Another great RocketTheme Joomla Template brought to you by the RocketTheme Joomla Template Club.
Home
The Best Fishing Presents are Not Always the Most Expensive...


I first became a passionate angler as a child. It has enriched my life and taught me many things never taught in any book in school. I had little support from disinterested parents and my fishing progress was very limited when I was young. This lack of encouragement teamed with scarce funds to buy fishing tackle and pay for fishing permits did not help either. Two of the greatest presents you can actually provide any kid with a growing interest, is to give them attention and encouragement no matter how little you care about the new hobby or sport etc yourself.

           

Owing to a lack of information and materials to expand and forward my own learning and enable me to further think for myself my catches and development of my passion were hampered. Today if you are a beginner, or even an experienced one, the internet is such an amazing resource for budding anglers. I used to visit libraries and read everything I could to expand my knowledge. As they say, a little knowledge is a dangerous thing, certainly for the fish it can be. Just one tip about a bait enhancing principle can revolutionise catches for instance.

 

Often an angler can remain stuck for years in a ‘void’ where their thinking and understanding and technical approach is very conventional and generally on a par with his or her peers. For instance I remember using soluble polyvinyl alcohol tubes to apply free bait accurately at range, when most anglers around me were ignorant of its existence altogether. Applying extra pressure on the line where a bobbin, indicator or ‘swinger’ would be placed today, I used different weight tent pegs and elastic to vary line tension and ‘bounce-back’ on a fish playing with a baited rig which produced many good results and valuable lessons. This was around the time that hollow cylinders were being used on a stick with the line passing under it as bite indicators in the 70’s and early eighties.

 

Where everyone is reading the same information (and opinions) this generally creates a situation where a majority will inevitably think the same. This can even make people who do things differently to the majority get ridiculed, which is just crazy. For example a guy using live bait to catch a big carp. Sound crazy? Nope: Richie McDonald tuned into his surroundings to the degree that when he realised that the big carp he was fishing for were predating upon abundant fish fry and tadpoles etc, he simply went with the flow and gave them more suitable baits offerings.

 

The result of his efforts was one of the biggest leather carp in the UK at the time; ‘Heather the leather.’ Now many young anglers have missed school in order to go fishing without their parents or teachers knowledge. I’m sure Richie did and yours truly also. But this was because no-one close to me neither encouraged nor supported me so I took things into my own hands. My parents simply never went fishing with me (period.) What can we learn from this I wonder...?

 

For me, it only made me even more determined and rebellious, which is not the best thing for any family and cause disruptions, arguments, fall-outs, groundings and cycles of family battles etc. What a waste of effort. If the family helps and supports a child’s passion then this is far more productive and less harmful avoiding all those negative and emotionally-draining life experiences and relationships strife that can so easily be avoided.

 

I was not a good reader at the age of 6. But by allowing me to do a very detailed school project on fishing at the age of 10, not only did my reading skills (and illustrative skill) improve overnight drastically, but so did my behaviour, my performance in various school subjects and my confidence and improved attitude too. Being free to express yourself through something you are passionate about, (at any age) really can change you and your life (and your family’s) in so many positive ways.

 

Through my childhood and teen years I gradually gathered more and more information about a very wide and deep range of fishing areas and subjects. Memories of small stepping stone experiences where many major breakthroughs occurred, looking back now really fill those years with colour and fond memories. Like many kids I also had other interests and played guitar and sang (my mother was a music teacher) played many sports and won many cups and medals, loved wildlife and actually rather preferred to be there doing something ‘hands-on’ than reading about it. But then in between doing something I liked doing, I’d track down information and read about it. I liked to try a technique for real; them read more about the subject and try again and keep trying new things and testing results. I never new what might happen which was a really exciting thing.

 

I remember sitting beside my carp rods on a particular night on the first water I fished with 20 pound carp lurking there. The sudden realisation that I might hook a 20 pound carp scared me – I’d only landed my previous best, a 13 pound carp, on a roach rod and although I was now using heavier rods used for ledgering using a sinker, how would I myself deal with the fight from a bigger fish? At the time a 20 pound carp was considered a very good fish and the record of Kevin Maddocks, that of twenty 20 pound carp caught in a season, had not been achieved yet.

 

As a kid I’d had pictures all over my walls of  big fish caught by leading anglers of the day mostly members of the dedicated fishing fraternity the ‘British Carp Study Group.’ The fish in the pictures are not thought of as huge today. I fact I hooked three 40’s in 18 hours in a water in the UK in 2005 and multiple catches of  30 pound fish are common-place in the UK. Fish have benefited from global warming, improved bait nutrition and volume of application and improved availability of natural food too, by growing much bigger on average than in previous decades. A role model is very important and my heroes were the likes of Rod Hutchinson, Richard Walker, The Taylors, Jack Hilton and so on.

 

These guys really shared their passion and love for fishing, for nature and wildlife and how to appreciate it more, so that their fishing became an integral part of a natural vibrant waterside environment. For example at the famous carp water called Bernithan pool or ‘Redmire’ swims were just gaps in the reeds created upon arriving to fish and ‘bivvy’ sized swims were definitely not cool even though ridge tents were often used. In fact, the first time I ever night-fished, I used a 2 man ridge tent. This might seem unimaginable to the extremely commercially minded anglers of today.

 

What help and enthusiasm and encouragement I could not get from family came from those writers of articles in the fishing papers of the time and very ground-breaking they were too, although many times the baits and methods talked about had already been used in practice by a range of different creative anglers in the past. The ‘hair rig’ for instance was used by anglers in different countries including parts of China and even in the UK well prior to the official publication of the hair rig. It is sometimes easier to ‘invent’ something by accident that puts you ahead. Using a tangled hook link so that the bait (which had ridden up the line away from the hook) was fished away from the hook was my first use of a hair rig and it solved the twitch bites I had been having most of the time from single figure fish at the time.

