THE carp market today is awash with quality baits. For the young or
inexperienced angler this can be a nightmare. How do you know which bait
to use? Out of all the baits in your local tackle shop, which should
you buy and why?
Over the years I’ve used most of the baits you can
find in a tackle shop, and more besides. I have spent many hours mixing
up many noxious-smelling products in my kitchen, many hours boiling up
different types of particles and seeds, and many hours mixing obscure
flavours in an attempt to find the ultimate carp bait.
Some of these
baits have been highly successful, others have failed miserably. In
fact, some of the baits I’ve made over the years have been more
successful at actually repelling carp than attracting them!
However,
no matter how much experimentation you do, I can almost guarantee that
the best carp baits of all time will not change. The seven I’ve written
about here have done the business for me on numerous occasions on some
of the country’s hardest waters, and will do the business for you too if
you fish well.
Before we get onto the business of talking about each
bait in turn, I’d like to say that all the baits you can buy in your
tackle shop will catch carp. They will work on their day, and some will
even work better than my top seven baits – depending on the angling
pressure the fish have received and the bait that has been used at the
water concerned.
BAIT 7...
|
Vitalin - just add hot water! |
Vitalin
Vitalin is a dog food made from maize meal, meat and bone meal (among other things).
I’ve
put it in at No7 because I’ve caught many fish over the years using it,
especially during the winter months. My most successful winter campaign
ever was based around Vitalin.
While I can’t name the water
concerned, after a few weeks of gentle prebaiting with Vitalin
groundbait balls (with added hemp, tigers, corn and boilies) I managed
to catch many of the biggest fish in the lake.
Vitalin is at the
bottom of this list because it’s not a hook bait (the same goes for
hemp). It’s a groundbait which you can mix with all six other baits on
this list, with the exception of the fluoro pop-ups. To make it up,
simply pour hot water into a bucket of the dry mix, add other
ingredients, stir it up and mould into balls. It’s that simple!
BAIT 6...
|
Carp absolutely love hemp. |
HEMP
All
the hype you see and read about this seed is true. Carp absolutely love
hemp. In fact, they think it tastes fantastic. Even a very small
handful of the stuff can keep fish digging in the lake bed, looking for
food, for hours and hours. I’ve actually stopped carp in their tracks by
throwing individual grains of hemp in front of them.
There was one
occasion when I was sitting up a tree, over the top of a previously
baited area that had been cleaned by the carp. Two fish were cruising
around, seemingly not feeding. One was much bigger than the other.
I
flicked two or three grains (yes, grains!) of hemp into the water,
several metres in front of the cruising fish. As the carp passed beneath
the spot where the hemp had hit the surface, you could clearly see
their animated reactions as they tasted the hemp oil in the water.
The
two carp then cruised over the spot, came round in a big circle and
descended exactly where the hemp had hit the bottom. Several more grains
of hemp and 30 minutes later I caught the bigger one at well over 30lb!
People
often ask me why carp love hemp. The truth is, no-one really knows – we
can only guess. What I would say is that hemp oozes awesome smells and
tasty oils into the water, and that carp find these oils really
attractive. Also, the size of hemp and its texture is important. Carp
love eating small aquatic snails, and hemp closely resembles these in
size and texture.
BAIT 5...
|
Simon prefers to fish pop-ups
as single baits |
Fluoro Pop-Ups
The fact I’ve put fluoro pop-ups at No5 might surprise some people. However, I love these little beauties!
Fluorescent
pop-ups definitely seem to attract carp. Used on their own or as part
of a more complicated trap, I have caught many carp in the last three
years on fluoro hook baits.
I prefer using them as single hook baits.
As fluoro hook baits are usually well overloaded with flavours, they
are very attractive in their own right and don’t need to be used over a
baited area. Fish are quite capable of homing in on them when they’re
used as single hook baits because of the smell they generate within the
water, and also because they can see them clearly (in clear water).
I
think the contrast created between the fluorescent pop-up and the lake
bed is more important than the individual colour of the bait. For
instance, I have caught on white, popped-up fluoro baits fished over
dark, silty lake beds, while bright yellows and pinks have been better
when fished over weed.
When using fluoros, just think about the appearance of the lake bed and use a hook bait that will stand out against it.
Fluoros
are especially good as single hook baits in the winter – and I mean as a
SINGLE hook bait. There is a huge difference between having one hook
bait by itself on the lake bed and one hook bait surrounded by three or
four freebies.
If a fish is only going to sample one boilie, and you
have three freebies, you only have a one-in-four chance of getting a
pick-up. However, if a carp wants to investigate the smell and sight of a
single hook bait, fished on its own, it has no choice but to take it
into its mouth. Then, if the rig is good enough, a take will result.
This
is a very good tactic for those readers who might not have much money,
as single fluoro pop-ups will be all you’ll need to catch in a lot of
situations. I use Crafty Catcher Neons, with the plum and squid flavours
being favourite, and Dynamite’s Frank Warwick baits.
BAIT 4...
|
Frozen boilies are better
than shelf lives. |
Regular Boilies
Boilies
catch the vast majority of carp across England every year. There are
hundreds of excellent boilie types available to buy from tackle shops
and bait companies across the country.
Out of all the boilies on the
market, my advice would be to choose a fishmeal-based bait in the
spring, summer and autumn. Also, frozen readymades tend to be better
because they’re of a higher quality than the shelf life baits you can
find in shops, so I’d recommend them over anything else.
