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\n<\/span><\/p>\nWith warming of water and increase in the amount of aquatic vegetation in the river chub from deep places go to the rolls. On my rivers at the beginning of the “hunting season” he stands on the rolls very selectively: he finds places with hard cartilaginous bottom and concentrates on them, and the current can be both medium and very strong. When summer comes into its own, spring points often stop working, and the chub scatters along the river and hides behind the appeared algae, under tree crowns, bridges, etc. And you can find it both on the sandy bottom, and on a harder, stony bottom. In addition, chub can hide in places with absolutely no current, especially in the heat of the day. To peck usually in such situations, he does not want to, but if without too much noise to hold the bait under his nose, the blow can follow immediately.<\/p>\n
<\/span>Tactics of search and catching rolls<\/span><\/h2>\n
\n<\/span><\/p>\nWhen searching for places on an unknown river, it is worth catching absolutely any points on the river, which do not even seem promising. Sometimes golavl can be found even at a depth of 15 centimeters.
Places where there were nibbles, it is worth remembering, and give them on the next fishing increased attention.<\/p>\n
When approaching the roll, I pay special attention to the first 5-10 throws. If the catfish is present at the point, he usually immediately as anything shows itself, and if not, then I shift and catch adjacent areas. On the most interesting places I linger and try several different baits.<\/p>\n
If there is a cluster of golawl on a given roll, then I linger on it longer, and pick up a working theme. More than an hour I stand on one tumble rarely, because the chub is alarmed by the constantly flickering in front of his nose wobblers and baits. Moreover, if the nibbles were, but stopped, it is worth giving the place a rest. Returning to the point an hour or two later, calmed down golovly often begin to greedily peck with the first throws.<\/p>\n
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\nThere are three main types of wiring when fishing for chub:<\/p>\n
1) across the current;<\/p>\n
2) against the current and\/or on the drift;<\/p>\n
3) upstream (upstream).<\/p>\n
<\/span><\/p>\nOn any of them the chub bites better or worse depending on his mood, so I try to fish the same place from different angles.<\/p>\n
The fastest way to check the roll for active chub is to wade across the current, that is, the throw goes about 90 degrees to the stream or slightly upward, with the expectation that the current will hit the bait in the side.<\/p>\n
My favorite wiring – against the current, when the throw goes down in relation to the stream at an acute angle with subsequent holds without spinning the reel or with a very very slow rotation. The most inactive golavl often reacts only to this wiring.<\/p>\n
Well and the third type of wiring, upstream – when we lead a wobbler or bobber with high speed downstream directly into the forehead of the chub, standing always against the current. Often this wiring works due to the effect of surprise, redfin simply does not want to miss something edible, floating in front of his nose.<\/p>\n
Time of catching. In the period under consideration (May and June), the chub feeds all day, but there are bursts of activity:<\/p>\n
– not in the early morning, hours from 7 to 9;<\/p>\n
– in the evening before sunset.<\/p>\n
The largest chub go out to hunt at night, but I have no experience in night fishing.<\/p>\n
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\nSpinning.<\/strong><\/p>\n<\/span><\/p>\nFor chub on a small river is best suited specialized stream spinning with a complex structure for fishing on the current (allowing you to hold the bait against the stream, and at the same time amortizing jerks of fish). Upper test is tentatively from 6 to 14 grams depending on the baits used, the complexity of conditions (snags, rubble or clean places) and the size of the intended trophies.<\/p>\n
Reel.<\/strong><\/p>\nI have only two main requirements for reels – good cord laying and light weight. I use Shimano 16 Stradic Ci4+ 2500.<\/p>\n
Cord.<\/strong><\/p>\nWhen fishing for chub, I use eight-strand cords for maximum sensitivity and throwing range. The optimum diameter for rivers near Moscow is #0.6 – #0.8 according to the Japanese classification. Thinner to put definitely not worth it, because the cord is often in contact with the bottom and other obstacles, rubs, and can fail at the crucial moment.<\/p>\n
Leashes.<\/strong><\/p>\nA lot of copies broken on the topic “to use or not to use a leash” in materekh golavlyavlyatnikov. Since, probably, on every chub river there is a pike, in my opinion, the leash is necessary. In my practice, the chub is not afraid of either string or thick fluorocarbon leash, the main thing that does not spoil the game of small baits. Repeatedly caught chub with 0.6-m fluoro. But the optimal will be the diameter of 0.45 millimeters (protects from most of the pike and does not affect the game of wobblers) or a thin string length of 5-8 centimeters.<\/p>\n