Bent butt game rod

Downriggershop

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Bent butt game rod specifications:

  • 2 piece
  • 5 feet 6 inches
  • Roller tip
  • Weight: 880 grams
  • Rated to 24kg

Delivery included in Australia


Collections: All products, Single rods and reels

Category: Game rod, Trolling

Type: Rods

One of the most underrated game fish in Australian waters has got to be the mako shark:

Andy with a mako shark putting the rod under heavy load

Here in Sydney we are very fortunate to have the underwater seamount Browns Mountain about twenty miles east, of the city. That pinnacle attracts huge numbers of gemfish which gather to spawn there, during the winter months:

Gemfish brought up on the downrigger shop bent butt at browns

The eggs produced drift south in the current, attracting mako sharks from maybe hundreds of kilometers away. That can be infuriating because it’s not uncommon to have a prime gemfish torn off the line or bitten in half, boatside:

Mako Sharks regularly hit deep water fish on their way to the surface

With the bag limit very restrictive at just two per angler it’s quite usual to have reached your legal catch limit by mid-morning. What’s a keen angler to do when your that far offshore but you can’t keep fishing for gemfish? Switch to mako sharks, of course.

Personally I find them a fantastic sport fish. The click-click-click of the ratchet as one picks up the bait and slowly moves off goes through you like a bristle brush through an old .303. Quickly get the angler into a rod bucket but, most importantly, turn on the camera and point the lens in the direction of the line:

Stronger tackle increases your odds when you hook the big one

As the rod man slides the drag up to strike most makos leap high, with three or more back flips. They then crash dive, at which point the ratchet screams like a banshee. If you can get all that on video you’ll have great memories for years to come.

 

I’ve been chasing them for forty years. Here’s a video from back in the 70s, a two hundred kilo specimen we took from a 16 foot Quintrex at Crescent Head. Don’t freak out when you see it get shot, at the end? That’s how we rolled, back then

The sharks are the same and they go just as hard today. One difference is that we now keep a mako each year for the table. If you cut the white tendon off the steaks they taste great. But the biggest difference is in the tackle. Because now we’ve switched to bent butt rods for sharking:

Strapped in and ready for game fish

What a joy bent butt rods are. It’s hard to describe the increase in comfort, on a long fight. For marlin, blue-fin tuna, sharks and other muscle machines getting the lever fulcrum lower and the reel at a more comfortable height makes an incredible difference. These guys do a pretty good explanation of their mechanical advantage, over straight rods:

Bent Butt vs Straight Butt Fishing Rods

From the Web:

My primary reason for the bent butt is high speed trolling. When the rod is placed in a conventional 30 degree rod-holder, the additional angle of the butt puts the rod near parallel with the boat gunwale, keeping the tip pointed at the lure. The position of the rod eliminates tip flex, and prevents “lure lash”, and subsequent “hook – line fouling”. The improved presentation of the lure directly results in more hook-ups.

They are also very good for deep dropping. A bent butt rod means your line is held well clear of the gunwale. We use ours for both game fishing and deep dropping and have caught some mighty fish with both options:

Diawa Tanacom ready for deep dropping

Andy with a Yellowfin Tuna brought in with the bent butt rod

We have two:

Two of the rods set up at downrigger shop and ready to go

The most popular being our 24 kilo 2-piece, with roller tip:

The roller tip is an excellent feature on the rod

I love the 2-piece setup with these because often the reel you are using – game reel, or electric – is pretty valuable. Not real big on leaving a reel that costs $700 or more out in the rod rack, to be blasted by sun and spray. So what I do is, separate the rod from the butt. The rod part goes in the boat’s side pocket. The butt, with reel attached, goes into the cabin or onto the console shelf, out of sun and spray. Much better way to go.

The Diawa Tanacom pairs so well with this rod, and can handle the heavy fish

Best of all these aren’t expensive. Would you believe $160 delivered in Australia? Sure, you could make your own bent butts like one of our clients. Note hose clamps:

One of our customers made his own Bent Butt rods

But if you’ve got an old TLD20, Penn International, Daiwa Sealine around, do yourself a favour and get the real thing:

A great looking set up offshore

Match one of these with your reel and you’ll see how much better it all works. Check this out. Crew member Oliver on a big Browns Mountain thresher shark, a couple of years ago. After a couple of hours we had to leave, so Oliver broke the line – over the rod! If that doesn’t prove how tough this stick is, nothing will.

 

You won’t be disappointed.

 

Thanks for reading,

Andrew Hestelow

Managing Director