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Rocky Mountain Survival Institute Headline Animator
Ham Radio Conditions/MUF
Saturday, September 17, 2011
More on Survival Fishing (Trotlines)
Difficulty:
Moderate
Instructions
Things You'll Need
Float
Weight
Bait
1
Find a spot in the river with good fish habitat. Look for features such as deep holes and pools and undercut banks. Spots where the river swings also can be good.
2
Attach one end of the trot line to a stable object on the shoreline, such as a stump or tree. If there are no natural objects, a stake driven into the ground also works as a ground anchor.
3
Grab the unstaked portion of the trot line and get into a boat. Motor straight away from the anchor and into the river. As you go toward the middle of the river, feed line out and bait hooks as you come to them. Night crawlers are good all-around baits. Strips of minnows also work well.
4
Tie a length of nylon line to a milk jug. The line length depends on the river's depth; it should be sufficiently long to suspend the hooks a foot or two above the bottom. Tie the float line to the trot line about one-quarter of the way between the end of the trot line that's onshore and the end that will be anchored in the river.
5
Drop each hook and bait into the river as you continue motoring out. Once you get to the end, tie a 2-foot piece of rope to the end of the trot line. Tie a cinder block -- or a 1-gallon milk pail filled with concrete -- to the other end of the rope. Drop the anchor and trot line to the bottom.
6
Check the trot line at least once every 24 hours.
Read more: How to Run a Trot Line | eHow.com http://www.ehow.com/how_8671180_run-trot-line.html#ixzz1VVi4XRVy
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