Martin Stevens
Senior Member
Martin,
The 'stick' method will not be effective at all in running water. It is designed to hide hook links in lakes, whereby the link is still covered by the stick mix after the PVA has melted, because there is nothing to disturb it.
In a flowing river, the PVA would melt in seconds, allowing the stick mix to be washed away by the current within another few seconds, leaving the link exposed as though the stick had never been there. That does of course depend slightly on the flow and consistency of the mix, but to be honest the mix would have to contain araldite to make it work, it really is a non starter.
Cheers, Dave.
hi dave thanks for your thoughts. While you have some valid points I believe that with proper testing in water clear enough to see what's going on, I do believe it would be possible to get a version working.
Not all pva dissolves at the same rate as I'm sure you're aware. Combine a slow melting pva with a sturdy mix wetted using an oil based flavour and I think it could work. The rivers I fish are rarely very deep or horrendously rapid which would also work in my favour.
Having seen underwater footage of the effect flows have on bait as well as carrying out my own tests I believe that unless very dry, groundbait and small particles tend to stay in place longer than larger baits, which I imagine is probably down to them having less area for the flow to push against. I've had patches of groundbait stay pretty much intact for over eight hours. Admittedly maybe it would be better if some fish ate it first!
Cheers
m
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