Thanks for watching! Don't forget to check out flytyingyarn.com/ for your fly-tying material needs. In this video I was fishing a black stiff hackle fly with a Paprika yarn body.
I have the Tiny Ten and the Tiny Ten 2 eight footer. The five foot is definitely a niche rod and is marketed as such. For tiny overgrown creeks, it has been my favorite go to rod. It was designed pretty much exclusively for bow and arrow casts in tight cover. I keep it with me most of the time just in case. Leave no water unfished! Thanks again for another great video! Always the highlight of my Saturday morning!
Can we pause a minute to appreciate how amazing beavers are. I don't know of any other animal that purposefully builds things which alter the environment so drastically, besides humans of course. They are born to build, literally
You should see the overgrowth around some of the little streams in the Appalachian mountain ranges up and down the east coast. I fish a lot on the northern end in Maine and New Hampshire. We get more annual rainfall than in the west, and that leads to much more brush. It is mountain stream fishing without the space for tenkara. I love the Nissan pocket mini v3, but it's a 3 meter rod, although it collapses to the size of a large magic marker, and a little smaller than the Tiny-10. I have used a tanago rod (Shogetsu Pro-Marine--160 cm) on these streams here for up to 4 and 5 inch brookies, which the little rod can handle well, with a 7 ft line and 2 ft of 1 lb fluorocarbon tippet. In many of these streams, a 7-incher would be a monster, but unfortunately, I've never seen them. Last June, I spent a week at a fishing lodge near Rangeley, ME, where they had a 17-inch brookie mounted on the wall. One day a couple of fishermen came back with photos of a14-inch fish they caught, and everyone gathered around to look at them. The shorter (180-210 cm) lengths of the yellow Chinese rods fitted with a short cigar cork grip can be ideal in their length and flexibility. That's the difference between east coast blue-line mountain steams and those western mountain semi-desert, open air streams. That's why east coast fishermen spend time in other parts of the world looking for their biggest fish.
Yep. Down here on southern end of Appalachians Blue Lining can be challenging...rarely catch natives except bow and arrow style due to cover and open waters are usually stockies.
I love this tiny tools. The close contact fishing is what brought me to tenkara and i can use this short sticks even when fishing much bigger water like sea shore jetty.
Were you using beaded/nymphs here? What kind of presentation do you think is best for slack water like this? “Jigging” a bit? I did some tenkara fishing in the Appalachians for native brook trout and very successfully caught a bunch in shallow quick water. But I tried a brown trout stream I would normally use spinners in because they adhere mostly to deeper, stagnant pools... but I have yet to have much success in this specific scenario.
Love this rod not too stiff it's perfect for 8+ inch fish in my opinion. Tips are very delicate but that's part of the finesse game. I've got smallmouth bass and brook trout on mine so far.
I think it makes for a useful niche rod. Where I fish here in the east, many headwater brook trout streams feature lengthy (and almost impenetrable) laurel and rhododendron tunnels. I’ve used my Tiny Ten with some success on these small, brushy waters. But frustration is often only one cast away. It has improved my bow-and-arrow casting - but not to the point I have an “A game.” Thanks for another excellent video!
Hey Tristan! I’m about to get into Tenkara. What’s your current recommendation for a $100-$200 rod? I’ve been a mostly non-fisher and want a cost effective light setup to take backpacking and to local streams. I live on the Wasatch Front just north of Provo UT and I imagine fishing for trout exclusively. Considering a zoom rod w/different lengths since I’m not entirely sure of the different scenarios I’ll encounter locally. When backpacking, I’m very confident I’ll encounter open conditions.
Just got this rod and fishing in N GA small streams and doing pretty well so far. Are you still finding the length of level line and tippett combo still works? Thanks for all the great videos and reviews. This has become my new obsession after dropping out of regular fishing for over 10 years. I find I look for streams to get to with all my weekly travels and work. Thanks for the great ideas and tips.
Been having loads of fun with my Tiny Tenkara while fishing the tighter spots of a creek I often fish. Guess it is stiff for the smaller fish, ~4", as there have been a couple of times I did not feel the fish hit. Still having a blast "bushwhacking" into some narrower places and launching a bow & arrow cast.