With regards
to which readymades to use, I can only advise on what I’ve been using –
and have recently had success using Yateley Angling Centre’s Squirrel
baits and the Tackle Box’s Ming boilies.
I believe you can buy them
mail order from each shop if you want to try them, though in fairness
all the major bait companies also produce excellent frozen fishmeal
readymades.
You’ll often read advice telling you to get on the same
bait as everyone else on your local lake. I wouldn’t necessarily go
along with this. I am a firm believer in trying something a little
different and creating your own, established bait. In the long term
you’ll have better results doing this than using the same baits as
everyone else.
The subject of boilies is a massive one. I can’t do it
justice in the space I have available here and will look into it in
more detail later in the series.
BAIT 3...
|
Pellets reamain one of the all time great carp catchers. |
Pellets
Pellets
have been around for a very long time. In fact, Dick Walker used to
mash trout pellets up and use them as a paste in the 1950s, I think! If
he’d dropped them in a PVA bag and whacked them into Redmire, he’d have
caned the place – there would have been wet, hessian sacks hanging from
every tree!
Seriously, pellets remain one of the best carp catchers
ever. I use trout pellets, salmon pellets and halibut pellets today on a
regular basis – and I am a great believer in mixing and matching
different sizes and varieties of pellets together to create a
more-confusing baited area for the fish.
It is important to be aware
that not all pellets are the same – the fish can taste the difference. I
will give you an example of this.
One day I decided to test two
different types of pellet on the carp in my pond. Both were exactly the
same size, but of a slightly different colour. The first was a standard
carp pellet, the second a high-performance trout pellet.
I mixed the
two types together and dropped them into my large garden pond. One of my
bigger mirrors cruised towards the baited patch and proceeded to hoover
up virtually every pellet in one go! He then rose off the bottom of the
pond with what must have been an enormous mouthful of food.
Using
the filtering system in his mouth, within three or four seconds the fish
blew just about every single carp pellet back out of its mouth – only
dropping one or two trout pellets as it did so. It then swam off to
digest a sensible-sized mouthful of trout pellets!
Only once the greedy old fish had eaten all the trout pellets did it decide to return and eat the carp pellets.
As
I said, the carp can taste the difference. The difficulty for the
angler is knowing which pellets are high-performance and which aren’t.
Generally speaking, the more money a pellet costs, the better it is –
something you should remember.
BAIT 2...
|
A single tiger nut with no other bait around it is a deadly weapon! |
Tiger Nuts
Tiger nuts are brilliant baits. They give off a great smell and the fish love eating them.
I
once did an experiment with some tanked carp and some tigers. I placed a
handful of the nuts in an old sock, so the carp couldn’t see them, and
suspended the sock in the surface of the water. The carp couldn’t see
what was in the sock, neither could they get hold of the bait.
The
result was a tankful of fish frantically pulling at one of my cheesy old
socks, trying to get at whatever was inside. So yes, carp love the
smell of tigers!
But how should you fish with them? Well,
less-experienced anglers might find it hard to believe, and I do accept
it might take a bit of time to get your head around the concept, but a
single tiger nut fished on its own with NO other bait around it is a
killer weapon.
I have caught a number of large fish (over 35lb) on
tiger nuts fished in this fashion, totally on their own. You can also
fish a tiger over a very small bed of hemp; another tactic that’s been
good for me.
To be honest, any tiger nuts are good, as long as
they’re properly prepared. You can either make your own, buying the dry
nuts in bulk from a specialist seed merchant like Haithes or Hinders, or
you can use the more-convenient Dynamite tinned alternatives – which
can be used straight from the can.
If you do make your own, remember
that tigers are dangerous if used dry, without the right preparation. To
make them safe, soak them for a minimum of 24 hours. Then bring them to
the boil and let them simmer for 30 minutes before allowing them to
stand in their juices for another 24 hours.
BAIT 1...
|
Tinned corn has salt in it - another great carp attractor. |
|
It obviously visually attractive too because plastic corn is so good. |
Sweetcorn
Corn
is my No1 bait by some margin. Its colour, its taste and its texture
are all highly attractive to carp. It has caught me a ridiculous number
of huge fish, including my personal best of 52lb – the late Mary from
Wraysbury.
My favourite brand of sweetcorn (and I’m not sponsored by any food manufacturer!) is Jolly Green Giant Niblets – they rock!
Seriously
though, any corn will work. Apart from the fact carp like its taste,
canned corn has sugar and salt added to it, which are both good carp
attractors. Also, corn has a lot of highly-attractive amino acids that
will give off food signals under the water.
The yellow colour of corn
is also significant, and like the fluoro boilies it is an advantage
when you use it over lake beds where it really stands out. You can use
it in quantity or by itself – again, corn is a hook bait that will work
very well on its own.
It’s also brilliant in cocktails with hemp and
tigers. If you spod out a mixture of hemp and corn into your lake (75
per cent hemp and 25 per cent corn) you won’t go too far wrong.
One
disadvantage is that it’s also liked by nuisance fish and often won’t
stay on the hair for very long. If this is the case, try using plastic
corn imitation hook baits. They do work very well! I have caught fish to
over 30lb using plastic corn hook baits, fished both as single hook
baits and over beds of bait.