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Thread: Marking a Spot

  1. #1
    Ausfish Bronze Member
    Join Date
    Mar 2007

    Lightbulb Marking a Spot

    Can anyone please help my husband, Barra
    I always find a great spot on the sounder but after he throws down the anchor we never drift back onto the spot.

    Has someone got a clue as to how to mark the spot by dropping something into the water to indicate the position, without polluting the ocean?

    Appreciate you help please.

    Debro

  2. #2
    Ausfish Bronze Member Edmo's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2006

    Re: Marking a Spot

    try a small weight attatched to a length of rope with a small ball float ay the end for easy retrieval, choose something small enough as not to spook the fish. This should work ok in shallower river areas etc, i think this is how some divers mark spots when they dont have gps which i assume you havent either. hope this helps a bit Cheers Edmo.

  3. #3
    Ausfish Platinum Member STUIE63's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2007

    Re: Marking a Spot

    another way I have heard of is to our a little bit of olive or canola oil in the water it then gives you a visual mark to anchor relative to you have to be reasonably quick though because of the run in the tide
    IF IT CAN'T EAT A WHOLE PILLY I DON'T WANT IT

  4. #4

    Re: Marking a Spot

    Can't hit "WPT" twice on the GPS ????
    Don.
    "Magpie Navy." VHF 73.

    It was a Woman who drove me to Drink......
    ....and I never gave her money for the Petrol......


  5. #5

    Re: Marking a Spot

    back when we had a sounder but no gps, we had 2 roll up rope floats with thin cord and a weight.

    The 2 floats were different colours.

    we would drift over a good show and throw the first float, and then float along a bit further and throw the second

    The 2 different colour floats meant that without any land mass to orient yourself, it was easy to redrift down the same line.

    the cord needs to be roughly the same depth as the water, ie, water depth plus about 20%. the more extra length on the cord, the further the float is away from the mark, but thats not all that important - what matters is having 2 floats to get the drift line right and you just start a bit further away

  6. #6
    Ausfish Platinum Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2003
    Location
    Seaforth QLD & Cairns

    Re: Marking a Spot

    You could use something like these:


    You can easily make something like this:


    Or something like this:


    You need something that you can have a sinker on that is heavy enough to rotate the float in the water and feed line out, but once it hits the bottom, the float is shapped as such that the tide will not feed line out.
    I've used this type of thing to mark a wreck, then you can set up anchor so you are drifting your baits back onto it. I just use a lure to hook the line with and pull it back into the boat.

    Cheers
    Corry
    Cheers
    Corry

  7. #7

    Re: Marking a Spot

    Don't be too hard on him Debro, this is a skill that can take years and years to begin to master. Finding the spot is the only constant factor in an equation that involves wind direction and speed, current direction and speed, tidal influence and depth of water. The greater the value of any of these four variables, the greater the degree of difficulty. Compounded when any of them oppose each other!
    Do you have a GPS? This can be a MAJOR help!
    Bear in mind, you do not necessarily need to have your boat anchored directly on the mark, but rather you need to be anchored in the correct position to have your BAITS end up on the mark!
    Plenty of good methods previously mentioned, practise them in shallow water first as it is generally more difficult the deeper the water is.
    Cheers.

  8. #8
    Ausfish Bronze Member
    Join Date
    Mar 2007

    Re: Marking a Spot

    Quote Originally Posted by STUIE63 View Post
    another way I have heard of is to our a little bit of olive or canola oil in the water it then gives you a visual mark to anchor relative to you have to be reasonably quick though because of the run in the tide
    Thanks Stuie, Will give this a try, it is a simple method.
    Reading through the other replies it seems as though this is more complicated than I thought.
    Better not be so tough on Barra....

    Thanks
    Debro

  9. #9
    Ausfish Bronze Member
    Join Date
    Mar 2007

    Re: Marking a Spot

    Quote Originally Posted by Donny Boy View Post
    Can't hit "WPT" twice on the GPS ????

    Hey, What is WPT, please
    I do have a GPS, which I mark the spot as we drift over it,
    but trouble is after you anchor and drift the current and wind take you to a different place.
    The GPS (handheld Garmin ETrex) stops giving compass direction once the boat is not moving (not motoring along), it does tell me the distance away from the spot but where exactly is hard to know.

    Anyway, We will try the few methods mentioned and see what happens.

    Curious what WPT is though...

