Home Outdoor Sports FAQS Fishing Golf swimming Skiing and Skating Cycling Climbing Other Outdoor Sports Camping
Fishing Articles  Outdoor sports > Fishing > Fishing Articles > Big Carp Bait Making Secrets Of Choosing Best Ingredients!

Big Carp Bait Making Secrets Of Choosing Best Ingredients!

2016/7/16 16:34:29

If you want to catch many more big fish then there are some exciting bait substances, fish senses, and vital energy and metabolism clues to help you attract more big fish to your hook baits! Far too many anglers ask themselves the wrong questions about fishing and baits that really are not that important! So begin by thinking more like a fish instead of an angler and get much better at asking yourself the most productive questions that bring success!

By beginning to making homemade baits by starting out by considering what carp are most sensitive to, this is far more likely to succeed than arbitrarily forming a list of ingredients you like the sound of or smell of personally! So many anglers just know the very basics about a carp and it is not surprising that relatively few anglers actually know why a bait or ingredient stimulates carp to take a bait into its mouth - and why some baits and ingredients are multiples of times more effective!

When speaking to many fellow anglers in researching for my ebooks it was clear that the vast majority are dependent on expensive ready made boilies and pellets. When anglers are dependent on ready made baits they are completely at the mercy of others to decide their bait modes of action and competitiveness over other baits, and cost; which is not necessarily an ideal situation to be in. When you are dependent upon ready made baits instead of producing your own, your bait budget is to a very large extent decided by the pricing of ready made baits.

So set your own bait budget, cut your costs in advance and not let someone else decide you're spending for you - and save yourself a genuine fortune! Ready made baits cost so much each year or even per fishing session that undercutting these costs by making your own potent baits is very easy. Of course knowing significant details of things like how and why fish behave in the presence of substances they are sensitive to and so on, and how to exploit such things to get fish hooked on your own unique bait recipes repeatedly again and again is extremely productive!

Bait-making beginners can take many short-cuts by learning and avoiding the kinds of commonest mistakes that other bait-making anglers have made and then avoided themselves over the years through their own experience! Over the last 34 years of carp fishing I have had well over 80 percent of my own homemade baits work on many waters even from the first cast. Sure some waters demand bait changes and adjustments to be successful and these days this often is in regards to out-competing other baits as opposed to simply attracting fish!

Probably the commonest mistake bait-making beginners make is formulating a bait based on their personal opinions and own human perceptions of bait substances aromas, smells, tastes etc. The best way to avoid limiting success of your baits is to start with the fish and what they are most sensitive. Basing your baits on fish sensitivities is the most powerful starting point and this encourages you to think like a carp and not like an angler merely choosing a ready made bait flavour that thousands of others may have previously already exploited so massively reducing any competitive advantages.

Certain bait substances do necessarily not work on their own in water and need a bait carrier substance with which they can work synergistically to bring forth their most potent impacts on fish senses. However, many bait substances can be said to be very habit-forming and I include the essential amino acids and particular non-essential amino acids found in protein ingredients additives and liquids in this group too. I am amazed at how many anglers feel they lack confidence in a bait if it has no strong discernible flavours or smell. Think about it; carp can sense substances down to a few parts in a billion and it will be very hard for the average carp angler to incorporate any substance in their bait that has no smell, taste or aroma or effect some sort of subtle electrical impact or difference on carp senses when in water for that matter that they will detect the presence of!

Carp are such highly evolved creatures able to adapt sensitivity to substances, sense completely new substances in water, identify new food sources and monopolise them to their own benefit. You can condition and train carp just the same as dogs by repetition of positive rewards (using new and thus safer baits.) The carp bait substances you choose literally manipulate their behaviours as they influence which hormones production which forms of physical actions; for instance the filter feeding on dissolved bait substances, or movement towards baited areas following concentration gradients, or intensive competitive feeding and repeated bait consumption. (For more information see my website Baitbigfish, my unique ebooks and biography right now!)

By Tim Richardson.
  1. Prev:
  2. Next:
Related Articles
Trout Fishing Flies - Common Fishing Mistake
How to Plan for a Peacock Bass Fishing Trip
How To Enter Fishing Tournaments
River Fishing - Top Tips For Making a Great Catch
Tips for Beginner Fly Fishing
Fly Fishing Rods Review: Getting Help in Finding the Right Rod
Top 3 Coarse Fishing Holiday Destinations In UK
Tips on How to Jig
Fishing In Mount Rainier National Park
More Great Links

Why Gang Hooks Are So Effective As A Fish Catching Tool

Gang Hooks are, by far, the most effective hook set up that Ive ever used. They help me catch many

The Tried And True Basics Of Fishing

TIP! Patience is one of the most important aspects of fishing. Fishing is a hobby requiring

Which Fishing Technique Do You Prefer

Fly FishingAncient Macedonian pottery paintings indicate that fly fishing, that is, fishing with a l

Contact management E-mail : [email protected]

Copyright © 2005-2016 Outdoor sports All Rights Reserved