I was playing around with some reel seat inserts and engraved hardware today. Here are a few of them from left to right: Pink Ivory, Maple Burl, Curly Walnut, English Walnut, Curly Maple, and Madrone. The engraving work on the hardware is by John Hyde.
Tag Archives: bamboo rods
Building a Hollow-Built Bamboo Switch Rod – Chapter 1
I recently started on another Hollow-Built Bamboo Switch Rod. I though it would be fun to document my process along the way, so here are some early photos. First, the bamboo is selected and split. For this Switch Rod, four pieces of matching bamboo were used.

After heat treating, the bamboo strips are roughed out into a triangular shape on a Bellinger Beveler.

– The planed and hollowed bamboo strips are then glued together using Unibond 800 adhesive and a Bellinger Binder.
The thread holds the strips together under a constant tension until the glue cures.
Determining the line weight of a bamboo fly rod.
A good friend and fellow bamboo rod builder (Skip Hosfield) sent this to me. I’m not sure who developed this procedure so I can’t give him/her the credit they deserve…it works quite well.
1) Accurately measure the distance from the rod tip to the front of the cork grip (not the entire rod length). Divide that number by 10. Example: 96″/10=9.6
2) Clamp the rod grip to a table so that the rod is horizontal next to a wall. Mark the position of the tip of the rod on the wall. Put a paper clip through the top of a small plastic bag and hang the paper clip and bag to the tip of the rod. Slowly add small weights (coins, washers, nuts, etc.) to the bag until the tip flexes down exactly 1/10 of the measured rod length: Above example 9.6″.
3) Remove the plastic bag, paper clip, and the weights you’ve added and weight everything on a gram scale. Example: Paper clip, bag, and coins collectively weighed 20 grams.
4) Divide the measured weight by adjusted rod length to get a grams/length ratio. Match the ratio to the recommended line weight in the table below: Example 20 grams/9.6″=2.1. This rod is about a 5 wt. rod.
Ratio Recommended Line Weight
1.4 – 1.6 3
1.6 – 1.9 4
1.9 – 2.2 5
2.2 – 2.6 6
2.6 – 3.0 7
3.0 – 3.5 8
3.5 – 4.2 9
4.2 – 5.0 10
More Bamboo Switch Rod Casting
Mary Ann and I took one of my Bamboo Switch Rods out recently on the Metolius River and the Deschutes River, swinging for larger trout or steelhead. We experimented with several different leader set-ups and flies on a Snowbee 4/5 Switch Line. This 10′ 6″ 5 wt rod worked extremely well with AirFlo Intermediate and Super Fast Sinking (4.9 inches/sec) Polyleaders with unweighted or moderately weighted streamers and intruder-style flies. Though we didn’t hook up on any larger fish, we still have a great time. Here are a couple of photos:
Bamboo Rods on Bear Valley Creek in Idaho
Our summer season in Stanley, Idaho is nearing an end but we’ve still had a little time to get out and fish. Mary Ann and I hit a local spring creek, Bear Valley Creek, a few days ago. While you don’t normally get huge numbers of fish at Bear Valley, the ones you do get are often very nice. We picked up a few nice fish on hoppers, with small nymph droppers. Here is a shot of Bear Valley Creek, and two of the fish we caught.