    Thank you
    Debro

  10. #10
    Ausfish Premium Member TimiBoy's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2007

    Re: Marking a Spot

    Debro,

    Buy him a GPS for an early Christmas present! Mark the spot, and when you use the track function, it will show you the angle of drift, so that you can be sure you are anchoring in the right direction, and you'll know when you are on target. Using this method offshore still results in the need to reset the pick several times (sometimes) before getting it right, but it DOES work!

    Ah, just read your next post. CHUCK THE HANDHELD!

    Cheers,

    Tim
    Carbon Really Ain't Pollution.

  11. #11
    Ausfish Bronze Member
    Join Date
    Mar 2007

    Re: Marking a Spot

    Quote Originally Posted by nigelr View Post
    Don't be too hard on him Debro, this is a skill that can take years and years to begin to master. Finding the spot is the only constant factor in an equation that involves wind direction and speed, current direction and speed, tidal influence and depth of water. The greater the value of any of these four variables, the greater the degree of difficulty. Compounded when any of them oppose each other!
    Do you have a GPS? This can be a MAJOR help!
    Bear in mind, you do not necessarily need to have your boat anchored directly on the mark, but rather you need to be anchored in the correct position to have your BAITS end up on the mark!
    Plenty of good methods previously mentioned, practise them in shallow water first as it is generally more difficult the deeper the water is.
    Cheers.
    Yeah, I can see it is a complicated issue.
    Okay I wont be so hard on Barra.
    We do have a GPS which is fantastic for finding the same reef but after anchoring the GPS can only tell me how far from the spot we are and the compass spins not giving the direction (because the boat has to be moving for the compass to read)

    Really appreciate all your information,
    Will give the methods a try that have been mentioned but I can see it is a skill to be developed perhaps never perfected...

    Getting the bait on the spot is definately the answer though...

    Many thanks for your help
    Debro

  12. #12
    Ausfish Bronze Member
    Join Date
    Mar 2007

    Re: Marking a Spot

    Quote Originally Posted by TimiBoy View Post
    Debro,

    Buy him a GPS for an early Christmas present! Mark the spot, and when you use the track function, it will show you the angle of drift, so that you can be sure you are anchoring in the right direction, and you'll know when you are on target. Using this method offshore still results in the need to reset the pick several times (sometimes) before getting it right, but it DOES work!

    Ah, just read your next post. CHUCK THE HANDHELD!

    Cheers,

    Tim
    My handheld does have a track function, I will learn how to use that feature and see how we go.
    I didn't think the tracking would work on the water but now you've given me another challenge....
    Will also give the other methods a try too.

    I had enough trouble getting Barra to buy ME the handheld... so I'm not chucking it yet... I still catch more fish than him and bigger ones even when he can't get back on the good spot...


    Thanks Tim

    Debro

  13. #13
    Ausfish Platinum Member
    Join Date
    Nov 2005

    Re: Marking a Spot

    I had enough trouble getting Barra to buy ME the handheld... so I'm not chucking it yet

    No reason why you should either, hand held or ritzy mounted models all work on the same principle, and the same satelites.

    Muzz

  14. #14

    Re: Marking a Spot

    You have a GPS on board so it should be quite easy to work out where to set the anchor.
    Once you find the show of fish or the piece of ground that you are wanting to fish you need to stop the boat directly above them and put a new plot mark on the spot.Then you have to drift for atleast 5 minutes while you set up your gear and cut baits ect.
    Once you have completed a decent drift put a new plot mark into the GPS.
    Now if you put the curser on the first plot mark that will give you the direct line back to the fish.Drive back along that line and go past the first mark atleast 50-100 meters and place a 3rd plot mark.This 3rd mark is your anchor mark or start of your drift mark.If you drift past the mark by a few meters you can adjust your drift start from that 3 mark and adding a new plot at the start of the drift until you get it smack on.
    Using your GPS properly is what will make the difference for you to hit the fish on the head every time.
    If you anchor up and miss the mark by a small amount you can tie off the anchor rope around the bow of the boat a bit further to help swing the boat.Turning the motor will also help to move the boat a small amount if their is any current running.

  15. #15
    Ausfish Platinum Member
    Join Date
    Aug 2005

    Re: Marking a Spot

    Simplest method by far Deb is to buy a can of bright yellow aerosol paint and when you're over the mark on the sounder, put a big X on the bottom of the boat. Works every time and there's no mucking around with drifting and all that complicated stuff that I find so confusing.

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