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Fishing brolly hide


Wasting lead
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I have a few different size ones that I have picked up at Boot Fairs or eBay over the years.

All are the heavy duty covered, tilting, fishing brolly/bivvy types.

 

The smaller ones I use slightly upright (like a mushroom) so I can stand/sit under, with a camo net draped round it, mainly for wet weather and good for crows.

 

The large ones (50+ ") I use in open fields, or where there is limited back cover.

I set it up on the tilt, the back of the brolly touching the ground, wrap round camo net and I shoot sitting down.

This does give you a forward and side shooting perspective only, but it works well.

These large umbrellas have a fitting that I slide on to the front right and left ribs on the brolly.

I can then screw in thick adjustable bank sticks which make the brolly stable and enable me to lift the front of the umbrella to the height I need.

 

I can use guy ropes to peg down my brollys, but rarely need them.

A couple of the smaller brollys have guy ropes and pegs built into the top of the brolly.

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I have a few different size ones that I have picked up at Boot Fairs or eBay over the years.

All are the heavy duty covered, tilting, fishing brolly/bivvy types.

 

The smaller ones I use slightly upright (like a mushroom) so I can stand/sit under, with a camo net draped round it, mainly for wet weather and good for crows.

 

The large ones (50+ ") I use in open fields, or where there is limited back cover.

I set it up on the tilt, the back of the brolly touching the ground, wrap round camo net and I shoot sitting down.

This does give you a forward and side shooting perspective only, but it works well.

These large umbrellas have a fitting that I slide on to the front right and left ribs on the brolly.

I can then screw in thick adjustable bank sticks which make the brolly stable and enable me to lift the front of the umbrella to the height I need.

 

I can use guy ropes to peg down my brollys, but rarely need them.

A couple of the smaller brollys have guy ropes and pegs built into the top of the brolly.

The fitting are called storm pole attachments, they screw into long bank sticks or 'storm poles' to lock the brolly down and make it stable in strong winds, hence the name.

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