Jump to content

salokcinnodrog

Super Moderator
  • Posts

    19,431
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    278

Everything posted by salokcinnodrog

  1. I use Verselle Laga garlic oil bird food in some of my baits. Good additive in my pop-ups, but it does stink a bit!
  2. Found them rock hard, but they definitely catch!
  3. Good bait for chub, even as they float. Carefully hook them, with maybe a cork ball on the hook eye, then freeline or drift them in the current, although you might need a controller to get a good straight drift as they are so light.
  4. It's a cancer caused by aflatoxins. Bird peanuts used to be the leftovers, quite literally the rubbish that hit the floor, got wet, mildewed and attacked by bugs. However I think you will find they now have to be top grade human quality, so these aflatoxins are not present in them anymore. A 1kg bag is actually perfect, it stop you using too many. If you work on one bag per trip or for 48 hours then that prevents the 'addiction' that fishing with too many can create. Obviously, don't forget, soak for a minimum of 24hours and boil for 20minutes. Peanuts while they are high in Vitamin E, due to, I think, an enzyme inhibitor it stops the nutrition being utilised, so high quantities of peanuts are not good for carp, and many places ban them. Dried mealworms float, might be some alternative thinking coming around, like putting them in groundbait and wet spod mixes for floater fishing, or even as freebies for surface fishing... Or maybe grinding into base mixes... As for the wild bird seed, £1 a kilo may be slightly more than £12 for 15 or 20kg from an animal food store, but I have bought bags from the supermarket when out fishing just to top up, or not been able to get to the animal feed shop. The preparation is easy when fishing, I just pour boiling water over them in a bait bucket, put the lid on and they are ready 24hours later. You can boil them after 24hours, it releases sugars, and does make them more attractive.
  5. Welcome to the forum. Anyone if you put it in the right place! Almost every single boilie available will catch fish, what sort of boilie do you want? Where are you fishing, a runs water or a harder lakes after big fish? Do you want an attractor bait or a food bait? Take your pick: Rod Hutchinson KMG, Monster Crab Crafty Catcher King Prawn. Dynamite, various flavours can't remember them all. Nutrabaits... Just four bait manufacturers, there are loads more...
  6. Join the club! Ok, I have fished a few reservoirs over the years, so I'll try to give my best advice, but it will be long winded. Your tackle, 10000's will be fine, but bear in mind with 0.35mm 15lb line you will probably be looking at casting no more than 90metres. You may need to down the line size, possibly to 10lb and a shockleader to get any further, or as your other option, get Big Pit reels. Believe it or not, most of my reservoir fish have come at less than 100 metres range, in fact many within 50metres. As much time looking and walking as you can, usually I spend around hours looking certain areas even before I start. The shape of the reservoir can make a difference, a bowl you can walk one bank, if you have the sun behind you, with binoculars, if a fish rolls, you can often see it. If however it is divided into separate arms or bays then you will be needing to look closely. For some reason, the fish can really follow the wind, the stronger the better. It may not be fun facing into a strong gale force wind with pouring rain, but I have had my best result on Alton in those conditions, when I was quite literally peeking out of the door, or unable to sleep because I was worried my brolly was going to get blown away, and I have had a couple of nights when I was holding it down, with extra long pegs. A good strong bivvy is a must, cheap domes don't last! I rarely prebait, other than putting the last of my bait in at the end of a session. I have a good bait, I know it works, however it can take a couple of days for carp to come into an area. Every fish I have caught has come on bottom baits or pop-ups, none on zigs! Be confident in your rigs, a plain knotless knot rig with line aligner works, often no need to faff about. This 'slope line' is often a good place to fish, it is the spot I have caught many fish, both bream and carp, more so than deeper water. Most of my fish have come from between 6 and 15 feet deep.
