Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional culture - Moss fishing normal group video

Moss fishing normal group video

Moss fishing techniques are as follows:

1, it is not easy to fall to the bottom when drifting.

Moss is thick, but unlike mud and sand. When the bait falls on the moss, it is easy to fall into the moss.

When the water is shallow, the moss is not thick to the naked eye, so it is not surprising that the hook bait falls on it and eats half the length of the sub-line, and the moss will also be affected by buoyancy, which will have a secondary impact on the hook bait.

2. The pole will hang up 100%.

At present, most fishing ideas are based on hook bottom and bait. If you fish in the mud bottom, even if the hook and bait sink into the mud bottom, it will not have much influence when lifting the rod.

3. Fish can't find bait.

The moss bottom is very similar to the mud bottom, and the nest material and bait are trapped in the moss. After the fish enters the nest, there is no bait trapped in the moss at all.

Fishing for moss is basically a disadvantage. So, what are the advantages? The answer is yes, and it is very big, because moss itself is one of the main foods of freshwater fish.

Method 2

The skills of fishing with moss are:

1, choose a piece of moss, which is a wisp of moss, which is more natural.

2. Select Yi Shi No.6 hook. The advantage of using Yi Shi hook is that the hook tip bends inward and the hook has good tensile strength.

3. Straighten the moss and remove the residual short burrs. The way to remove burrs is to roll moss from the front end to the tail by hand, and small pieces of Tess will be removed by hand.

4, rubbing moss with two hands, just like rubbing a rope, two laps is enough.

5. Fold the rolled moss in half and put the hook into the hook from the folded top.

6. Move the moss that has passed through to the handle of the hook, then braid the two strands of moss twice like braiding hair, so that the two strands of moss are intertwined, and then put the hook through the winding place, so that the moss is firmly hung on the hook.