Hi Tristan. I am looking to try tenkara. I have watched a few of your videos and need some advice. Want to know what you would recommend. Thinking of a dragontail rod but unsure of which model. Thinking around a 10 ft. . I know in some of your videos you like the 12 ft shadowfire. Think that might be a bit too long for me. Can you give me some recommendations? I am in NY
i looked at this rod and the wild water fly fishing 6ft tenkara rod and went with the 6ft. i feel like that extra foot makes all the difference while still having and extremely small profile
Hopefully you will see this post, have you ever fished or heard of Mores creek in Idaho, on gold rush they briefly showed that stream. It looks great to fish but......gold minners as you know don't give a damn about destroying a stream!! So what is your take on this!!
@@TenkaraAddict The reason I am asking about a rod that short is because i would normally use a very short rod, 7 ft or such when I fishing with regular fly rods. Anything longer is going to create problems with the over growth. I thought that the stiffness might give me better control of the standard size fish in this stream.
@ 4 minutes in the video you name a rod that you tell us to check out something I have no idea how to spell or pronounce to Siri lol a 180 something or other.
Thanks for watching! Don't forget to check out flytyingyarn.com/ for your fly-tying material needs. In this video I was fishing a black stiff hackle fly with a Paprika yarn body.
thank you your welcome
Pro tip:
Use furled line on the Tiny Ten. You can actually cast when you use it......sorta.
Wait! Do you have to be a pro to give pro tips?!
I have the Tiny Ten and the Tiny Ten 2 eight footer. The five foot is definitely a niche rod and is marketed as such. For tiny overgrown creeks, it has been my favorite go to rod. It was designed pretty much exclusively for bow and arrow casts in tight cover. I keep it with me most of the time just in case. Leave no water unfished! Thanks again for another great video! Always the highlight of my Saturday morning!
Can we pause a minute to appreciate how amazing beavers are. I don't know of any other animal that purposefully builds things which alter the environment so drastically, besides humans of course. They are born to build, literally
You should see the overgrowth around some of the little streams in the Appalachian mountain ranges up and down the east coast. I fish a lot on the northern end in Maine and New Hampshire. We get more annual rainfall than in the west, and that leads to much more brush. It is mountain stream fishing without the space for tenkara. I love the Nissan pocket mini v3, but it's a 3 meter rod, although it collapses to the size of a large magic marker, and a little smaller than the Tiny-10. I have used a tanago rod (Shogetsu Pro-Marine--160 cm) on these streams here for up to 4 and 5 inch brookies, which the little rod can handle well, with a 7 ft line and 2 ft of 1 lb fluorocarbon tippet. In many of these streams, a 7-incher would be a monster, but unfortunately, I've never seen them. Last June, I spent a week at a fishing lodge near Rangeley, ME, where they had a 17-inch brookie mounted on the wall. One day a couple of fishermen came back with photos of a14-inch fish they caught, and everyone gathered around to look at them. The shorter (180-210 cm) lengths of the yellow Chinese rods fitted with a short cigar cork grip can be ideal in their length and flexibility. That's the difference between east coast blue-line mountain steams and those western mountain semi-desert, open air streams. That's why east coast fishermen spend time in other parts of the world looking for their biggest fish.
Yep. Down here on southern end of Appalachians Blue Lining can be challenging...rarely catch natives except bow and arrow style due to cover and open waters are usually stockies.
Fun to watch. I've found that catching those micro trout are some of the most difficult. Really good training to detect strikes.
I've had great fun with this rod in dried rivers with ponds and 'creeks' still in them. It's a nice companion for niche moments.
I really like this rod. Like tenkara itself, it’s not good in all situations, but it’s great when you need it.
I love this tiny tools. The close contact fishing is what brought me to tenkara and i can use this short sticks even when fishing much bigger water like sea shore jetty.
Were you using beaded/nymphs here? What kind of presentation do you think is best for slack water like this? “Jigging” a bit? I did some tenkara fishing in the Appalachians for native brook trout and very successfully caught a bunch in shallow quick water. But I tried a brown trout stream I would normally use spinners in because they adhere mostly to deeper, stagnant pools... but I have yet to have much success in this specific scenario.
Spring aint sprung yet up yonder, eh?
Thanks for bringing us along...
Reminds me when I was a little guy we would tie a line on a stick of bamboo and fish for bluegill.
Love this rod not too stiff it's perfect for 8+ inch fish in my opinion. Tips are very delicate but that's part of the finesse game. I've got smallmouth bass and brook trout on mine so far.