  7. I have used them in the past, you do have to make sure that they don't break. I had one break after it was lit, it fell off the coil and melted a hole in a bucket lid. Mosquito repellants are personal, and mosquitoes in one place will respond differently to different supposed repellants. Some people get on alright with Avon Skin so Soft, yet others don't. At Nazeing Skin so Soft was normally ok and kept me bug free, yet at Taverham Mills I had to use Deet based repellant. The higher Deet content the more repellant, yet the more of a headache it can produce. It will also break down plastics! Lifesystems Expedition + is around 50% Deet, as is Jungle Formula. The repellant effect of 8 hours is ok in summer, but come autumn if I spray just before dark, I could end up being bitten before I wake up. I'm not normally too bad with insect bites, just a slight itch the day after, but I have had serious problems when I was bitten by something in long grass and ended up with blood poisoning that saw a hospital visit. That would be my own fault for not spraying...
  8. You can get Solar Indicator Heads only, or the complete P1 indicator system. I use the Short Arm Titaniums as swingers, quiver arm (tight line indicators) or set slack at maximum drop for running leads and slack lines: https://www.solartackle.co.uk/gear/titanium-indicator-heads
  9. The best binder to keep it stiff is white breadcrumb. Vitalin and plain white crumb takes its time breaking down.
  10. Joel, Welcome to Carp.com. Plenty of carp in various Midland rivers, the Severn Trent area has plenty of river carp fishing, and Ian has very nicely pointed out a good spot. East Midlands has The Soar, which I believe is a tributary of The Trent. Various clubs along there, so may be worth a dig around.
  11. Is this any use? It is page 2 of a Chod rig thread: There are some pictures on there, and I have used a ring swivel, but it is fallen flat Please note, I do still make sure that if I have used a leader of any sort that the beads will go over my leader knot and the rig can follow.
  12. The 10000 does have a bigger body, whereas on the smaller sizes I think it is just spool size.
  13. I have a distinct preference for Shimano reels, but I would definitely agree more modern Shimanos are not as good as older models, with a few exceptions. I used to work in a tackle shop, so played with plenty, my view is do not waste your money on the DL range, stick with the ST.
  14. The D-rig is the basis for a few rigs. A Chod rig relies on a D. You can even end the D up the hooklink, making it a blowback rig. I must admit I tie a longer knotless section so the ring is situated close and tight to the shank near the bend for pop-ups, I personally found it gave me better hookups. Please note, that is my findings on pop-ups fished close to the bottom. D-rigs do also work very well with snowman presentations as well as bottom baits. I believe It was in this situation, as a bottom bait rig that Roger Smith came up with it, in the blowback format, for fish that had sussed the original hair at Savay.
  15. I found spodding with braid absolutely horrible. If you hit the clip hard, because braid has no stretch you lose a spomb, even with a shockleader, or you break a line clip. (And I have). Braid can also be terrible for wind knots, and I also wore grooves in the tip and butt ring of the Spod rod I was using. On my spod rod I had to go back to 15lb mono with an Amnesia or 40lb Greased Weasel Leader and a medium Spomb. The distance I am spodding at is a lot more than 20 wraps (around 75metres), probably closer to 100 or more, and I no longer have problems with lost tackle
  16. I buy Eyelevel sunglasses, they are decent wearing for all times, I rarely go out anywhere without mine. The only problem with that is I have a tendency to break or lose them, so this is saved: https://eyelevel-uk.com/search?type=product,article,page&q=Fishing* I had it explained to me as Most cheap polarised glasses are only one layer of polarisation, if you tilt your head 90degrees to the side the polarisation effect does not work, so a second layer is put on at that angle. That then increases the cost. I have had various sunglasses over the years, from Optix Cormorants, around £45 in the 1990's, to Fox, to Sunglasses Warehouse, and to be honest the Eyelevel I found as comfortable, and as good as the Optix.
  17. I have moved this into Tackle and Equipment. Apparently these are what Dave Lane uses: https://www.totalfishinggear.co.uk/carp/bite-alarms/tf-gear-mag-runner-ignite-bite-alarm I have seen them in the flesh when I used to work in a tackle shop, they do look pretty good, never had any returns, and according to Dave Lane in the TFG catalogue article, pretty bulletproof
