Just got to thinking about my last trip to Palmy. There was only 4 boats there and there was bits of polystyrene everywhere. We passed heaps on the way past Mermaid too.
Now I can buy four of those little poly floats for 2.60 The line threads down the centre and is stoppered by a stick of plastic..easy as to change depth of bait and they are big enough to carry a full pilly. I am in the process of finding an alternative (thin dowel or similar) to the plastic stopper as this can fall out and isn't degradable, although I've only ever lost one. The larger floats are 2 bucks each and will carry a small mullet or gar. The only time I lose 'em is if I am broke off. If the float surfaces later then it is more likely to be picked up by someone simply because it is a bona fide float.
I am led to believe that fishos use bits of poly 'cause they break off in the fight and don't prevent the leader coming into the rod tip as a stoppered float may. This can be negated by the floats that I use that don't have stoppers and if you can set the stick into the centre of the float so that your line pulls through easily by hand, they will not obstruct when winding all the way in. They are dirt cheap so why do folk stick to bits of poly and balloons, which are a hazard to marine life?
When shark fishing in the past, I have used 3 litre milk bottles as floats with a split ring strapped to the handle and a running line through the ring, stoppered by a large swivel to main line. This allows the bottle to drop right down to the wire leader and in no way hinders the handling of the trace. If they break off, they can be retrieved or even if not retrieved, although environmentally unsightly, are not as hazardous to marine life as rubber and bits of poly that can break up. They also don't pop when rubbed against the wire trace. Why then do folk use balloons that can burst and poly that can break up and be swallowed by marine life?
Not having a go at anyone, but just trying to understand why folks do it as it doesn't make sense to me when our practices are under constant scrutiny. If debate about it can be beneficial to the environment, then the purpose of this thread is served.
Think on this, The use of lead in weights has been banned from many waterways in the UK, and prior to substitutes being found, ledgering was sometimes banned altogether. If our practice of float fishing is found to be environmentally unfriendly, then the same thing can happen here.
kev