Do you plan on using that 6wt for salmon? A 6 wt is a standard all around trout rod, or a good lightweight summerrun rod (I usually use a 7 wt for summerruns) but that's it. I've snapped a 7 wt on chums. I'd highly suggest if you plan on hitting silvers/chums, and especially kings to step up to an 8 or 9 wt. You can get by with that 6 wt, but since you're new to the game it's much better to have a little more leverage of a rod to play with. Plus the flies you'll be throwing will be a bear with a 6 wt. A size 1/0 or 2/0 on an 8 wt is hard enough, let alone a 6 wt. That's a good cuttie rod though.
You know, you don't have to go super technical like alot of these trout guys do. I'd suggest either one of two things. Either have a WF floating line on one spool and a spool with a sink tip, or if you only have one spool have a WF floating and buy a sinktip you can add buy just slipping onto the main flyline. I usually use a piece of 3-4 foot 12-15# maxima UG leader on my sinktip and a 6-9 foot leader of 8-15# test on my floating setups (depending on water clarity I'll even load lower on test if I'm hitting summerruns). Sometimes I'll even go up to #20 when I'm hitting kings.
There's a ton of options you can go. There's a ton of lines too. A good line is the Rio Versitip. Will help you on the learning curve if you can afford it. You can also go with the Cabela's multitip. That way you can have one flyreel instead of multi spools.
Any more questions email me.