Getting My Feet Wet with Tenkara
Getting My Feet Wet with Tenkara
Notes on choosing a first tenkara rod for North Georgia backcountry fishing. Written for hunters, hikers, and anyone who's crossed a stream on a trail and thought "I wish I had a rod." Not written for fly fishing people — they already know this stuff.
Carrying a spinning rod into a trailhead is friction. You either plan a fishing trip or you don't fish. I wanted something that lived under the truck seat, was always there, and didn't require a decision to bring it.
A lot of bushcrafters end up here through catch and cook videos — wondering how to reliably put fish in the pan without a full fishing setup. A hand reel works and is worth starting with, but you'll consistently want just a bit more reach. Tenkara is just as portable and more capable: still no reel, still fits in a pocket, but enough rod and line to fish real water.
A rod, a line, a few flies. No reel. No running line. Cast by feel, land the fish by hand. Developed in Japan for mountain stream fishing — long rod, direct connection to the fly, designed for tight water.
Every spring I'm drawn out of the woods and toward the water. This year that meant finally solving the gear friction problem I'd been ignoring.
The specific draw: a quiet day on a mountain stream north of Atlanta with more deer and bears nearby than people. National Forests and WMAs north of the perimeter have good trout water. The Chattahoochee NRA corridor runs near home. Lake Allatoona has shoreline worth fishing. None of it requires a boat. Most of it doesn't require planning, if the rod is already in the truck.
Why not just upgrade the spinning setup
Still doing that too. An ultralight spinning rod handles dedicated trips, bigger water, and heavier lures. The spinning rod is for when you're going fishing. The tenkara rod is for when you're going somewhere else and fishing might happen.
How I chose the rod
Started with canoe versus kayak versus jon boat for Allatoona WMA access. Ended up at "just go bank fish." From there the question was: what rod lives in the truck and actually gets used.
Pocket rods (under 12 inches collapsed) were tempting for true daypack carry, but honest self-assessment said the "fishing a remote stream on a deer hunt" use case was aspirational. The more realistic pattern is the truck rod — pull up to the Hooch after work, grab the rod, go.
Tenkara USA makes well-regarded rods with a lifetime warranty. The Sato's longer lengths would have been the stronger call if the goal were purely bigger open water like Allatoona. The Rhodo is the better small stream specialist. Both are $250, and that's hard to justify before knowing if tenkara is going to stick.
| Rod | Collapsed | Lengths | Small Streams | Open Bank/Pond | Pack Carry |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dragontail Shadowfire 365 | ~25in | 12ft fixed | Too long | Good | Poor |
| Dragontail Kaida zx320 | ~19in | 9.4ft / 10.6ft | Good | Good | Good |
| Dragontail Mizuchi zx340 | 25.2in | 7.9ft / 9.6ft / 11ft | Best | Good | Adequate |
| Dragontail TinyTalon 245 | ~12in | 8ft fixed | Good | Limited | Best |
| Dragontail TalonMINI 310 | ~12in | 10ft fixed | Good | Good | Best |
| Tenkara USA Hane | 15in | 10'10" fixed | Good | Good | Excellent |
| Tenkara USA Rhodo | 21in | 8'10" / 9'9" / 10'6" | Excellent | Limited | Good |
| Tenkara USA Sato | 22¾in | 10'8" / 11'10" / 12'9" | Good | Best | Good |
Why the Mizuchi
Three lengths: 7.9ft for tight canopy, 9.6ft for mid-range, 11ft for open bank water. Co-designed with Tom Davis of Teton Tenkara specifically for small Appalachian-style streams — which is exactly what the WMA water north of Atlanta looks like. Collapses to 25.2 inches, fits under the seat of a Tacoma without planning for it. Came with a furled line kit, tippet, and three flies.
The Kaida was close. Carbon-glass hybrid construction is more forgiving in a pack. The Mizuchi's three lengths and 11ft ceiling gave it the edge for varied water.
Fly inventory
These flies were ordered before I decided to try tenkara — informed by general western fly fishing writing as a starting point for east coast catch and cook. They translate reasonably well to tenkara with some exceptions noted below.
| Fly | Size | Type | Tenkara Use | Best Conditions | Target |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Woolly Bugger - Olive | 10 | Wet | Dead drift or twitched in current seams. Primary workhorse. | Overcast, early morning | Trout, bass, panfish |
| Woolly Bugger - Black | 10 | Wet | Same as olive. Better in low light and stained water. | Dawn, dusk, cloudy | Trout, bass |
| Elk Hair Caddis - Olive | 14 | Dry | Float on surface. Minimal movement. | Rising fish, spring/fall hatches | Trout, redeye bass |
| Elk Hair Caddis - Cinnamon | 14 | Dry | Same as olive. Better match for late season caddis. | Late summer through fall | Trout, redeye bass |
| Adams Parachute | 14 | Dry | General attractor dry. Fish when nothing specific is hatching. | Calm mornings, visible rises | Trout |
| Pheasant Tail Nymph | 14 | Nymph | Dead drift subsurface. No beadhead, stays shallow. | Clear water, picky fish | Trout |
| BH Hare's Ear | 14 | Nymph | Dead drift near bottom. Beadhead sinks faster. Head of pools and current breaks. | Moving water, deeper pools | Trout, redeye bass |
| CDC Wickman's Fancy | 16 | Dry | Small and delicate. Low rod angle, gentle presentation. Slow flat water. | Clear calm water, selective fish | Trout |
| Adams - Bargain Bin | 14 | Dry | Same as Adams Parachute. Use these up first. | Rising fish | Trout |
What I'm adding next
Now that I'm thinking in tenkara terms and fishing North Georgia water specifically, these are on the short list. The kit kebari that came with the Mizuchi covers the immediate need — this is what comes after.
| Fly | Size | Type | Why | Target |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sakasa Kebari | 12 | Tenkara wet | The foundational tenkara fly. Reverse hackle pulses and breathes on the rod tip twitch. Works on everything. | Trout, panfish, bass |
| Takayama Sakasa Kebari | 12 | Tenkara wet | Traditional Japanese pattern, peacock herl body. One of the most referenced patterns in the US tenkara community. | Trout |
| Killer Bug | 14 | Tenkara nymph | Simple yarn body, no hackle. Fished dead drift subsurface. Embarrassingly effective. | Trout |
| Zebra Midge | 18-20 | Western nymph | Midges are year-round on Georgia tailwater and WMA streams. Covers picky fish when nothing else works. | Trout, bluegill |
| San Juan Worm (small) | 14-16 | Western nymph | Simple, effective, good for stocked trout. Easy first fish on a new rod. | Trout |
| Soft Hackle Partridge & Orange | 12-14 | Western wet | Bridges western and tenkara traditions. Fished with rod tip pulse it behaves like a kebari. | Trout, redeye bass, panfish |
If you fish North Georgia or similar southeast water and have flies that consistently produce — especially on shoal bass, redeye bass, or WMA trout streams — drop a comment. Always looking to refine the box.
For catfish specifically, tenkara isn't the tool. A hand reel with 50lb braid, a weight, and an octopus hook baited with something smelly is. Cheap, packable, and it works. Trotlines and jug fishing are a different conversation.
Rod arrives tomorrow. Field notes to follow.
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