Popular Mechanics (South Africa)

TECHNOLOGI­CALLY AMAZING FLY ROD OF THE MONTH

This thing actually enhances your talent as an angler – whether you know what you’re fishing for or not.

- R12 000; R8 000; BY J ON GLUCK

IF YOU WANT to know what makes the Scott Meridian fly rod special, I can spell out all the science-y reasons. A good fly rod is light and strong and allows you to cast with just the right balance of power and finesse. In developing the Meridian’s state-of-the-art composite materials, Scott used a new process that creates bonds between each graphite fibre that are 20 per cent stronger than those found in traditiona­l rods. They pioneered a damping system that keeps vibrations from sapping energy from your cast without adding excess materials that up weight and compromise feel. The rod’s anodised aluminium surface is so hard, durable and corrosionr­esistant you might well hand the thing down to your grandkids’ grandkids. At the Internatio­nal Fly Tackle Dealer Show, the industry’s top trade event, the Meridian won both the best saltwater fly rod and best-of-show awards. Karl Andersen, buyer for the highend New York City fly shop The Urban Angler, calls it “the biggest rod breakthrou­gh in a decade”.

But what good is technology if it doesn’t allow you to do something amazing? To experience the awesome? To come away with a good braggy story? Last spring, I travelled to El Pescador Lodge on Ambergris Caye, in Belize, in an attempt to land my first permit. Among the most prized saltwater game species, Trachinotu­s falcatus are notoriousl­y finicky eaters and bruising kilo-for-kilo fighters. To land one, you’ve got to make a cast of maybe 20 metres or more (any closer and he’ll see you and take off), drop your fly within less than half a metre of the fish’s nose (any further and he won’t notice it) and then, if you’re lucky enough to get a strike, wrestle your prey to the boat as he tries to beeline it for the horizon. A permit of two or three kilos might run 100 metres before you can even begin to reel him in, then, just when you’ve brought him to within a few metres of the boat, run 100 metres more. Half-hour tussles are not uncommon.

Armed with a 9-weight Meridian outfitted with a Hatch 7 Plus Finatic large-arbor reel (a fine piece of machinery in its own right), I found myself in the middle of a good-size school of permit within the first hour of my first day. She cast like a dream; an impossible mix of howitzer and surgical instrument. A guy can spend days trying to hook a permit without any luck, but after just 25 casts or so, I managed to put a shot on the money, and – chomp, hook set, fish on. The ensuing fight lasted 20 minutes or so, but really, the poor little fella never had a chance. If he was the irresistib­le force, the Meridian was the immovable object.

Oh right, one more thing: between the time I began casting to the school in question and the time I hooked up, I thought I was fishing to an altogether different species called a bonefish. Although that is not an entirely unheard-of error, it is a mortifying one neverthele­ss. You know how they say it’s not the hammer, it’s the guy swinging it? That’s usually true.

PURIFIED WATER

Coal, active coal, particles, sand

Mist, pollen, hair

Yeast, blood cells, flour, bacteria, (0.4-0.1 micron) How t he membrane works The spiral membrane is constructe­d of one or more membrane envelopes wound around a perforated central tube. The permeate passes through the membrane into the envelope and spirals inward to the central tube for collection.

Brine seal

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