How to plumb up properly when pole fishing

Steve Ringer explains how to correctly use a plummet to find the depth and features in your peg


by Tony Grigorjevs |
Updated on

You can have the most expensive pole, the best bait and be sat on the flyer peg, but all this will count for nothing if you don’t get the basics right in the first place – and that all starts with plumbing the depth.

Too many anglers are in a rush to get fishing and ship the pole out, find the depth within seconds and say: ‘That’ll do’. The truth is, it won’t and that little piece of metal that sits in your seatbox drawer becomes one of the most important bits of kit you’ll have.

Spending time plumbing up will not only give you a totally accurate depth reading, but also identify any snags or rubbish in the area, fish-holding depth variations, and even what the lakebed is made up of.

With all this information to hand, you can then work out the best place in the swim to fish and how and what you should feed.

IF YOU ARE NEW TO FISHING, HERE ARE SOME EXCELLENT POLE FISHING TIPS!

plumbing up is essential

Use a a big plummet

I prefer a large 30g size, as I think this allows me to get a better feel of the lakebed. Being heavy, it will sink into any silt or will hit the bottom with a ‘clunk’ if it’s gravel. If in doubt, I’ll start with a the big plummet and then change to a 10g version.

THE BEST FISHING POLES WILL HELP YOU FISH ACCURATELY AFTER PLUMBING UP.

Use a a big plummet
Use a a big plummet

Sweep the bottom

One I’ve found the depth I’ll keep the plummet on and ‘sweep’ the pole side to side for a metre each way, dragging the plummet along the bottom. This lets me identify any snags or rubbish – these aren’t spots where fish will naturally feed. The longer you spend doing this the more you will learn about what is in front of you, it can be the difference between a netful and a blank!

YOU WILL NEED ONE OF THE BEST FISHING KEEPNETS WITH ALL THE ECTRA FISH YOU WILL CATCH!

Sweep the bottom
Sweep the bottom

Go for Line-through

The old cork-bottomed plummets don’t give you a truly accurate depth reading. The newer line-through plummets do, as they keep the line straight to the hook. They also have a wider base, which helps to get a proper picture of the bottom.

EVERY ANGLER NEEDS TO KNOW HOW TO TIE THE BEST FISHING KNOTS!

Go for Line-through
Go for Line-through

Let bristle show

I get asked a lot how much bristle should be left on show when plumbing up to dead depth. The answer is ‘all of it’, and a little bit of float body too. This might put the bait just slightly overdepth, but no lakebed is flat like a tabletop.

Let bristle show
Let bristle show
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