Fishing Equipment Tips
Fishing
Equipment - Anchor Pulley, Keep it Quiet
If you use an anchor pulley, you risk spooking the fish as most pulleys
eventually start to squeak. Try this alternative to a pulley:
Get a large
U-bolt, a few nuts and washers, and an old-style glass or porcelain
fencepost insulator.
Slip the insulator
on a U-bolt, drill a couple of holes to accommodate the bolt, and tighten
it to the mounting surface. The anchor rope will slide freely in the
insulator’s groove, and the anchor lowers and raises as effortlessly
as with a pulley, especially once the rope is wet.
Fishing
Equipment Tips – Cheap and easy depth finder
Using two felt-tipped markers (red and black) mark an anchor rope as
follows: A single red mark around the rope at five feet, a red and black
mark at 10 feet, a single red mark at 15 feet, two black marks at 20
feet, a single red and two black marks at 25 feet and three black marks
at 30. Use the color code red for every five feet and multiples of black
for 10 feet.
Fishing
Equipment – Netting baitfish
Increases the efficiency of your minnow scoop by putting a bend in it.
Just turn the wire handle down 90 degrees, then push the net back on
line. The forward-positioned net makes it much easier to trap a baitfish
against the inside of an open-top bucket.
Fishing
Equipment Tips– A Cheap Anchor For A Fishing Boat
For holding a good-sized boat over a rocky bottom, use a large swivel
snap to fasten four fee of heavy chain to a standard mushroom anchor.
You can get one from a junkyard. The chain boosts the anchor’s
weight and holding power, provides convenient handles for lowering and
raising, and gives extra leverage when an anchor jams in rocks or snags.
When he brings it aboard, he coils the heavy chain on a bed of old foam-rubber
pads so it doesn’t rattle around or dent his boat. In calm water,
he simply unsnaps the chain and uses the mushroom anchor by itself.