  18. It was recommended when I was fishing at Nazeing probably around 2008, maybe earlier, a couple of fish were found tethered, printed in the national press and on a big thread on here, started by Jemsue, unable to get rid of the rig, attached to leadcore. Rob Hughes and Simon Crow reported them in CarpTalk. Korda then backtracked what they said.
  19. That is one reason I try to put as little money in his pocket as possible. His Embryo project may be good for angling, although over stocking a lake with tench is not a good idea. His lead clips are shameful, the lead clip should always lockdown and not move. Yet it only takes a tug for the lead clip to release from the swivel. Every other manufacturer knows this, and pegs them or has theirs drilled so they can be tied in place. You should be able to use any size 8 swivel, not just Korda's which are a slightly different size. And some of the tips coming out of the Korda company have left a number of fish... 'Using a needle Put your leadcore beads on sideways' that stopped rigs ejecting and lead to fish getting snagged up on leadcore.
  20. I found Kryston Supersilk to be too thin for its breaking strain, there were only two of their hooklinks I didn't get on with, that and Jackal, which I found would strip itself far too easily. The coating wasn't tough enough.
  21. I must have been bored, I sat and D'd some hooks this week for D-rigs, so I have plenty ready for tying. Standard rig ring on 15lb mono. The hard part is whipping the second end of the mono down as you are going inside the loop. You also have to be careful with the glue not to splurge over the eye.
  22. Kind of. From using nuclear or atomic energy workers as priest to get planets to join the Foundation, after the breakdown of the Empire, to traders being the spread of the Foundation. Then add in an unpredicted anomaly and how that was dealt with. I read Puckoon years ago when I was still at school, I think primary or middle school. Even then I found it funny.
  23. I used to have a number of John Wilson's books, some of his trips were amazing. Something else he wrote was a Guide to Fishing in Norfolk and Suffolk, the rivers, lakes, both day ticket, season and syndicate as well as The Broads. There were a few done over the years, updates. My non fishing books on the bank are often Isaac Asimov, and Frederick Forsyth, although I usually mix up with other authors like Lee Child, in fact pretty much anything. The current Asimov books I have been reading are The Foundation series which I think are brilliant sci-fi, and he was well ahead of his time. Lee Child books I can read, but after reading them, the Hollywood choice of Tom Cruise to play Reacher is totally wrong in the films. If you like old fashioned comedic satire, Tom Sharpe, the Wilt series are very funny.
  24. I rarely use anything less than a size 4. A carp does not know what a hook is, well not until it is removed. It is the fact that in the cases of most pop-up rigs they can't see it. The sharpness of a different size of hook does not change on the thickness of the hook. In many cases the size 4 of a pattern of hook is on the same gauge wire as a 6 or even 8. In fact I can think of a number of size 2's and 4's that are on a thinner gauge wire than a size 8. Yes you can improve or even sharpen a hook, I don't it, it comes out the pack, the point gets checked, the hook gets tied on. I want a big hook, more gape to grab hold, and a straight point is far better at grabbing hold than a beaked hook. To me a beaked hook is only good over gravel that will turn a straight point over. The D-rig is not a fashion icon, it was developed for a particular reason; To counter rig shy carp at Savay, to give additional movement that wasn't happening with a standard hair. Rod Hutchinson developed his sliding hair while Roger Smith came up with the D. It also happens to be very effective with pop-ups and snowman baits.
  25. In that case, put your tin hat on, because journalists have no writing skills, do not know how to make a point or even write decent English. Do me a favour, don't write 3 or 4 posts, put it all into one. The grief it causes the moderators and myself having to merge a series of posts into one. As for Terry Hearn, I've been around a bit, never found anyone with one exception who has a bad word to say about Terry Hearn. Many anglers got into carp fishing because of him and his writings. He is not overinflated, does not have an ego, is the nicest guy going. He talks because that is his nature. He shows his enthusiasm for fishing, his writing, his slideshows.
×
×
  • Create New...