I think it makes for a useful niche rod. Where I fish here in the east, many headwater brook trout streams feature lengthy (and almost impenetrable) laurel and rhododendron tunnels. I’ve used my Tiny Ten with some success on these small, brushy waters. But frustration is often only one cast away. It has improved my bow-and-arrow casting - but not to the point I have an “A game.” Thanks for another excellent video!
id be keen to see a Tenkara Rod buying guide that covers a few price ranges
Hey Tristan! I’m about to get into Tenkara. What’s your current recommendation for a $100-$200 rod? I’ve been a mostly non-fisher and want a cost effective light setup to take backpacking and to local streams. I live on the Wasatch Front just north of Provo UT and I imagine fishing for trout exclusively. Considering a zoom rod w/different lengths since I’m not entirely sure of the different scenarios I’ll encounter locally. When backpacking, I’m very confident I’ll encounter open conditions.
Just got this rod and fishing in N GA small streams and doing pretty well so far. Are you still finding the length of level line and tippett combo still works? Thanks for all the great videos and reviews. This has become my new obsession after dropping out of regular fishing for over 10 years. I find I look for streams to get to with all my weekly travels and work. Thanks for the great ideas and tips.
Jungle fishing. I am impressed you were able to fish there. The branches are brutal!
I have really enjoyed this little rod. I'm on my third tip however, it is really delicate.
I have a tiny ten and I find around 6ft of line with a 3ft tippet leader works really well.
Been having loads of fun with my Tiny Tenkara while fishing the tighter spots of a creek I often fish. Guess it is stiff for the smaller fish, ~4", as there have been a couple of times I did not feel the fish hit.
Still having a blast "bushwhacking" into some narrower places and launching a bow & arrow cast.
Hi Tristan. I am looking to try tenkara. I have watched a few of your videos and need some advice. Want to know what you would recommend. Thinking of a dragontail rod but unsure of which model. Thinking around a 10 ft. . I know in some of your videos you like the 12 ft shadowfire. Think that might be a bit too long for me. Can you give me some recommendations? I am in NY
Would you prefer the Tenkara Rod Co White Cloud or the Tiny Ten 2 for a first 8ft rod? Just a newbie Tenkara fisherman needing advice.
I carry one in the fame pack on my Cogburn fat-bike. I've caught lots of bluegill with it. No trout so far.
i looked at this rod and the wild water fly fishing 6ft tenkara rod and went with the 6ft. i feel like that extra foot makes all the difference while still having and extremely small profile
Another awesome video well done
Didn't do as well as last time, but still a cool spot to watch you fish.
Keiryu, Tenkara, Seiyru, crappie pole, and similar rods/fishing from other countries- rod, line, no reel, and catch fish. Easy😁
I got the Tiny Ten II based on this video...wanted something a bit longer than 5' for my children. It has a very nice cast.
Tenkara Addict is like the Bob Ross of fishing.
HaHaha!
yep.
So what is the advantage of tenkara over western fly fishing?
Hopefully you will see this post, have you ever fished or heard of Mores creek in Idaho, on gold rush they briefly showed that stream. It looks great to fish but......gold minners as you know don't give a damn about destroying a stream!! So what is your take on this!!
Tiny Tenkara Co has entered the chat 😤
Saturday again 😍🙌🙌🙌🙌🙏🙏🙏
Nice rod
Can you try out the tiny ten 2?
I have it. Haven't fished with it yet, though.
@@TenkaraAddict Nice. Are you going to make a video about it anytime soon?
My first tenkara rod 😁
Same bought mine a month ago and I get 2 fish every adventure
“Broom stick” haha
Do you think that this Tiny Ten Rod might be good for a small stream where the trout could be anywhere from 12 to 18 inches?
If no other rod length will work, sure. But my guess is that if the fish are that big, you could get away with a longer (and better) rod.
@@TenkaraAddict The reason I am asking about a rod that short is because i would normally use a very short rod, 7 ft or such when I fishing with regular fly rods. Anything longer is going to create problems with the over growth. I thought that the stiffness might give me better control of the standard size fish in this stream.
Just got it. 👍
Where can you get that rod
great vid
Tiny ghajini rod facing down?
Belarus president in hospital
what was the rod your using brand ect any info would be great
and length
Check the video description 👍
@@TenkaraAddict thanks
That is my only tenkara rod. A strange place to start I know.
😍😍😍😍
more like a cane pole than tenkara maybe?
That's what I was thinking...
Jeez the Tiny Ten is now $85
It’s $79 now
@ 4 minutes in the video you name a rod that you tell us to check out something I have no idea how to spell or pronounce to Siri lol a 180 something or other.
Boring...
Any chance of a link to the Tiny 10.... nothing coming up on Google search!
Google "tiny ten tenkara" 👍