Feedback on.... Carp Hunting
(Page 3 of 3)
September/October 1975
By Herm Fitz
[3] If you believe that your prey is swimming at a depth of less than 8 inches, use a correspondingly smaller "swamp depression" angle . . . since the distance between reality and image decreases as the fish approaches the surface (at the interface, fish and image are coincident).
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Meanwhile, don't forget those other hunting rules I mentioned. Let's suppose you're trying for a distant carp on a windy day. In that case, "Kentucky windage" dictates that you shoot slightly into the wind so that the arrow will be blown true (the correct adjustment varies with distance to the target and windspeed). At the same time, the "Tennessee elevation" principle requires you to aim slightly above the object to compensate for the downward curve in the arrow's flight path . . . yet according to the rule of "swamp depression" you must aim slightly low to allow for the refraction of light at the surface! That may sound complicated, but with some experience a good hunter may learn to make all three compensations simultaneously and accurately. Happy hunting!
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