Most fly rod manufacturers these days offer lifetime warranties, and we say you should do whatever you can to take advantage of such generous offers. Paying repair fees is awesome, ruining your fishing day is super cool, and having to wait for your rod to be repaired is the most fun you’ll have this side of pouring sand down your throat!
If you want to break your fly rod, just pick any one of our 10 simple options, and you’ll have success in no time.
- Set it up inside, in a room with a ceiling fan. Ceiling fans love devouring the tips of fly rods, as do doors – especially doors that the wind blows shut as you’re walking through.
- Prop it in your open car door. Car doors, tailgates and trunk lids love crushing fly rods too. You might forget your rod’s propped there, or your buddy might not know your rod’s propped there, or that wind might flare up…
- Step over your rod tips on the way in and out of the boat. This is, by far, the most effective technique for rod breakage that’s employed at our lodges. It’s a numbers game – if all week you step over the tips of your rods while getting in and out of the boat, you’re giving yourself at least 100 chances to make a tiny little error in balance and break a few rods at a time. Awesome! If you sit on the bow of the boat and smoothly and easily rotate your legs over the gunwale, your hopes of mangling rod tips will be dashed.
- Don’t check your ferrules while fishing. Ferrules that are separated by even a quarter of an inch are much weaker than ferrules that are seated tight – if you want a great opportunity to destroy your fly rod, definitely don’t check to make sure that your ferrules are tight, at least a few times a day.
- Set on a big fish with your rod tip. The butt section of your fly rod is much stronger than the tip section. Setting the hook with the rod lifted high, with the butt at a 180 degree angle to the tip of your fly line (Bassmaster style!) exploits your rod’s weak tip section beautifully, and gives you a great chance at cracking one rod per hook set.
- Cast wildly with lead-eyed flies. Giant lead-eyed flies might not successfully destroy the tip of your rod the first or fifth time that they bounce off it, but rest assured that they’re doing invisible damage. One of these days, the damage caused by those repeated blows will win out, and the tip of your rod will go flying.
- Carry your rod through the bushes, tip first. Pointing your rod backwards when you’re bushwhacking is really boring – the strong part of your rod hangs up first, and you’ve got plenty of time to maneuver before the fragile tip section comes bouncing through. If you point your rod straight in front of you though, you’re forming a giant, weak spring, and the exploding tip of your rod will do a great job letting you know that it just got hung up on a tree branch.
- Lay your rod on the ground. If you’re taking a picture of your buddy’s fish, our answering nature’s call, or stopping for lunch, don’t prop your rod up on a stick or a rock where it’s easy to see. Just lay it down flat on the ground, where you or your buddy or your enemy can easily and unwittingly take one step and help ensure job security for the Sage repair department.
- Yank on your fly line when it’s caught in the tip top guide. This is yet another way to take advantage of the delicate tip of your fly rod. If you’re pulling line through the tip of your rod and a knot gets hung up on the tip top guide, just give it a hard yank! The thinnest, weakest part of your rod will double over and snap, and rod breakage victory will be yours.
- Flail the rod wildly when you’re hung up on a snag. The safe, easy way to get your fly off the snag (or break it off if it’s really buried), is to point your rod straight at the fly and pull the line with your stripping hand. That’s never going to break your rod though – to succeed here you should yank up, yank down, yank left and yank right until your rod gives up and you get to take the rest of the afternoon off.
Bjorn says
For as many rods as I've broken, you'd think I'd be able to check off all 10… but it turns out I have some favorites… 3 rods down from putting them on top of the car and driving off… yes, this seems pretty dumb… but that's only because it was… every time.
Deneki Outdoors says
Very nice – an effective technique to say the least.
Ian Scott says
Here's an idea – it's what our team did during competitions in regard to loose ferrules – and especially using long heavier rods that were 3 and 4 piece – use electrical tape around the ferrule. Especially helpful on the furthest ferrule away. Why the furthest? It's the hardest one to check. We'd usually keep one ferrule not taped, so we could take down the rod for quicker line changes and leader attachment.
On the longer heavier rods, a single wrap of electrical tape around the joint did not affect performance of the rod whatsoever. Not sure about lighter, shorter rods.
Ken Morrow says
great post, guys! someday, we should all put our heads together and compile "the fly fisherman's exhaustive list of ways to break fly rods." but if anglers would simply learn to avoid the top 10, 90% of all rod breakage would be eliminated.
Deneki Outdoors says
Thanks Ken! Somehow learning the top 10 and ceasing those top 10 behaviors have been two different tasks for me…
Derry Ryan says
The best / worst case of rod breaking was when we were preparing to go out on a lake. There were 3 of us and all the fly rods were laying on the seats when one of the guys decided to load the 10 hp Honda onto the transom by getting into the boat and walking to the back to put on the motor. Alas he got half way down the 19′ boat and lost his balance and yes all 5 rods ended up in bits!! We had spare gear but it turned out to be a very quiet day on the water!
What we should have done was to turn the boat and have the transom on the shoreline for easy mounting of the engine
Expensive lessons learned
Andrew Wilson says
Just learnt lesson #9 today – there goes my 10wt for six months….
Oh yeah, cant forget #2 also – cost me my 8wt a couple of months ago
So down to my 9wt and 7wt. Hopefully i dont have to learn the others