Effective Winter Baits
Tempting lethargic fish to feed in winter can be
particularly tricky as most species’ metabolism slows right down in colder
water.
They need far less food than they require during the
rest of the year when they are much more active, so to cajole them into feeding
you need to alter your feeding approach as well as selecting the right bait.
Here's some great baits that have
a top reputation of catching even the most stubborn of fish in tough winter
conditions.
Bread is a top winter bait especially on the rivers where chub and roach both adore flake, crust or punch. Although mashed bread is widely used as groundbait when bread fishing, for winter use a finely liquidised white, sliced loaf which produces smaller particle sizes and is less likely to fill up a feeding fish; remove crusts from the slices for an even finer mix if the going is really tough. A PVA stick of compressed crumb is a little used but brilliantly effective winter carp tactic – use in conjunction with a single grain of white, rubber corn
Maggots
One of the very best coldwater carp catchers. A mesh PVA bag
of maggots, in conjunction with a bunch of grubs on a hair-rigged maggot clip,
is one of the most reliable of winter carp tactics. Maggots are easily digested,
colourful and loved by carp. Cast regularly and tightly to build an area and
don’t forget to include a couple of rubber grubs on the rig to balance the
weight of the hook.
Spices
Spicy flavours have long had an association with winter fishing and with the proliferation of Asian stores there is a bewildering range of brilliant additives with which to spice up your baits. A sprinkling of turmeric on maggots, a shake of garam masala in groundbait, chilli-laced hemp, coriander flavoured corn, meat dusted with garlic salt and pastes made with belachan paste are just some of the spicy options – which are only limited by your imagination.
Hi-attract paste hook baits are only one part of the winter
paste story as the versatility of the bait lends itself to a number of different
applications. Most notably it can be used as a ‘plug’ for watch-style leads or
as a wrap around for any bomb or hook bait; it can even be ‘blobbed’ onto PVA
stringers. The paste used in this way gives a longer-term leakage of
flavour-charged particles into the swim and acts as a great fish-puller,
especially in the rivers. To give a more rapid breakdown for non-hook bait
applications mix pastes with water rather than eggs.
For coldwater commercial carping there are few baits to beat a simple grain or two of sweetcorn. Corn is easily digested, highly visible – even in coloured water – and, unlike maggots, resistant to the attentions of small silvers. A couple of grains hair-rigged through the middle sit perfectly on an 18 but, if the going is really tough, a single grain presented lengthwise on a size 20 should do the trick.
The spicy meat snack checks all of the boxes when it comes to winter fishing, despite the fact it is on the oily side. Highly attractive to carp, chub and barbel it can be whittled down to tiny chunks for use with scaled down line and small hooks, yet it still packs a serious punch in terms of attraction once the outer skin is sliced off. Try a thin slice as a topper for half a 10 mm pop-up boilie for excellent winter carp results.
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