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#1
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I had a very frustrating few hours fishing floaters on Saturday.
The swans were a pain in the arse, but the most frustrating part was watching the carp take all the freebie's and my hookbait being left well alone!! I was using dog biscuits that I had flavoured with Liquid Molasses, mounted on a hair of 4lb Shinobi hooklength to 6lb Maxima, 4 feet from the controller float. I lost count of the number of fish that started to rise to the hookbait but turned away, only to take some freebies under a foot away! I tried swapping to a 3lb flourocarbon hooklength, but this just sank and pulled the biscuits right next to the controller. Hook was a PR27 size 14, I tried dropping this down to a 18. I put fresh bait on the hook every 10 minutes. Tried half a biscuit. Nothing I did made any difference, hookbait remained untouched - while the freebies were sucked down with confidence. I must have got through nearly a pint of biscuits over the course of the day, with no fish hooked! What can I do to improve my presentation?? __ Matt |
#2
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In message , "Matt (IS Team)"
writes I had a very frustrating few hours fishing floaters on Saturday. The swans were a pain in the arse, but the most frustrating part was watching the carp take all the freebie's and my hookbait being left well alone!! I was using dog biscuits that I had flavoured with Liquid Molasses, mounted on a hair of 4lb Shinobi hooklength to 6lb Maxima, 4 feet from the controller float. I lost count of the number of fish that started to rise to the hookbait but turned away, only to take some freebies under a foot away! I tried swapping to a 3lb flourocarbon hooklength, but this just sank and pulled the biscuits right next to the controller. Hook was a PR27 size 14, I tried dropping this down to a 18. I put fresh bait on the hook every 10 minutes. Tried half a biscuit. Nothing I did made any difference, hookbait remained untouched - while the freebies were sucked down with confidence. I must have got through nearly a pint of biscuits over the course of the day, with no fish hooked! What can I do to improve my presentation?? Something I've always wanted to try is effectively an upside-down float, to lift the trace out of the water. Imagine one of those really big pole floats with a long fibre stem and a spherical body. Thread it onto the line so that it's almost as far from the hook as the length of the stem. Then shot it *above* the float, so that the float cocks upside-down with the stem waving in the air. With the weight of the bait pulling it over, it should leave the bait sat on the surface with no line in the water visible to the carp. You'd probably have to make it yourself rather than actually using a pole float, but I reckon it could work. Is this where someone tells me Drennan have been making them for years? -- Steve Walker |
#3
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In message , "Matt (IS Team)"
writes I had a very frustrating few hours fishing floaters on Saturday. The swans were a pain in the arse, but the most frustrating part was watching the carp take all the freebie's and my hookbait being left well alone!! I was using dog biscuits that I had flavoured with Liquid Molasses, mounted on a hair of 4lb Shinobi hooklength to 6lb Maxima, 4 feet from the controller float. I lost count of the number of fish that started to rise to the hookbait but turned away, only to take some freebies under a foot away! I tried swapping to a 3lb flourocarbon hooklength, but this just sank and pulled the biscuits right next to the controller. Hook was a PR27 size 14, I tried dropping this down to a 18. I put fresh bait on the hook every 10 minutes. Tried half a biscuit. Nothing I did made any difference, hookbait remained untouched - while the freebies were sucked down with confidence. I must have got through nearly a pint of biscuits over the course of the day, with no fish hooked! What can I do to improve my presentation?? Something I've always wanted to try is effectively an upside-down float, to lift the trace out of the water. Imagine one of those really big pole floats with a long fibre stem and a spherical body. Thread it onto the line so that it's almost as far from the hook as the length of the stem. Then shot it *above* the float, so that the float cocks upside-down with the stem waving in the air. With the weight of the bait pulling it over, it should leave the bait sat on the surface with no line in the water visible to the carp. You'd probably have to make it yourself rather than actually using a pole float, but I reckon it could work. Is this where someone tells me Drennan have been making them for years? -- Steve Walker |
