Hey jrs3, I don't mean to be rude, but I like to be honest: The chart is a pain in a chartist's eye. You don't even know how to draw trendlines / channels!
You have used lines and just planted them the way they fit the best to the bodies of the candles - that's a total no-no.
It's not the bar "body" that counts, but actual bar range - the price areas traded. This is a big problem a lot of candle chartists get wrong, and it's a big problem with candlestick charts in itself. I used to be a candle freak (yes, read all the Nison books), but gave candles up totally for bar charts, because they're misleading. The problem with candles is that their fat bodies visually distract from the actual range of the bar, and it gives people false impressions of trading ranges. Now draw trendlines that fit to the bodies rather than the wicks, and the chaos is complete.
Here you go for instruction on that particular chart:
- Referring to all bars after the long one covered by that blue vertical line...
1. Start line at 2nd bar top
2. End line at 7th bar top
3. Copy that line, and attach it to 3rd bar bottom
Now you should have 2 totally parallel lines, resembling a channel. As it will turn out later on, the 12th bar bottom just touches that actual channel bottom nicely, then bounces up. And you could have acted on that for a nice long, had you drawn your channels properly.
Also, you will figure that the upper channel line on that chart has not actually been broken yet, if you draw the lines properly. But hey, no doubt it looks pretty bullish.
Get rid of that trendline chaos, never "cut" through bars drawing a trendline, and make sure channels are channels, i.e. parallel.
Don't worry, there's a million traders who don't know how to draw a trendline...
Hope that helps,
Scientist