Neil Smart
Senior Member
Yep agreed, far more confidence in meat.I’m having less and less confidence in pellet these days, it just doesn’t seem to pull fish like it used to.
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Yep agreed, far more confidence in meat.I’m having less and less confidence in pellet these days, it just doesn’t seem to pull fish like it used to.
I like the barbel blitz too. I do wish they weren't pre drilled though.I like Hinders Barbel Blitz - I'm sure they are an Elips pre-glugged
Don't know( or care that much) but they are a consistent catcher but in warmer months do need checking as can get very soft relatively quickly
Do they catch any better than a standard Elips - ?????
I do use the odd dropper of pellets for baiting up but overall I think you are right.Shoot me Down here but……..
They are used far far too much imo.
Loads of that oily shite chucked into the rivers all the time unnecessarily.
Natural hemp seed and pigeon conditioner mixes are far better things to be offloaded into the river and have imo better pulling power too.
The odd one or two on a hook bait ….. fine but piling them in through feeders and droppers etc ………..just plan and prepare some proper quality bait. What can possibly be better than a bucket full of shiny jet black hemp seeds or a sticky sugary mixed seed mix that came off the hob the day before.
I pester John baker occasionally via email when looking for advice on bait. Such a nice obliging bloke considering he doesn’t make a fortune out of me using my 1 egg mixes once a week at best. But he’s always happy to advise.I do use the odd dropper of pellets for baiting up but overall I think you are right.
About 25 years ago I worked at a stillwater fishery for a couple of years where all pellets other than those supplied by the fishery were banned by the owner. Everyone assumed this was purely for commercial reasons and anglers would constantly moan about it. But the owner was adamant that it was was because he didn’t want his fish stocks constantly consuming high oil trout and salmon pellets as, in his opinion, it lead to overweight bloated unhealthy fish that were shorter lived. The pellets he supplied were a low oil type, and he also only sold them in small bags which were a couple of quid. As a result not many people bought them which suited him fine. So a lot of anglers complained about being not being able to use their own pellets, but then would comment on what great condition and how fighting fit the fish (mainly carp) were. Traditional baits like maggots, worms, bread and meat consistently did the business. Nor where any supplied by the fishery which kind of blew a hole in the ‘greedy fishery owner’ argument.
Can't argue with you on that, I guess you scaling down the pellet sixe gives you the edge.for me pellet still out fishes any other bait for barbel all year round. I use small meat cubes a lot in summer for float fishing but when it’s time for the feeder pellet wins out for me. I’m still a fan of elipse but standard halibut pellets still catch me a lot of fish, especially 6mm.
Do you use dry pellets in a blockend feeder clifffor me pellet still out fishes any other bait for barbel all year round. I use small meat cubes a lot in summer for float fishing but when it’s time for the feeder pellet wins out for me. I’m still a fan of elipse but standard halibut pellets still catch me a lot of fish, especially 6mm.
Are black caps your go to feeder or something else?I use a mix of 3mm and 4mm pellets in the feeder, you can vary the mix to suit conditions so more 4mm if the flow is harder or you want a slower release. I wouldn't use even half a bag of feed pellets in a days feeder fishing. The other advantage is its so clean and easy, I just mix the pellets into a ziplock freezer bag and stick them in my bag or waist pouch, a small bag of hook size pellets and away you go. No taking ground bait buckets, mixing on the bank, trying to keep it damp etc. Catches me barbel every where I go, best recent example would be the lower Severn which I only fished for the first time last season, Ive had 7 barbel in 7 visits so far (includes two blanks).
You make a very salient point about planning & preparation and you are bang on. In an ideal world my first line of attack for most days would be hemp, caster and a change of maggot & worm. Early season when I'm getting out 3-4 times a week I can do this as the natural bait can always be utilised in some way shape or form. As it gets into Autumn and my chance to get out declines , It's just a lot harder to find the time to get natural baits being where I am and working full-time, often away from home. I have a freezer tray literally full of bags of maggots and casters that were bought in for a autumn/winter session only to not get used cos it was raging through/ in flood etc..Shoot me Down here but……..
They are used far far too much imo.
Loads of that oily shite chucked into the rivers all the time unnecessarily.
Natural hemp seed and pigeon conditioner mixes are far better things to be offloaded into the river and have imo better pulling power too.
The odd one or two on a hook bait ….. fine but piling them in through feeders and droppers etc ………..just plan and prepare some proper quality bait. What can possibly be better than a bucket full of shiny jet black hemp seeds or a sticky sugary mixed seed mix that came off the hob the day before.
Yes, I use black caps and have cow leads from 1-5ozs as required although I rarely use more than 3oz.Are black caps your go to feeder or something else?