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Question:

Storing Fishing Rod In Car trunk.?

My mom has a 2002 Chevy Malibu, I wanted to get a Abu Garcia Silver Max baitcaster with a Berkley Lightning rod that was 6ft. My question is if I bend my rod a little to fit it into my car trunk wouldn't it break after a while? (I put it in the trunk to go fishing.) And how do you fit your 6'6 one piece poles in your car trunk if you don't have trunk or a SUV. Just a Mid Size care.

Answer:

Lie? I'd say nothing that shoots a projectile out is safe I have spent full weekends shooting bb guns. Here's a story :P Once we went to West Texas to my friend's dad's deer lease. While we were there, I unloaded my 3 bb guns (I was 15 or 16 at this time myself) and 2 of my guns had small scopes. -We shot frogs that whole weekend. Sniping was our main priority. But doing it ALL weekend, something bad was bound to happen. -Many times many many times a bb would bounce off a rock in shoot in our direction. The more times I pumped it, the closer the bb would get to coming directly back at us (when it did actually happen). -None of us got hit that weekend, but we got buzzed by some close shotsHonestly, try getting it with the promise you'd only shoot it under their supervision. Then work your way up to getting 5-10 minutes alone. They'll probably get tired of watching you shoot it all the time and leave you alone. Eventually, it'll be yours to roam free Worth a shot. Also, if you get hurt, do NOT tell them unless you need medical attention. You'll never see that gun again if they know, lol. If it's a small cut from it hitting you, grab a bandaid for the cut and a zipper for your mouth! :P
The gear you wear depends on the amount of protection you want. Helmets are the only thing made mandatory outside of the military, and that varies by state. Since I'm in the Army, I am required to wear at least a DOT approved helmet, full fingered gloves, over the ankle boots, long sleeved shirt, a reflective belt, and long pants. I actually wear a full face DOT/Snell approved helmet, motorcycle gloves with extra padding in the knuckles, a reflective vest, and a jacket with armored back , shoulder and elbow protection. I'm looking forward to getting some armored pants soon. The point here is to dress for the crash, not for the ride. Make yourself visible as well. No one is looking for a bike but a fluorescent, reflective vest will stick out no matter what. Check out the link below.
a good jacket and as far as boots go just make sure they cover your ankles so a 25 dollar pair from Walmart is better then tennis shoes ,insurance is a different story there are a lot of variables such as age of rider ,type of bike, speeding tickets accidents all come into account when getting insurance ,I pay $321.00 a year for full coverage on an 07 H-D Sportster
The first thing you need is respect for the machine! The rest should be a couple of hundred.
Honestly, I wouldn't recomend getting boots. They are helpful but really expensive. You will need these things if you don't have alot of money to spend: jeans, motorcycle jacket, helmet with eye protection in case a rock hits you, bike, gloves, if you are going somewhere far away a back pack,

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