Stillwater carp give you everything and nothing at the same time. The surface can look calm and empty, while an entire story plays out just beneath it. Sight fishing is about learning to notice what matters, then acting before the moment moves on.
Begin with shapes
Look for bold outlines that interrupt the natural flow of the water. Carp move with purpose. Even when they stop, they hold a shape that sets them apart from weedbeds or drifting debris.
Shadows tell the truth
On bright days, the cleanest signal is often the shadow rather than the fish itself. Track the darker patch under the surface instead of the flash above it.
Movement is a giveaway
Slow rotations, sudden turns, a lazy flick of a tail. Carp rarely stay perfectly still unless asleep. Subtle motion is your window.
- Trailing silt clouds
- Slow pushes of water toward cover
- Shapes rising through thermoclines
How to guide your eyes
Break each swim into sections. Scan in lines rather than staring at one spot. Let your eyes relax and take in broad changes rather than hunting for a whole fish instantly.
Vision gear that supports watercraft
Polarised sunglasses strip glare away so you can read what the surface is trying to hide. Pick a tint that matches your light.
- Marron 247 – for mixed daylight and tracking movement deeper down
- Ambre AMPM – when shade and trees make the margins tricky
- Interrupteur – when conditions can’t decide what they want to be
Keep still. Then move fast.
Stillwater stalking is patience and explosions of action. Freeze when observing. Then be decisive if something shifts. Carp rarely wait for long.
Fortis gear for sight fishing
- AVS – lightweight clarity for long hours scanning the edges.
- Enveloppes – strong coverage when glare sits on the surface.
- Isolateurs – sharpened focus when detail is everything.
See the story under the surface. The more you read, the more opportunities reveal themselves.
Explore eyewear designed for sight fishing:


