There are a number of
baits that can be used with the feeders described in part 1. Both
traditional and new, manufactured type baits can work equally well.
The thing I find strange is that fish can display a preference on any
given day. The Method and other feeders are intended to produce a
pile of free offerings in which is located the baited hook. The
intention, at least in part, being that the fish will pick up the
hookbait unintentionally when sucking in some of the free offerings.
Indeed some have reported using a bare hook and still catching fish
proving this happens.
Yet I have had several
days when a change of bait has brought about a noticeable change in
fortunes. It therefore pays to carry a selection of baits.
The following is my
selection. There may be others but this is enough choices for me.
Maggots
Normally fished in
multiples and dead (AKA dead reds). A live bunch of maggots will
break up the parcel of groundbait or pellets on or in the feeder.
Hence dead ones are used. There are a few ways of killing maggots.
For a few hookbaits
they can be rolled between the fingers or on your thigh ten to twenty
times being sufficient to kill them. Another method is to put a
number of them in a container of cold water then gradually add hot
water until they are dead. Probably the most used method though will
be freezing.
One problem some people
find is that when defrosted frozen maggots can turn black. I think
the reason for this is that it has taken too long for the maggots to
freeze. To prevent this I freeze in small batches, enough for
hookbait for a day's fishing. I have found the small plastic pots my
local pizza shop puts its garlic mayo in to be an ideal size. Small
batches will freeze quicker than a pint in one container or bag. The
batches should be placed either on the fast freeze tray or directly
on the coolant channels on the bottom of a shelf.
You can place defrosted
maggots in water on your side tray to try and stop air getting to
them and turning them black but I have never found the need with my
method of freezing.
Three or four maggots
on a 16 hook like the B911 works well for me.
Sweetcorn
Another traditional but
effective bait. One grain is normally sufficient. I prefer tinned
corn (any brand/price) as this seems to be firmer and thus more able
to withstand being squeezed along with the pellets or groundbait. I
freeze leftover corn for use another day but after home freezing it
is always quite soft, I think for the same reason maggots can turn
black. The defrosted corn I find better for fishing corn skin or as
the whole grain on the pole.
I think how you hook
the corn is important. It may be, it may not. But I am given a
little bit of confidence doing what I think is “right”.
Most grains are flat to
a degree, or at least you can find such in the tin. For the Banjo I
hook through the narrow side so that the grain lies flat on the
bottom of the feeder. Then with pellets squeezed over this it is not
likely to burst the hook from the grain.
I also hook this way
for The Method as I feel the hook is less likely to catch on the ribs
of the feeder.
For the Pellet feeder I
hook the grain the other way, through the flat side, as I feel the
grain then sits in the depression in the pellets better.
Others will say it
makes no difference how you hook the corn. I will not disagree with
them. I just have my preferred method.
Meat
Mention
meat and people immediately think luncheon meat however for the
feeder I think polony. For those that don't know, polony is a type
of sausage. Found in the chilled meat sector of your supermarket and
always in my experience in a red plastic wrapper.
Why
polony and not luncheon meat? Two reasons. First is that polony is
much firmer and thus I think more able to withstand being compressed
into or onto a feeder. Second is that I can slice polony and freeze
the slices knowing it will defrost much the same as when it was
frozen. I can then take just a few of slices which can be enough for
a day's fishing. I find luncheon meat, when frozen and defrosted can
tend to float.
Luncheon
meat can work and I have used it when I have forgotten the polony.
You
can cut the polony up into cubes or use meat punches to get hook
sized pieces.
Boilies, Wafters,
Bandums etc.
These
baits are manufactured purely as bait, not something like meat &
corn taken from the supermarket shelf. Boilies were developed by the
carp angling fraternity and adopted by the general coarse and match
angler because they catch fish.
For general coarse work boilies tend to be smaller than those used by specimen carp anglers, in the 8-10 mm range. The shape was then adapted from spherical to dumbbell or barrel shape to make them easier to use with a bait band, though I don't use a band as I explain below.
There
are a vast array of flavours and colours and they can either sink or
float. I cannot say anything other than if you want to use them
carry a variety. I have used them to good effect and as always, on
occasion the fish can display a preference for a certain flavour,
colour and buoyancy.
I
have used floating baits on a four inch hooklength so the bait is
popped up that far above the feeder once released from it. You can
also critically balance it with shot on the hooklength or a heavy
hook so it sits just on the bottom or just off it but is easily
sucked up by the fish. And of course the sinking versions act like
other baits and sit on the bottom until taken up by a fish.
These
baits are always fished on a hair rig. There are four basic ways of
attaching them. First is to use a bait band around dumbbell shaped
bait. The negative side of this method is that if the bait gets
caught in the landing net mesh a thrashing fish can break the hair
and you then need to fit a new hooklength.
You
can use a bayonet made from the shank of an eyed hook to impale the
bait. The bayonet is tied to the hair as you would a bait band
before tying the hook. The bait will pull off if caught in the
landing net.
You
can pull a hair loop through the bait. Some people will use a boily
stop to hold the hair in place. Again this can cause the hair to
break with a thrashing fish in the net. I have never found the need
to use a stop. I use a fine baiting needle to pull the hair through.
The hole through the bait is small enough to grip the loop and knot.
Finally
you could drill a wider hole through the bait and pull a bait band
through. Drilling a hole though may split the bait.
Any
method that pulls something through the bait without anchoring it
will allow it to be pulled off without breaking the hair if caught in
the landing net.
Hard Pellet
Really
much the same as the boily and wafter except that most pellets will
sink. An unpumped and thus buoyant expander pellet could be used but
will quickly soften and come off the hook.
Most
people will put the pellet in a bait band. While I will do this with
4 & 6 mm pellets I drill a hole in 8 mm & larger and pull a
bait band through.
One
trick with hard pellets is to soak them in vegetable oil before use.
This is supposed to slow the breakdown of the pellet in the water. I
have found that it can take several weeks for the pellets to fully
absorb the oil. So this is is best done in batches and the oiled
pellets stored in a leak proof container until there is no visible
oil. The pellets don't need to be submerged in oil but given a good
coating and then left. Invert the container every few days for the
excess oil to reach all the pellets.
Groundbait
There
are plenty of commercially made Method groundbaits. I cannot
recommend one over another as I don't use them. I can only suggest
you try different ones until you find one that works for you and that
you find easy to mix to the right consistency, and gets results!
The
groundbait should mould to the feeder well, stay on through the cast
and on sinking. Once on the bottom it should break down or not as is
your preference. I would recommend testing groundbait mixes by
filling the feeder and dropping it from height into a bucket of
water. Though getting bites when in use is also a good indicator the
groundbait is doing what it should.
I
make my own groundbait that seems to work. I describe how in this
blog post.
https://neilofthenene.blogspot.com/2014/09/bits-bobs-groundbait.html
Feed Pellet
Preparation
For
me this is simple and done before leaving home in the morning. I
just put micro pellets into a tub, put enough water in to just wet
the top layer then lid on and leave. A shake of the tub once set up
and the pellets are ready.
But
I use Skrettings pellets. The very occasional time I have used other
brands it has not been that simple. I can only advise you to
experiment.
Some people follow the “Minute per mm” guide. So for a two mil micro pellet you soak the pellets for two minutes then drain the water off. 4 minutes for a 4 mil pellet.
One
word though on the Skrettings. I did once get a batch of micros that
were very light in colour, they are normally dark brown, these
pellets went to mush if soaked for too long. So with those I adopted
the two minute rule.
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