ESP Quickdraw 4K Rods
The new ESP Quickdraw 4K retractable rods are built on high modulus blanks with a crisp responsive action and feature a 3K woven finish on the butt and a lighter 1K finish on the tip – hence the name 4K.
The new ESP Quickdraw 4K retractable rods are built on high modulus blanks with a crisp responsive action and feature a 3K woven finish on the butt and a lighter 1K finish on the tip – hence the name 4K.
The extra buoyant Zig Float allows zig hookbaits to be instantly adjusted to fish closer to the surface or deeper in the water column to search until carp are located.
The second new Pinpoint pattern for 2025, developed from the original Brute but refined with a parallel point to enlarge the gape and suit bigger hookbaits and shrink tube extensions to improve hook holds under high loading – particularly around snags and heavy weed.
The second new Pinpoint pattern for 2025, developed from the original Brute but refined with a parallel point to enlarge the gape and suit bigger hookbaits and shrink tube extensions to improve hook holds under high loading – particularly around snags and heavy weed.
Front heavy and smooth design for stable casting.
Spend £350.00 or more to qualify for 0% Interest Finance.
Only available to UK residents over 18, subject to terms and conditions.
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Front heavy and smooth design for stable casting.
Streamlined distance shape with large surface area base makes feeling the drop much easier
Integral steel swivel – Minimised height with no additional connections and hinging
Robust Evolve ‘dark camo’ skin to withstand all eventualities
EVOLVE TACKLE LEAD STATEMENT
Lead has always been present in fishing, as it is a cheap material and it performs well.
It possesses unique characteristics; high density, malleability, ease of production and cost, making it perfect for a range of fishing products.
So what’s the problem?……. Lead is a highly toxic and poisonous metal!
Lead has well documented hazardous properties and adverse effects on both human health and wildlife. This is why it is placed on the ‘hazardous substance list’, and is included in the candidate list of ‘substances of very high concern’ (SVHC) by the European Chemicals Agency (ECHA).
At all stages of lead usage there are hazards:
Mining to remove from the ground (highly polluting practice)
Manufacturing & smelting (harmful gases released)
Release of lead into the environment (intentionally & unintentionally by anglers)
Recycling of lead (repeated smelting & manufacturing practices releasing harmful gases)
The demand for lead is increasing, and demand outstrips (the finite) supply, so any continual use of lead requires more mining and processing (recycling) to meet demand, promoting the cyclical hazards. Normally recycling of materials is to be aspired to, but this is not the case with lead, as any processing is hazardous.
The best and safest place for lead is in its natural domain – locked in the earth’s crust.
Lead will not change over time, it is a material in its final state (having decayed from uranium), and it will not become less toxic or less of a risk. Unless it is physically removed, any lead weights or lead containing products released into an aquatic environment are there indefinitely.
Over the course of the many years that lead and fishing have been intertwined, our lakes, rivers and environment have seen a continual increase in lead release from fishing.
This is a worrying trend that needs to stop, so the accumulation of lead already deposited in our lakes and rivers ceases to grow.
Spend £350.00 or more to qualify for 0% Interest Finance.
Only available to UK residents over 18, subject to terms and conditions.
More information
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