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#1
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Hi chaps,
I'm sailor and not really a fisherman. Some years ago I was with a bloke on a Yacht, he had a bit of wood about 9 inches by 3 inches that he towed behind the boat. The wood was rigged so that it was held below the surface untill a fish grabbed it, this caused it to trip and then it rose to the surface. I had never seen one before and have never seen one since I am doing a crossing from the West Indies to the Med and thru to the Adriatic and some nice fresh fish would supplimennt the rations, anyone got any designs one of these. Thanks Jeff |
#2
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In message . com, Jeff
writes Hi chaps, I'm sailor and not really a fisherman. Some years ago I was with a bloke on a Yacht, he had a bit of wood about 9 inches by 3 inches that he towed behind the boat. The wood was rigged so that it was held below the surface untill a fish grabbed it, this caused it to trip and then it rose to the surface. I had never seen one before and have never seen one since I am doing a crossing from the West Indies to the Med and thru to the Adriatic and some nice fresh fish would supplimennt the rations, anyone got any designs one of these. Thanks Jeff No, but I'll tell you what, take me with you and I'll design and refine as we travel! -- Clint Sharp |
#3
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In article . com, Jeff
wrote: Hi chaps, I'm sailor and not really a fisherman. Some years ago I was with a bloke on a Yacht, he had a bit of wood about 9 inches by 3 inches that he towed behind the boat. The wood was rigged so that it was held below the surface untill a fish grabbed it, this caused it to trip and then it rose to the surface. I had never seen one before and have never seen one since I am doing a crossing from the West Indies to the Med and thru to the Adriatic and some nice fresh fish would supplimennt the rations, anyone got any designs one of these. It's a paravane. It works like an otterboard or underwater kite. When a fish takes the lure attached to the 'tail' it collapses the diving angle and the whole lot rises to the surface. An alternative is a -spherical- lead which tends to be a better hooker but does not rise so neatly. If you just want the odd fresh meal and don't mind missing a few then a selection of paravanes would be fine. You don't say which port you're sailing from but anywhere with a sport fishing fleet will have mass produced paravanes available - they use big ones for billfishing and small ones to catch bait. Ask one of the skippers where they buy them. Get several (cheaper by the dozen?) as you'll lose a few to sharks. Make sure you specify -diving- paravanes, there are also types designed to stay at the surface and take a line out parallel with the boat to prevent tangling when several surface lines are trailed at once. I have some basic info for yachtsmen available via my site (below) - meant for UK coastal day-sailors rather then blue waters but it might be useful. Have fun, Cheerio, -- Fishing: http://www.fishing.casterbridge.net/ Writing: http://www.author.casterbridge.net/derek-moody/ uk.rec.fishing.game Badge Page: http://www.fishing.casterbridge.net/urfg/ |
#4
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Jeff wrote:
Hi chaps, I'm sailor and not really a fisherman. Some years ago I was with a bloke on a Yacht, he had a bit of wood about 9 inches by 3 inches that he towed behind the boat. The wood was rigged so that it was held below the surface untill a fish grabbed it, this caused it to trip and then it rose to the surface. I had never seen one before and have never seen one since I am doing a crossing from the West Indies to the Med and thru to the Adriatic and some nice fresh fish would supplimennt the rations, anyone got any designs one of these. Thanks Jeff Hi Jeff, I have seen a homemade one but forget the details of where the line was attached etc.. As you have a yacht another few quid won't make much difference... They are called paravanes and a quick Google found this... there are others of course... http://www.sharnbrooktackle.com/acat...avanes_87.html Happy fishing.. Steve Landlocked in Salisbury |
#5
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![]() "Jeff" wrote in message ups.com... Hi chaps, I'm sailor and not really a fisherman. Some years ago I was with a bloke on a Yacht, he had a bit of wood about 9 inches by 3 inches that he towed behind the boat. The wood was rigged so that it was held below the surface untill a fish grabbed it, this caused it to trip and then it rose to the surface. I had never seen one before and have never seen one since I am doing a crossing from the West Indies to the Med and thru to the Adriatic and some nice fresh fish would supplimennt the rations, anyone got any designs one of these. Thanks Jeff Only time I've ever seen these used was on a mackerel fishing/pleasure trip from one of the Cornish ports many years ago. They don't seem to use them these days. |
#6
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Clint
