How do your lines not get tangled when one of these gets a bite? In my head one could cross straight over into the other 2 when it gets a run. Sorry if silly question
Posted by Clever_Girl1116
8 Comments
HallettCove5158 on
There cast in different directions, and with a wide enough peg you can play the fish away from the other two. When a fish goes under a line you can just pass the rods around to prevent a tangle.
PhilVG on
Use Toplead in front of your rods.
This way the line runs flat on the bottom
Cultural-Company282 on
The lines aren’t cast out straight ahead. They are fanned out. So even though the rods are close together, there is a decent amount of space between where the baits are sitting. When you hook a fish, you fight it with that in mind. So, for example, if you hook to fish on the rod all the way on the left, you might step to the left a little as you’re fighting it and work on guiding it away from the other two lines.
Qu4ckAttack on
As the other guys said on here already, make sure you cast within your boundaries to the left, middle and right as per your rod set up. And when the buzzers start screaming, get on the rods ASAP
Just wait till you get two buzzers going at once. That’s when things liven up. 😉
crazyabbit on
It’s possible to have one fish take out all the other rods, you just sort it out and put your rods back out again. Multiple fish at once gets tricky, you have to try and judge what fish is the best, slacken off the drag, put that rod back on the rest. Then get back to the other better fish hoping that she’s still there. Land that one & repeat. Wouldn’t change it for the world, the buzz is unreal!
Clever_Girl1116 on
Thanks for the answers!
Analyst_Annoyed on
Even if all 3 rods are cast virtually at the same spot, if you get a take and the line crosses over one next to it, you can usually easily tell which line is above/below the other, and you can reposition them as needed to ‘untangle’ them. It’s difficult to explain but honestly, it’s not an issue once you know what you’re doing
Analyst_Annoyed on
Even if all 3 rods are cast virtually at the same spot, if you get a take and the line crosses over one next to it, you can usually easily tell which line is above/below the other, and you can reposition them as needed to ‘untangle’ them. It’s difficult to explain but honestly, it’s not an issue once you know what you’re doing
8 Comments
There cast in different directions, and with a wide enough peg you can play the fish away from the other two. When a fish goes under a line you can just pass the rods around to prevent a tangle.
Use Toplead in front of your rods.
This way the line runs flat on the bottom
The lines aren’t cast out straight ahead. They are fanned out. So even though the rods are close together, there is a decent amount of space between where the baits are sitting. When you hook a fish, you fight it with that in mind. So, for example, if you hook to fish on the rod all the way on the left, you might step to the left a little as you’re fighting it and work on guiding it away from the other two lines.
As the other guys said on here already, make sure you cast within your boundaries to the left, middle and right as per your rod set up. And when the buzzers start screaming, get on the rods ASAP
Just wait till you get two buzzers going at once. That’s when things liven up. 😉
It’s possible to have one fish take out all the other rods, you just sort it out and put your rods back out again. Multiple fish at once gets tricky, you have to try and judge what fish is the best, slacken off the drag, put that rod back on the rest. Then get back to the other better fish hoping that she’s still there. Land that one & repeat. Wouldn’t change it for the world, the buzz is unreal!
Thanks for the answers!
Even if all 3 rods are cast virtually at the same spot, if you get a take and the line crosses over one next to it, you can usually easily tell which line is above/below the other, and you can reposition them as needed to ‘untangle’ them. It’s difficult to explain but honestly, it’s not an issue once you know what you’re doing
Even if all 3 rods are cast virtually at the same spot, if you get a take and the line crosses over one next to it, you can usually easily tell which line is above/below the other, and you can reposition them as needed to ‘untangle’ them. It’s difficult to explain but honestly, it’s not an issue once you know what you’re doing