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The Chod RigBy Samantha Collins-Ratcliffe |  |  |
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SAMANTHA COLLINS-RATCLIFFE
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Samantha Collins-Ratcliffe is a school teacher as well as a very keen carp angler, aged 25 and lives in Cornwall. She's been fishing now for several years after her partner got her into it when she went to Suffolk with him on a five day carp fishing session.
That was where Samantha caught her first carp and then she was hooked. She's caught carp from two different continents and goes to France a number of times a year. Her UK PB is 44lb 12oz. She is sponsored by Realtree, Diamond weights, TF Gear and Quest Baits
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The Chod Rig
The Chod Rig has to be one of most favoured long distance rigs. Its presentation could be described as second to none.
The Chod rig was designed for fishing over silty bottoms or over debris but works well when fishing single hookbaits at long distance.
 Sam's Chod rig with a difference
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The workings of the rig are simple; the stiff material is positioned to keep the hook up at all times and will run along the leader until it hits the 10mm boilies. This will allow the lead to go into the silt and the rig to stay on top of the lake bed.
If you have ever watched carp feed over a bed of bait they tilt up and down therefore giving the Chod one of the best hookholds I've ever seen.
As you can see it is finished off with some personal preferences. I choose to use crimps instead of knots for my stiff link, allowing me to make it as long or short as required. The leader is ESP lead core, which I prefer to splice myself, usually being about 3ft long and finished off with a 3oz Diamond weight.
The components you need
ESP Stiff Rig (20lb)
ESP oval Rig Ring
ESP Lead Core (25lb)
1 Diamond Weight 3oz
1 Korda Wide Gape hook
1 Wychwood crimp and crimp tool
1 Korda Helicopter Sleeve
1 ESP Swivel
 All the components you will need to make the Chod
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 Knotless knot with ESP ring threaded back through the eye of hook
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 Cut link with sharp scissors
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 Burn the end of link until it is close to the eye of the hook
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 Thread link through the crimp and place the link through the eye of swivel and back through the crimp
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 Place crimping tool over crimp and press together for a nice tight fit
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 Sam's Chod rig
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About the Rigs Page
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The Rigs Page is a library of features to illustrate all those rigs that will be useful to both beginners and experienced anglers.
The rigs can be extremely simple and well known, or very complicated and little known, it doesn't matter providing they make some kind of sense and have a really practical application.
It could be a standard running leger rig that a beginner will appreciate seeing in pictures, or a very complicated anti-eject carp rig that the experienced carp angler would like to see.
If you wish to contribute a rig to this section please remember that the emphasis is on illustration rather than words. Good line drawings are fine in the absence of photographs. Please send to graham@fishingmagic.com
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| | Discuss this article, 1 of 33 messages, read more: | Frothey |   |
| Posted: 03/07/08 11:26:00 00 | Lovely stuff Samantha... have you tried the Osprey weights? they seem a bit smaller for their size (if stuff like that bothers you!)
it looks like you have, but when I used to use crimps I used to blob the bit by the crimp as well, just in case.
That lake in the pic looks familiar... big fish from there if it is! |
|  | Related articles:
 | PVA Rig Made Easy Samantha Collins-Ratcliffe with a step-by-step guide to making a PVA rig the easy way.
|  |  | Rigs Page Library Thumbnail links to the rigs in the Rigs Page Library.
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|  |  | Want to know what's in the latest issue of Coarse Fisherman before it hits the shelves?

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