Im a fussy type of carper,
not over fussy, just fussy enough. Im not satisfied
with just chucking and chancing. I like to know
whats out there on the lake bed and try to
visualise whats going on down in the murky waters.
Leading about with a marker float and watching the water
for showing carp are necessary to help find likely areas
worth fishing in the first place. But once I have found
these likely featured areas I employ the
measure technique so I can consistently cast
to the same spot, not only during the session, but at
anytime I return to the same swim. I like the
measure technique for many reasons, one
being, not having to cast a marker float about, spooking
everything in the area when you first arrive in a trusty
old swim, trying to find the same hot spot
you caught from a few weeks earlier.

I
developed this measure technique sometime ago due to two
main reasons. The first was the fact that I hated having
anything on my line as a marker. I disliked the way the
line was interfered with as it bangs on the marker knot
during the cast. Also this marker knot would drive me mad
as I tried to get it off the line at the end of the
session. Im now using thin electrical tape as a
marker and this is working well but still a pain to get
off. The second reason was to allow me to cast my bait
straight to the spot without disturbing any carp present
with a marker float as I mentioned earlier.
How do you
start using the measure technique? Your fishing the
hot spot and have a marker knot on the line.
What you need to do is somehow make an exact note of the
position of this hot spot for future
reference without having to resort back to chucking the
marker float about until you stumble across it again.
Well you know where you are standing to cast, you now
need to know how far away and in what direction the
hot spot is from you. Youll need a few
little bits of kit to make this work.

Marking the line with tape or knot
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Tools of the trade
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a) A compass
b) A line measurer
c) A note pad and pen
d) Patience
e) Luck
1) You
already have a marker knot on the line as mentioned
earlier, so clip up and make a cast.
2) Attach the line measuring tool to the rod, zero it and
trap the line.
3) Wind in until youre left with the same amount of
line you started off the cast with.
4) Read off the distance from the measuring tool and make
a note.
5) Use the compass to take and accurate direction
reading. Look for any distant feature to help clarify the
direction, such as a church spire, telegraph pole, etc,
or a feature on the lake such as Lilly pads and make a
note.

Line measure tool
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Consistent drop
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Making notes
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Find the bearing with the compass
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My notes might look like this for a particular
lake:
Swim 34 /
54 min / 55 yds / left of pylon.
Swim 39 / 44 min / 72 yds / big oak tree.
Swim 41 / 32 min / 34 yds / to the right of the Lilly
pads.
I use the
minutes reading and not the degrees because my compass is
set up that way, but both are fine.
You return to a swim that you have made notes on in the
past and wish to put out baits to your hot
spots.
Measure technique example No1 ( Still using the marker
knot or tape on the line )
1) Read your notes on the swim, in this example they
read:
Swim 34 / 54 min / 55 yds / left of pylon.
2) Use the compass to locate the direction.
3) Cast out a guessed 55 yds in another direction as not
to spook any carp in the target area.
4) Wind down tight and clip up
5) Attach the line measuring tool to the rod, zero it and
trap the line.
6) Wind in until youre left with the same amount of
line you started off the cast with.
7) Read off the distance from the measuring tool and
remember it.
8) Adjustments
a) Over cast: If the cast distance was more than
required, say a cast of 60 yds, remove the measuring tool
and cast out again to the clip. Replace the measuring
tool zero it and trap the line, unclip the line from the
spool and wind in 5 yds. ( 60 yds - 5 yds = 55 yds wanted
) Clip up and mark the line with tape or maker knot. You
now have the 55 yds desired.
b) Under cast: If the cast distance was less than
requires, say a cast of 50 yds, remove the measuring tool
and cast out again to the clip. Replace the measuring
tool zero it and trap the line, unclip the line from the
spool and let out 5 yds. ( 50 yds + 5 yds = 55 yds wanted
) Clip up and mark the line with tape or maker knot. You
now have the 55 yds desired.
9) Use the compass again to confirm the direction and
cast your baits out first time right on target.

Casting
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Touch down
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I find over casting is the easiest to do, so if
I under cast by a far way I just cast again until I have
over cast and then make my adjustments.
I know this all sounds very complex and fussy but once
you have your head round it, this is a quick and
affective way of re-finding that hot spot in
a few minutes with no prior disturbance to the area
before your bait hit it.
Measure
technique example No2 ( No use of a marker knot or tape
on the line )
The steps
are the same as example No1, but as there are no markings
on the line you will have to measure before re-casting
after a run. If you havent had a run and wish to
re-bait just wind down tight and clip up before you wind
in, and then you can re-cast to the same spot.
We all
spend a large amount of time siting behind buzzers
waiting for a run, so when you think about it, if it
takes a few minutes, two measure casts, and a bit of
messing about after a run, so what. I know it still
sounds a big hassle but in comparison to leading about
with a marker float disturbing all and sundry, I take the
measure technique any day when fishing a known swim.
Spoding
I apply
the same measuring technique to my spod rod but with
multiple spools, let me explain in this example.
Say Im in a swim that I have notes on, Im
using three rods, one in the margin, one at say 50 yds,
and the other at say 70 yds. We only need to think about
the two distance rods as the margin rod can be hand feed
in this example Ive done the measure technique on
the two distant rods, so theyre fishing nicely. I
take my spod rod and make a measure with one spool at 50
yds, clip up and mark the spool so I can identify it
later. I then swap spools and make another measure, this
time 70 yds, clip up and mark that spool. I now have a
spod rod that is set up to cast out to my two hot
spots at different ranges. All I have to do is
select the correct spool and spod away merrily.

Mark the spools
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Ready to spod to the spot
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Mark Tunley
Rod Maker
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