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Feeding the swim
The Method
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Feeding the swim

 
 

groundbaitHow to feed the swim

So you have set up all of your gear in your chosen swim, and are ready to start fishing. Do you just cast out and wait for a carp to come along and find your bait? Well you could, and eventually it may happen, but it would be a bit like putting a chocolate drop in a hall and telling a dog to find it. If you could keep it interested enough to keep looking, then it would eventually find it. Otherwise it would give up and go elsewhere. Put a line of chocolate drops in a trail leading to yours however, and the dog will find it much quicker. Put a few highly scented drops near your drop, and the dog will be there in seconds. The same applies to carp fishing. One bait in a 3-acre lake won't be found very quickly especially if the lake bottom is silty and the bait is not very visible. You need to attract the carp to your bait and then hold them there. So how do you do this?

Feeding with particles

One of my favourite methods is using particles. These are very small pieces of foodstuff, which may give off a scent, and take the carp a while to mop up, therefore keeping them in the vicinity of your bait. Of course, accuracy becomes important here, as you need the carp to find your bait right there where the particles are. I have seen anglers cast a hook bait and then spray particles all around the area within about a 40 feet radius of the bait. So how do you achieve this accuracy?

There are several ways to feed particles, and it will depend on the type you are using. If you are margin fishing, then maybe you can simply drop or throw the particles in to your swim. But for fishing farther out or in windy conditions, this is not particle. For dry particles such as trout pellets, one easy way is to use PVA bags. These small plastic bags come in a variety of types, but basically they all do the same thing. They hold a selection of your chosen particle, are attached to your rig, and when they are immersed in water they dissolve, placing your loose feed right there with your bait and rig.

For wet particles such as hemp, PVA is no use, as it will dissolve on contact. Another method must be found. One favourite method is the bait rocket or spod. These devices are basically plastic tubes blocked at one end with cork or polystyrene and attached at the other end to line on a spare rod, The tube is then filled with particles and cast to your chosen fishing spot. The tube will up-end on impact with the water, spilling the particles into the lake. Continually casting the spod will soon produce a good bed of bait, after which the rod is put aside for later use.

Bait boats

Another but more expensive method of getting your bait out there is to use a bait boat, but make sure they are not banned on your water before using. The good thing about bait boats is that you can fish into very awkward areas and still be sure that your free offerings are right by your hook bait. Fill the boat with free offerings and your rig and hookbait and let the boat take everything right to where you want it, maybe right under an overhanging tree on the edge of an island, and you are fishing areas that a lot of other anglers can't reach.

feeding in the marginsFeeders

Feeders are another good way of getting smaller amounts of particles into the swim, or use a Method Feeder, coated in groundbait containing a high proportion of particles. Hemp binds well with a good Method mix groundbait and will cast a fair distance on the proper rig.

Feeding in the margins

When fishing close in to the margins, feeding little and often usually works well, as it is easy to keep replenishing the bed of bait. If you continue to get runs, then feed more, say every 1/2-hour at least. This will keep the fish interested and in your swim. If nothing materialises however, beware of overfeeding. The situation you don't want is for there to be so much feed in your swim, that they don't need to take your bait.

Follow this advice and try to get the carp feeding right where you want them. Believe me, once carp get their heads down on a bed of particles, the fishing can be fantastic. I have even had to stop using two rods because I couldn't keep up with the runs. Give it a try and see of it works for you.

 
Monroe
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