(Music playing)
I am now going to start a fishing session.
For at the DVD, we have learned about setting up our fishing station,
About baits,
About setting up whips,
And also about setting up float rods and feeder rods,
Now, it is time to have fun. We are going to start fishing. The first item that I am going to use is going to be a whip. So, here we have the whip, this is a four-meter whip—set-up with a ready made rig, a 0.5 gram float, 3 pound main line, going to a hook length of six inches with two pound line and a size 18 hook.
The shutting pattern is very light. We are going to use a bock star pattern with four #8’s and two #10’s droppers wrap by indication. Okay, let us go for it.
I am going to start up with maggot, and see if we can catch few small fish.
Okay, we have cast in. We started cutting the line. I just want to start off with a small ball of ground bait just to get the fish, to attract the fish into the swim. Then, I want to continually just throw three or four maggots over on top of my float every cast just to keep the fish interested and keep in feeding.
Just know this—feed in a little and often. You do need to feed small amounts but very often. If you feed too much, you are going to fill the fish up and they are going off the feed. The idea of little and often is to just keep the fish competing in the swim for your bait.
When the float is caught, and sure you are waiting now for that bite to happen.
You keep the feed going in, your are fine if you actually stop in feeding for fifteen minutes or so ten to fifteen minutes, so fish will actually dispersed again, and it will take you a few minutes to be able to get how the fish back in the feeding pattern so you will really need to hit that feed going into consistently all the time.
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