
It is true to say that 99 percent of all legals on rivers are carried downstream, with bites being signaled by steep traffic. However, in most cases, the presentation upstream is superior, for example, when it comes to hitting the top of the rod, which is difficult or impossible to hit, which is typical of roach at a short distance. The preceding presentation will see that all resistance is removed when the fish pulls the bait downstream, so it keeps on bait for this vital number of seconds.
The second main advantage of upward doping is that it can automatically find a hot spot in the voyage, periodically moving the wire to hit the stream. Natural obstacles, such as lifting in gravel and weed roots, will stop the lead.
When you lie downstream, most anglers sit upstream from swimming and catch each area alternately, throwing it across and down, and this simple method catches fish consistently. However, there are weaknesses associated with the sequence down and between presentations. First, when you throw in each area in turn, there is an initial disturbing effect of lead falling into the water. It is obvious that the fish will soon restore their composition, if they are fed firmly, but without grief, you can work without serious consequences. You can decide to reduce the amount of casting by rolling the bait into place, rather than throwing it right on the swim. You can do this by dropping to the far shore, fishing for some time on this side, and then, raising the point of the rod, encourage the terminal plant to roll across the river to look for other areas. Although it minimizes outrage, dullness in gear means that when the bait rolls in the middle and then into the near shore, it does so in an arc across the stream. This is very unnatural and can be enough to dissuade a suspicious fish from intercepting the bait. In addition, the bait will ever catch fish on the lines of each arc, and in a large voyage this may mean that a lot of water is not being tested.
Parenting largely overcomes these objections. Sit at the farthest end point of swimming and throw two yards above the ascending sailing point on the far shore. After the manual has been laid down, the goal is to gradually work on the lure downstream, allowing it to settle for five minutes, and then repeating it at intervals along the way or when the natural function stops the lead. To do this, the point of the rod is raised, and a small line is drawn that displaces the wire so that it moves downstream to the desired position. This is the first difference. The lead link is downstream in a straight line, not in an arc, because the upstream view has created a weak line when lead is broken.
The whole running race could be sifted in this progressive manner, every inch of the bottom was covered in a completely natural way and without the need to throw directly at the nursing fish. The next step will be to cover middle and near banking in the same way.
Using different wires
For effective afterburning up, the standard leger snap-in gives you the ability to quickly change wires. This is important because one lead may require different lead at different points along its length in order to achieve a correct view. Lead must be such that it stably keeps from the flow, but requires only careful attraction. After breaking, he must quickly calm down again and not wash downstream too easily. Generally speaking, if the lead moves a couple of feet downstream and then settles again, you have that right.
Quivertip is required for effective implementation. Work on the principle that you need to deflate 4 inches (10 cm) at the tip, which must be maintained before the lead comes to pressure and hits downstream. Bites, as a rule, appear on the tip, after which recoil occurs due to the relaxation of tension.
Certain static situations require an upward leger. These include pants for peak-beds or rafts, or fishing in the lower reaches of bushes or trees. Often the only effective approach is swimming. Reliable winter swimmers are the “V” of quiet water created by middle-aged beds.
This area may be tiny, so aim for the bait to fish at the “V” point in the normal stream, or closer behind the obstacle at higher levels.
You do not want the bait to move when it is in position, and it pays to use a little more lead in these places when you catch a steady slip. The reason is that, although the bait is fishing in a calmer water area, it is often necessary to take into account the intermediate faster flow.
Parenting is vulnerable to false bites if there are many fleets in the river. Very few drifting weeds are required to extract the critically balanced terminal plant. If this is a problem, and it is likely that this will happen in the stream, add more lead than usual and try to ignore the garbage falling into the line. A bite from a big fish will still be obvious. These conditions are ideal for barbel, and you can’t go wrong with bites.

