Aitch wrote: ↑Thu Oct 22, 2020 8:49 am
I've had some success using glace' cherries as bait on a hair... the only problem was I ate more than the carp did
I have the same problem with prawns and Perch!
From "... the wilds of the Wirral, whose wayward people both God and good men have quite given up on ...".
Aitch wrote: ↑Thu Oct 22, 2020 8:49 am
I've had some success using glace' cherries as bait on a hair... the only problem was I ate more than the carp did
I have the same problem with prawns and Perch!
????? i've always used raw prawns ! is this what i'm doing wrong ?
Aitch wrote: ↑Thu Oct 22, 2020 8:49 am
I've had some success using glace' cherries as bait on a hair... the only problem was I ate more than the carp did
I have the same problem with prawns and Perch!
????? i've always used raw prawns ! is this what i'm doing wrong ?
Never had any success with them! Always used cooked. Unusual, I agree, but I do meet others doing it.
Phil
From "... the wilds of the Wirral, whose wayward people both God and good men have quite given up on ...".
Last summer I met a friend on the river bank. He was sight fishing for big chub with freelined bread crust. The chub didn't show any interest in his offerings. Only a couple of chublets took the bread.
There was an overhanging red mirabelle tree close by. I advised my friend to take a plum for bait. First cast he was into a chunky 4lb chub, his new pb!
I have never used them as bait myself, they are too tasty.
And too expensive to be using for loose feed!
"But every fish loves not each bait alike,
Although sometimes they feed upon the same;
But some do one, and some another seek,
As best unto their appetite do frame,
The Roach, the Bream, the Carp, the Chub and Bleak,
With paste or corn, their greedy hunger tame,
The Dace, the Ruffe, the Gudgeon and the rest
The smaller sort of crawling worms love best.
The Chavender or Chub do more delight
To feed on tender cheese or cherries red,
Black snails, their bellies slit to show the white,
Or grasshoppers that skip in every mead.
The Perch, the Tench, and Eel, do rather bite
At great red worms, in field or garden bred,
That have been scouredin moss or fennel rough
To rid their filth, and make them hard and tough."
John Dennys, Secrets of Angling, 1613
Quoted from my first and still my favourite book on angling, "Fishing for Beginners", by Maurice Wiggin.
Duebel wrote: ↑Thu Oct 22, 2020 12:33 pm
Last summer I met a friend on the river bank. He was sight fishing for big chub with freelined bread crust. The chub didn't show any interest in his offerings. Only a couple of chublets took the bread.
There was an overhanging red mirabelle tree close by. I advised my friend to take a plum for bait. First cast he was into a chunky 4lb chub, his new pb!
I should give it a go next summer myself.
Love that! Plumbing for fish! How large were the Mirabelles? I’ve seen them growing wild in France and only a little larger than cherries.
Phil
From "... the wilds of the Wirral, whose wayward people both God and good men have quite given up on ...".