12 May 2014, 21:48,
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RE: Sneak of the week
When I was a lad, old jim took me to Brecon .....fishing...... tickling .....first he cut a nut tree branch....the shape was a Y ......then by the riverbank led down .....put his arm in close under the bank....after few mins flicked out a trout onto the bank ....then fed the trout onto the nut stick through the gills out the mouth......go on have a go! .......when you feel one gentley stroke the belly .....then when its all calm flick it onto to bank.....down I go..........feeling under the bank....bloody hell jim I feel one.....shhhhhhhh he said ....ok when your ready son.......I flick it out......and shit myself .....its an eeeeeeeellllllllllllllll shouts jim laughing his head off......well done lad well done.
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12 May 2014, 22:34,
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Mortblanc
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RE: Sneak of the week
that is called noodling over here.
And our fish do seem to run on the large size, even freshwater.
https://www.google.com/search?q=noodling...38&bih=518
__________
Every person should view freedom of speech as an essential right.
Without it you can not tell who the idiots are.
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14 May 2014, 10:06,
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Lightspeed
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RE: Sneak of the week
(10 May 2014, 10:15)Tartar Horde Wrote: 12lb line might not be too heavy in the US Mort, but I can tell you for a fact that it is too heavy for our freshwater fish, no freshwater fisherman in the UK would consider using 12lb line for Roach, Perch, or Bream, such line is used for Pike etc. 12lb line would be considered too heavy for our freshwater species. Scythe the line will cut you if not respected, but it's just a matter of "watching" yourself and being careful.
TH as you said at the outset, its not about sport its about survival.... 8lb and 10lb line in freshwater works fine, and overcomes snags that would break lighter lines.
For more shy small fish, lighter leader to the hook is the way to go.
72 de
Lightspeed
26-SUKer-17
26-TM-580
STATUS: Bugged-In at the Bug-Out
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14 May 2014, 11:26,
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Tartar Horde
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RE: Sneak of the week
If I used 8-10lb line for Perch, Roach etc my catch rate would fall quite sharply as the line is too heavy, even if I use 3lb hook length. the heavier line is simply too visable in clearer waters. 8-10lbs line would be used for larger species like Carp, Tench and Bream. I sometimes fish with 3lb mainline and a 1lb hook length size 20-22. Using such fine line enables me to catch a lot of "whitebait" sized fish.
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15 May 2014, 15:26,
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Jace
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RE: Sneak of the week
Was out for a late night stroll last week and saw a bloke on the edge of our local river with some type of small net, basically just chucking it in water about 2 meters in, then hauling it out a few minutes later. I watched him for about 15 minutes, in which time he must've caught at least 20 fish. None of them was very big, but would have provided a meal for two for very little time or effort.
Meanwhile, a couple of hundred meters downstream, there were a couple of dozen anglers with all the rods, lights, bait, hooks etc that you could poke a stick at, yet none of them had caught anything in the hour or so that passed from when I first passed them.
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15 May 2014, 15:32,
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bigpaul
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RE: Sneak of the week
fishing with a road and line is very time consuming and many times you come away with nothing....and I'm talking from experience! if you want a feed your better off with a net or some form of trap.
Some people that prefer to be alone arent anti-social they just have no time for drama, stupidity and false people.
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18 May 2014, 04:49,
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Grumpy Grandpa
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RE: Sneak of the week
(12 May 2014, 22:34)Mortblanc Wrote: that is called noodling over here.
In Scotland (don't know about the rest of the UK,) we call it 'guddling'...
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18 May 2014, 17:38,
(This post was last modified: 18 May 2014, 17:43 by Mortblanc.)
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Mortblanc
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RE: Sneak of the week
(14 May 2014, 11:26)Tartar Horde Wrote: If I used 8-10lb line for Perch, Roach etc my catch rate would fall quite sharply as the line is too heavy, even if I use 3lb hook length. the heavier line is simply too visable in clearer waters. 8-10lbs line would be used for larger species like Carp, Tench and Bream. I sometimes fish with 3lb mainline and a 1lb hook length size 20-22. Using such fine line enables me to catch a lot of "whitebait" sized fish.
Does the fish know that strand is a fishing line?
Does he know you are at the other end?
If so, who told him?
I think you will find that the most important thing is using a hook baited with something he wants and of a size that will fit into his mouth with one gulp.
Small fish will nibble around what they can not swallow, leaving you a bare hook.
I normally use different rigs for different fish, based on what is legal in my area and what works for that species.
My favorite survival oriented fishing tool is the yo-yo reel.
http://www.cabelas.com/catalog/product.j...lsrc=aw.ds
http://www.speedhook.com/servlet/StoreFront
The yoyo reel combined with the speed hook is a deadly combination and is included in many of the special purpose survival kits for our military.
It also works as a snare for birds and small mammals.
__________
Every person should view freedom of speech as an essential right.
Without it you can not tell who the idiots are.
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18 May 2014, 21:13,
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CharlesHarris
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RE: Sneak of the week
The military speedhook is so effective, that it is illegal for sport fishing here, but I can tell you that with six feet of stainless steel leader and attached to to 20-lb. test braided nylon it works excellently on 10kg snapping turtles and large water moccasins! Just the thing for culling the undesirables from your pond!
73 de KE4SKY
In "Almost Heaven" West Virginia
USA
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18 May 2014, 21:17,
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Tartar Horde
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RE: Sneak of the week
Mort, the fish absolutely know what fishing line is, and that there is an association between that and getting caught.
The thing you need to appreciate is that nearly all our fish are thrown back and not eaten. Over the years they become accustomed to fishing and so become "hook shy" this is why I need to use fine line tactics to overcome their suspicions. If there are any Carp anglers on this forum they will confirm to you that fish do very much notice line, and certainly notice the angler if water conditions are clear enough.
The reason you stateside can use a more agrarian approach is that the first time a fish sees a hook in the US, is its last, they simply don't get used to being fished, and never live to learn from their mistake.
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