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duncan

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Posts posted by duncan

  1. Nice fish and picture Kam.

     

    Forget the comparison with JIMBOB, looking at the picture in detail I surmise that you landed this on a spinning rod with a light fixed spool reel, thin nylon snood to at best a medium wire hook. That is a great angling feat for any conger!

     

    Hope to see you Sunday

  2. a good handheld will get the coastguard in the club waters up to around 15 miles off - but that's more money than a fixed unit I am afraid. It won't keep you in contact with other club boats over the same range though.

    I regularily see SH units around 50 - 70 but again the gap to new isn't much sad.gif

    I know it's easy to say but a radio is pretty valuable out there - even more so with the club being as active as it is 'cos youmight even get to hear about some fish when you're blanking rolleyes.gif

  3. come on Paul - make a real game of it and fish flounder rod and reel with a mullet trace and 6 squid in 90ft of water...................[smile]

     

    seriously the more I think about it the more sensible the split between prizes and pool comp basis seems

     

    I make no bones about it I am only there for the beer - the 48hr specimin hunt is best (fairest) comp for small boats as far as I can see - but it will be nice to see some decent fish weighed in next Sunday.

     

    Where did the decision on 'sharks' get too?

  4. well Billy I have been advised that there is an excellent run of Marlin and Sailfish currently so the best thing I can do is troll large surface lures around Poole Bay at 8knots wink.gif

     

    alternatively if you just want the kudos of winning the competition then the winning specimen is likely to come from

    (1) red mullet

    (2) pouting

    (3) doggy

    (4) whiting

    (5) wrasse

    (6) bass

     

    with a ray being an outsider but not to be ignored!

     

    otherwise just enjoy the day fishing for cod..........and taking what comes

     

    the pool, being for the largest fish rather than specimen as I now understand it (?) , should be snaffled by a conger (round) and a turbot/brill/plaice (flat) - if the sea is dead calm - or flounder ('cos so many will be fishing for them) if not.

     

    All very boring and predictable really............ rolleyes.gif

  5. Adam - Xray is interesting, and the scale of the ground features not disimilar to 'the gully' (not the Ledge one - the other one). Key message being that big features don't always mean fish holding. The specific nature of the ground and the surrounding terrain seem to have a big impact as, for inshore marks must the currents (I suspect xray may be a current thing given it's position......?).

    Good examples of that are small features in otherwise (large) flat areas.

    Next time I am over that way I will run some patterns.

     

  6. Charlie - I think you will find that below 10hp and/or a certain design speed you don't need qualifications on the continent - but there are variations in different countries as you would expect!

     

    I will be honest and say that I don't support the general premise that everyone should be qualified to a certain level who takes a craft out on the water - basically because with a modicum of education you can get out and start experiencing and really learning but people capable of passing their Yachtmaster Exam can't know it all and will still be learning. IN other words you are never 'fully qualified' but can be extremely quickly 'basically safe'. IN this I accept that we might be agreeing when we bottom out 'modicum of education'.

     

    Taking a boat out is a state of mind (not ZEN!) around consideration of various factors.

  7. I know it can't be that easy - but have you tried putting them into fresh water? I am sure someone somewhere told me they simple abandon home. You only need to pop a few at a time to a bucket of freash as you require them too so you don't end up with a bucket of homeless hermits doing battle!

  8. OK first - I think you will find that the NS is the constant relationship between degrees and minutes with Nautical miles. For EW as you approach the poles each Degree will represent a decreased distance............any chart will give you the relationship at our Lattitude (but I don't have one here at work!)

    With the increasingly hightech equipement we all seem to be carrying the actual interpretation of the image is rather critical first step to where to fish, how, when and then moving on to where you what to position the boat and finallly where the anchor needs to hit the dirt! This makes fishing and anchoring a wreck seem easy (as it has less steps!).

    I will look further into the colours for you too Bob. I will let you know more about that area to the left of the origional picture on the evening of the 28th 'cos that's where I plan to fish ph34r.gif (weather permitting!)

