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waterfloating
One problem I have fishing from a personal watercraft is that some of the
energy intended to go into the cast is transferred instead to the craft ( make a casting motion right now and feel how your butt swivels and tries to rotate your chair to understand what I'm saying ) making my "longest" casts shorter than on dry land ( wading ) Am I just doing everything 100% wrong ? Is there some tricky way to minimize this? |
waterfloating
On Dec 29, 7:05 pm, "Larry L" wrote:
One problem I have fishing from a personal watercraft is that some of the energy intended to go into the cast is transferred instead to the craft ( make a casting motion right now and feel how your butt swivels and tries to rotate your chair to understand what I'm saying ) making my "longest" casts shorter than on dry land ( wading ) Am I just doing everything 100% wrong ? Is there some tricky way to minimize this? You can minimise it, indeed more or less eliminate it, by modifying your casting technique, just using your arm and shoulder, and not moving your body. Try it, as you suggested above. Sit in a swivel chair, and avoid moving your body. Or only allow your body to swivel at the hips It is the swivelling of your body which causes the craft to move. Also, as the force required to move your body merely moves the platform if you allow it to, it does your casting no good anyway. Quite the reverse! Practising in a swivel chair will improve your casting from a tube or pontoon boat considerably. TL MC |
waterfloating
This will also improve your tracking, ( getting the rod tip to travel in a straight line) and distance. Swivelling your whole body down to your legs is usually bad practice anyway, but especially so on a movable platform. It is basically just wasted en energy, and results in poor casting as well. TL MC |
waterfloating
You probably also have the ingrained habit of turning to watch your
back cast. This is best avoided when casting from such a platform. The trick here, is to close your eyes, and "feel" the back cast. If you can ´t see it, then you wont be tempted to turn and look at it. TL MC |
waterfloating
This is a major problem for many casters on land as well. They are
convinced they need to see their back cast in order to be able to execute it properly. This is not the case! But you will only realise it if you close your eyes ( on the back cast!). Concentrate entirely on the feel. Try this at various distances. In a fairly short while, ( although this varies considerably from person to person), you will know how it must feel for certain line lengths, and only need to glance over your shoulder to see obstructions etc BEFORE you cast, not WHILE you are casting. This will improve your casting immediately. It is also the only way I know to wean people off watching their backs casts, which causes them to twist their bodies, and ruin their tracking. You can lean your body backwards, but DONT TWIST IT. TL MC |
waterfloating
Sorry about the repeated replies to my own posts, but as I think about
this, and how I have taught people in the past, I keep thinking of further points, which are germane to the basic problem. TL MC |
waterfloating
Watch some of these;
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mFGZYy7h0FY The best do not twist their bodies Tl MC |
waterfloating
|
waterfloating
Also watch Rajeff here;
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GgPOa...eature=related he only turns his head, he doesn´t twist his body. This of course is under tournament conditions. Also note his almost explosive acceleration, flick and stop, on the final delivery. There is a lot more of interest on you tube,. but be careful, some of it is wrong! TL MC |
waterfloating
Kreh uses his body a lot;
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=svqnt0J1jNg this is useless in a float tube or similar. TL MC |
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