Sounds like a good idea Clint, can you guarantee to catch the fish? Jeff Clint Sharp wrote: In message . com, Jeff writes Hi chaps, I'm sailor and not really a fisherman. Some years ago I was with a bloke on a Yacht, he had a bit of wood about 9 inches by 3 inches that he towed behind the boat. The wood was rigged so that it was held below the surface untill a fish grabbed it, this caused it to trip and then it rose to the surface. I had never seen one before and have never seen one since I am doing a crossing from the West Indies to the Med and thru to the Adriatic and some nice fresh fish would supplimennt the rations, anyone got any designs one of these. Thanks Jeff No, but I'll tell you what, take me with you and I'll design and refine as we travel! -- Clint Sharp |
#7
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Steve,
That looks interesting, thanks for the reply, gosh things are hi tech now, as I said, I remember a bit of wood Jeff Steven Crook wrote: Jeff wrote: Hi chaps, I'm sailor and not really a fisherman. Some years ago I was with a bloke on a Yacht, he had a bit of wood about 9 inches by 3 inches that he towed behind the boat. The wood was rigged so that it was held below the surface untill a fish grabbed it, this caused it to trip and then it rose to the surface. I had never seen one before and have never seen one since I am doing a crossing from the West Indies to the Med and thru to the Adriatic and some nice fresh fish would supplimennt the rations, anyone got any designs one of these. Thanks Jeff Hi Jeff, I have seen a homemade one but forget the details of where the line was attached etc.. As you have a yacht another few quid won't make much difference... They are called paravanes and a quick Google found this... there are others of course... http://www.sharnbrooktackle.com/acat...avanes_87.html Happy fishing.. Steve Landlocked in Salisbury |
#8
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In message , Neil
writes Only time I've ever seen these used was on a mackerel fishing/pleasure trip from one of the Cornish ports many years ago. They don't seem to use them these days. Still see them off St Ives sometimes. -- Clint Sharp |
#9
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![]() Derek Moody wrote: In article . com, Jeff wrote: Hi chaps, I'm sailor and not really a fisherman. Some years ago I was with a bloke on a Yacht, he had a bit of wood about 9 inches by 3 inches that he towed behind the boat. The wood was rigged so that it was held below the surface untill a fish grabbed it, this caused it to trip and then it rose to the surface. I had never seen one before and have never seen one since I am doing a crossing from the West Indies to the Med and thru to the Adriatic and some nice fresh fish would supplimennt the rations, anyone got any designs one of these. It's a paravane. It works like an otterboard or underwater kite. When a fish takes the lure attached to the 'tail' it collapses the diving angle and the whole lot rises to the surface. An alternative is a -spherical- lead which tends to be a better hooker but does not rise so neatly. If you just want the odd fresh meal and don't mind missing a few then a selection of paravanes would be fine. You don't say which port you're sailing from but anywhere with a sport fishing fleet will have mass produced paravanes available - they use big ones for billfishing and small ones to catch bait. Ask one of the skippers where they buy them. Get several (cheaper by the dozen?) as you'll lose a few to sharks. Make sure you specify -diving- paravanes, there are also types designed to stay at the surface and take a line out parallel with the boat to prevent tangling when several surface lines are trailed at once. I have some basic info for yachtsmen available via my site (below) - meant for UK coastal day-sailors rather then blue waters but it might be useful. Have fun, Cheerio, -- Fishing: http://www.fishing.casterbridge.net/ Writing: http://www.author.casterbridge.net/derek-moody/ uk.rec.fishing.game Badge Page: http://www.fishing.casterbridge.net/urfg/ Hi Derek, Thanks for the reply, think i've tracked some down both on Ebay and from Tacklebargains.co.uk. When you know its name, its quite easy to find. I suppose mackerel spoons are the bait of choice for the chance of a bite from most fish? jeff |
#10
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In article .com, Jeff
wrote: Derek Moody wrote: In article . com, Jeff wrote: I am doing a crossing from the West Indies to the Med and thru to the Adriatic and some nice fresh fish would supplimennt the rations, anyone got any designs one of these. It's a paravane. It works like an otterboard or underwater kite. When a I suppose mackerel spoons are the bait of choice for the chance of a bite from most fish? A rotating lure is OK for a while but no matter what you do it will cause kinking eventually and you may be trailing it for days on end (in mid Atlantic there will be areas almost devoid of fish then suddenly you find huge mixed shoals.) My first choice for smaller fish would be redgill-type sandeel lures - take a selection of sizes. Next a selection of soft plastic shads and - only if you are rigging to a big-game rod and willing to take way off if a big fish hits, a Kona head or similar big slider on a steel trace. If you find a big shoal of small fish hook one of those, live, and trail it behind an 80lb test rod and you might get a billfish or big tuna. Do you ship a pan big enough to fry a six-foot fillet? Hth. Cheerio, -- Fishing: http://www.fishing.casterbridge.net/ Writing: http://www.author.casterbridge.net/derek-moody/ uk.rec.fishing.game Badge Page: http://www.fishing.casterbridge.net/urfg/ |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
I found this 24foot yacht for $600ish on ebay | Chris | Fishing in Australia | 1 | March 9th, 2004 07:51 AM |