     

    Is there a non secret relatively small feature near Poole Harbour entrance that members would like 'sonar mapped' for more detailed discussion? Lobster Rock for example or the area at the end of Christchurch Ledge (bit big really)?

  9. seems reasonable Bob - gives that pinacle / bank a base of around 25ft and therefore a seriously steep slope!

    As suggested by Martin this particular bit would probably fish better by drifting for fish holed up in the shelter than any expectation of bottom feeders 'hanging' to it? Looking at it this way I would look to put my baits further left.

    On the ebb however I would have thought the flat area (to the right on screen) a reasonable holding / feeding ground.

     

    The calculation you refer to can of course enable the calculation of where to have the anchor to get the boat where you want the bait.......... something the professionals seems to know instinctively but always seems to much hassle for the occassional to bother with!

  10. no waves - we ran back in at 30 plus knots!

     

    colours are Lowrance standards so the info from the sea angler articles on the LCX range will be relevant (LCX used for data) but I can up or down the colour map so without a reference.

     

    here is the same sample but in the origional colour format as best I can - had to use a .jpg sample so it's a bit bigger.

     

    Also havew give a couple of reference points for those that want (can) work out the scale - ie how wide is that pinacle - 10 ft or 100ft!

     

    post-3-1100731152.jpg

  11. Adam,

    Firstly I don't have a colour sounder! My B&W sounder enables me to record the actual input sonar data, combined with the GPS data, and Lowrance provide a software program to view this.

    That application works just like the unit settings, even down to sensitivity and surface clutter, but is being driven by a 3Ghz PC and displayed on a 42" plasma screen (or at high res).

    This particular image is a screen grap to paint then convert to gif (small file) for display on the site.

    Charlie has the same capability I believe.

    Because of the way it works you can actually import the file into a spreadsheet application and, if you have enough data, it will spit out a 3d map of the bottom - haven't done this though.

    Re ground - as Billy hints you need to know the boat speed to really understand what's being shown on the screen - Christchurch ledge at 40knots shows as a pinacle! We all get to relate this on our own unit.

    I am in Edinburgh right now but will give some positions from which distance can be calculated - for reference however the boat speed was 15knots on the button.

  12. yep that ties in - the 66ft above that pinacle was at high water Sunday last.

     

    it was here that we lost 6 fish to breaks on the Sunday of the coloured water, and Charlie had 7 conger, so maybe it's an opportunity for after dark some time?

     

    also a 15lb bass taken there at the same time - again those conditions were so different...............

     

    just thought it an interesting picture to discuss - the gully looks so boring relatively but...

  13. left/right - the boat is running along the line taken by the tide.

     

    having the exact position of everything available means that if you are any good you can actually position the boat very exactly relative to the features by working out the angles and back to where you want the anchor 'in' then add a bit uptide ('cos you can let out more easy enough).

     

    Fishing it on the flood (right to left on the screen) at anchor would make it interesting as you dropped the bait back - if you got it wrong it's just going to sit in the face of the bank sad.gif I presume.

     

    On the ebb would you try and fish the scour tight in to the face or ?

  14. ...my gratitude!

     

    OK you have seen these in mags - and it's always so much theory - so I thought you would all appreciate the option to show your skills.

    The following is a sonar image recorded running down the tide (West to East) across an area Charlie introduced me too as 'the banks'

     

    The overall depth is 83 feet and the highest 'pinacle' comes up a staggering 20ft as you can see.

     

    Now, where would you position the boat to fish, how and why?

     

    As I have pointed out before I am happy to run these over 'favorite spots' for club members if they wish, and I can direct you to the software that enables you to place your mouse cursor anywhere on the image to get the depth and exact position (lat/lon)............enjoy!

     

     

    post-3-1100637603.gif

  15. you are going to get one hell of a big knot using this with 50lb line! I find it excellent with light snoods and aberdeens but at 50lb I will be using the round turn &uni, and probably a heavier hook too. Alternatively the palomar.

  16. brilliant Bob - could spend hours looking at this one.

     

    seriously powerfull images that bring these knots to life - look forward to expanding to rigs but wonder if some of the plaice gear I have been hearing about might be too much!

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