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Home / Northern Advocate / Sport

Fishing: Anglers' practice reel odd

Northern Advocate
9 Jan, 2013 09:07 PM3 mins to read

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Casting fishing rods around 200m in the middle of a farm isn't a usual sight, but for a bunch of Kaitaia men it's the norm.

The New Zealand Angling and Casting Association Tackle Tactics tournament isn't widely known either.

But the tournament brought one of the three regional events leading to the nationals at Gisborne in March to Kaitaia on the weekend.

Organiser Jock Bielski said the event was designed to allow distance casting specialists to get their arm, eye and aim in before nationals, helped anglers test and perfect their long-distance casting technique and provided a forum to teach anyone else - from newcomer to experienced - interested in learning more about the craft.

Despite the event initially appearing to be the antithesis of fishing with nary a drop of water, ocean or otherwise, to be seen or sniffed at, exponents generally believed this sort of competition naturally improved fishing skills.

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One queried about the unusual location was Gary Whittaker from Wellington. Hitting 214m with one cast, Whittaker noted it was more practical to measure distance inland than on a beach.

"It gives you an opportunity to perfect your casting but it's not the be-all and end-all [for catching fish]," he said.

He said he had seen anglers in the Snapper Bonanza on 90 Mile Beach swim out to a sandbank with their rods and reels and then stand up and cast from there, whereas the average experienced long distance caster did not need to go to such lengths.

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The sport could do with a stronger profile.

Kaitaia only attracted eight participants while the other two events in Feilding and Papamoa drew around 15 anglers at each.

Europeans were traditionally the best in the world at distance casting as the sport was apparently more popular in places where there weren't much fish.

World champions such as the infamous Big Danny Moeskops could cast more than 300m in a game where greater weight and height was seen as an advantage.

The anglers use specialist rods and reels and have the option of working with different sinker weights and line combinations: 0.28mm line/1.25g sinker, 0.31mm/150, 0.35mm/175 etc.

Surprisingly, lighter weights often worked better with a good wind under them.

There were several divisions able to be contested from midgets (aged up to 12), juniors (up to 16 years), open men and women, golden oldies (over 55) to veteran golden oldies (over 70). Most of those in the Kaitaia regionals were contesting the open men's division.

All use a pendulum technique where the sinker is not supposed to touch the ground, and casting was always wind assisted. The course in Kaitaia was reset during the morning - after a small shift in the wind direction - by the tried and true method of releasing tufts of grass to see which way they blew.

The best cast of the day was 231m by Peter Froggatt from Dargaville who held a national record of 242m and has also cast 247m as a personal best (not officially ratified).

While he wouldn't confirm whether he would attend the upcoming nationals due to the cost and time involved, Froggatt was a firm believer the sport gave him an advantage outside the arena.

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"I use it for fishing all the time." On technique he added: "I religiously pendulum cast ... Keep everything slow [and] hit it right at the end."

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