Fedstar
Active member
- Joined
- Jun 26, 2022
- Messages
- 89
- Reaction score
- 286
- Points
- 53
- Location
- Belfast
- Favourite Fishing
- Shore
Barnacle i have sat in a small rowing boat 100yards out to sea in gin clear water watching flatties come off the bottom a good 8ft to chase my ragworm bait. The water column the fish feed in, for me, has a wide interpretation. Most days spinning for Pollock it's low an slow, other days though not as common your spinner has barely touch the water and you have a Pollock take it. On other occasions a strong actioned sink and draw is called for mid-water. Yet I would say Pollock are primarily bottom feeders.Be mindful that if you are fishing an elevated position a paternoster style rig maybe fishing more upright in which case the baits are not on the sea bed. That said its just something to bare in mind dependant on what your fishing for and where it feeds in the water column.
I get the impression that the general thinking is your gripper after the cast is pointed directly back at the angler, your line is taunt and arrow straight.
This is not the case, your gripper is pointing down tide your trace shockleader and some main line is bowed out downtide, nailed to the sea floor. This is true for me as with the small rowing boat I did do a lot of little experiments. I used a snorkel to see down and observe what way the terminal tackle lay.
But yes if your fishing vertical your trace may sit more upright but fish have a wider feeding zone vertically than you would be lead to believe.
Imagine a two hook trace bowed out on the seabed, the top hook will catch first and usually most not because it's higher (by all of three feet) but because the bow puts the top hook in the position we're the fish find it first. Does that make sense? Makes sense to me but you are not me lol
The truth is sometimes not what our monkey brains think it is, oh ha haha( monkey noises)
Mark ..
Last edited: