similar for certain techniques. I generally use spinning on windier situations (doesn't backlash like a caster), lighter lure presentations (tiny jigs/small inline spinners), and when a presentation needs a natural fall
(tube/wacky)
Why would they? Learning is great if there's a purpose, where is the todays purpose in cursive? Writing checks isn't that important, besides that I can't see any reason the need why it has to be a requirement to know.
Rubbing two sticks together can create fire but how many learn that to use it over a lighter? Somethings just need to evolve
I'd look more into the:
683 for weightless senko and light lures
734 for jig/worm/spinnerbaits
And keep one of the 735C for the bigger stuff, it's more like a heavier jig rod and it excells at frogging
Stick to the lure rating on the rods for best results
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