#4
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In article , Matt (IS Team)
wrote: The swans were a pain in the arse, but the most frustrating part was watching the carp take all the freebie's and my hookbait being left well alone!! I was using dog biscuits that I had flavoured with Liquid Molasses, mounted on a hair of 4lb Shinobi hooklength to 6lb Maxima, 4 feet from the controller float. I lost count of the number of fish that started to rise to the hookbait but turned away, only to take some freebies under a foot away! OK, they were line shy,,, I tried swapping to a 3lb flourocarbon hooklength, but this just sank and pulled the biscuits right next to the controller. Hook was a PR27 size 14, I tried dropping this down to a 18. I put fresh bait on the hook every 10 minutes. Tried half a biscuit. Nothing I did made any difference, hookbait remained untouched - while the freebies were sucked down with confidence. This is ridiculously light tackle for carp - scale up a bit and hide the line. If the fish are small you may get away with 8lb bs but 12-15 might be better, use much larger hooks, about #4 would be right. Take a sliced loaf, sread it all out, spray with green food dye and replace the loaf in it's bag. (Uneven spray will creep and even out over a little while.) Toss a few freebies among lilly pads and under marginal vegetation. Try not to let the swans see you doing this, as long as they don't twig by your actions they will ignore a green crust unless they actually bump into it (but once they do twig you can forget the tactic for that year.) Fish with just a crust baited hook on the line. Usually fish in the lillies will feed first, cast the bread into a gap, lay the line over the top of a lillypad and draw the crust up to the edge so only the bait is visible to the fish. When you get a take let about a foot of line go then hit and hold hard - you must keep the fish on the surface so forget baitrunners and clutches. If the baits under the bank are taken push just the tip of the rod over the bank and lower the bait to the surface allowing no line to touch the water, keep two feet of line in hand and let yhe fish take this before you strike. Hit and hold again... Cheerio, -- |
#5
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In article , Matt (IS Team)
wrote: The swans were a pain in the arse, but the most frustrating part was watching the carp take all the freebie's and my hookbait being left well alone!! I was using dog biscuits that I had flavoured with Liquid Molasses, mounted on a hair of 4lb Shinobi hooklength to 6lb Maxima, 4 feet from the controller float. I lost count of the number of fish that started to rise to the hookbait but turned away, only to take some freebies under a foot away! OK, they were line shy,,, I tried swapping to a 3lb flourocarbon hooklength, but this just sank and pulled the biscuits right next to the controller. Hook was a PR27 size 14, I tried dropping this down to a 18. I put fresh bait on the hook every 10 minutes. Tried half a biscuit. Nothing I did made any difference, hookbait remained untouched - while the freebies were sucked down with confidence. This is ridiculously light tackle for carp - scale up a bit and hide the line. If the fish are small you may get away with 8lb bs but 12-15 might be better, use much larger hooks, about #4 would be right. Take a sliced loaf, sread it all out, spray with green food dye and replace the loaf in it's bag. (Uneven spray will creep and even out over a little while.) Toss a few freebies among lilly pads and under marginal vegetation. Try not to let the swans see you doing this, as long as they don't twig by your actions they will ignore a green crust unless they actually bump into it (but once they do twig you can forget the tactic for that year.) Fish with just a crust baited hook on the line. Usually fish in the lillies will feed first, cast the bread into a gap, lay the line over the top of a lillypad and draw the crust up to the edge so only the bait is visible to the fish. When you get a take let about a foot of line go then hit and hold hard - you must keep the fish on the surface so forget baitrunners and clutches. If the baits under the bank are taken push just the tip of the rod over the bank and lower the bait to the surface allowing no line to touch the water, keep two feet of line in hand and let yhe fish take this before you strike. Hit and hold again... Cheerio, -- |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Presenting poppers | Joseph Ritz | Fly Fishing | 10 | September 2nd, 2004 03:56 PM |