 

Fishing information is all over the place now and it’s a great thing which can quicken the results achieved and raise standards and awareness of fishing by so many years. But one thing that is missing very frequently in new anglers is that ability to think creatively for themselves and also to respect their fishing environment.

 

Fishing publications often trigger fashions in thinking and behaviour which really have little to do with practical fishing and far more to do with ego and artificially created fashions, such as with ‘instant’ anglers who buy all the newest tackle available – those ‘camo’ style hoodies or the smoothest line lay big pit reels. It’s knowing how to use the equipment that really counts and that takes appreciation and understanding of information. It’s like knowing about wind lanes, shaded areas preferences of fish, the way underwater layers and currents move and effects of fly hatches on fish, etc. No camouflaged rucksack ever caught anyone a fish, just like no gun actually killed anyone by itself! Sure the tackle trade is there to make money and I’m sure to keep their livelihoods alive and kicking for the future, but this is not the ‘be all and end all.’

 

Tackle trade information is often skewed as ‘infomercials’ and tend to give a one-sided picture of things. How do you really know if a reported fish was caught on a particular companies bait, for instance, or if it was, was that bait which is commercially available actually identical to the one used in the adverts or even used by high profile ‘field-testers?’ Fortunately most companies realise that integrity counts long-term.

 

If you are thinking of maybe buying something for yourself or a budding angler for Christmas this is an exciting thing but also sometimes an apparently confusing thing. After all, with so many new and fashionable items on sale, how do you choose? Do you go with ‘X’ company’s recommendation, or ‘Y’ company’s recommendation? The best thing to do is actually discover for yourself exactly what the fishing needs and exact requirements really are. So many times a kid gets a rod that is too short and uncontrollable as a gift. The first time he goes to cast out or strike at a fish his float and fine line will easily tangle causing great frustration and tackle wastage and boredom!

 

I got really started out with a ‘toy rod’ of split cane with a fibreglass tip which was a 10 foot long 2 piece rod with a metal copper coloured furrel and rod end insert which proved its weakest point in the end! I was lucky as this length was much easier to use than the often seem ‘toy’ fishing rods from China at 5 or 6 feet long. In fact I found it much easier still using a 13 foot rod. The balance of a rod and its reel are so important to anglers learning skills of holding a rod to cast out, or reel in and land a fish.

 

Personally I loved getting anything to do with fishing for Christmas. As the years went by my parents found this time that this was no ‘5 minute wonder’ soon to be given up, but a completely absorbing all consuming passion, but I still only used the most basic of tackle. I still remember the smell of the lubricating oil in my first ‘fixed spool reel’ and marvelled at the varnish, whipping, rings, reel rings and cork handle of my first ‘real’ fishing rod. It was actually solid glass fibre rod of 10 feet in length with small sea-fishing style rings which were highly robust. In fact this rod successfully lasted me for years and again just shows it’s how you use equipment even when totally out-dated.

 

You need the correct tools for the job of actually fishing, but they must suit you personally and ideally you need the opportunity to test expensive equipment before buying and in this respect I really like the idea of this approach at the Carp Society water ‘Horseshoe Lake’ which is a stunning lake in Gloucestershire, UK. When testing a rod, its action and fighting test curve you must use line in the rings and preferably test casting it with the weights of sinkers you will use in practice. Over the years I’ve used rods that simply do not feel balanced, do not have the power in the tip, or butt section when really needed, have too much memory in the tip, or are too soft in the middle section, or simply feel awkward when fighting a big fish using a big heavy reel.

 

Some rods have had too few rings; some have too many, some have the rings at distances which for my purposes were not ideal. In fact many of my big fish (including a 45 pound leather carp) were landed using rod blanks which had been turned into sea bass fishing rods with a test curve of about 3.5 pounds. These rods were a mixture of glass fibre and carbon fibre and I used a total of 6 over a particular period of 10 years for catfish and carp. They gradually lost their memory after the effects of playing big fish took their toll, but they suited me perfectly, despite my having tried leading brand rods previously.

 

Sometimes it is better to get second-hand gear that was ‘top of the range’ first before buying brand new so you can use and ‘abuse’ it and really test it out. I used some brand new Rod Hutchinson rods successfully for a couple of years before I appreciated their ideal use and also their limitations. These rod were 13 foot long 3.5 pound test curve (original) ‘Dream Makers.’ I found them ideal for playing carp of around 30 to about 50 pounds, (the same for catfish) but above this they were not ‘pokey’ enough. I hooked the big girl (at 82 pounds) at Rainbow Lake in France on one of these rods and these rods were as much use as a roach rod.

 

In order to track down the exact equipment that suits you, you need to list what it is exactly that will give you the solution to your problem. For example, if you need to accurately hit the marginal shelf under a tree on the edge of an island 120 metres away (in a cross-wind) few rods will exactly suit your height, weight, style of casting etc and it takes genuine research and testing and not taking the first ‘distance rod’ you see in a magazine at face value.

 

In my opinion, (apart from fish location and behaviour) a genuine understanding of and appreciation of all the natural systems and environment and natural life involved in your fishing bestows great power. Yes consistent fishing success takes experience, but knowledge gives you the greatest personal edges and breakthroughs in fishing, (as with many things in life) because you will be mentally tooled-up to be able to think far more creatively and constructively to solve your fishing problems and challenges which constantly come everyone’s way.

 

Learning about why and how baits work and how best exploit them is vitally important, but the average fisherman does not have this deeper information. This is just one of the things that classify him as ‘average.’ Reading about the latest baits and fishing techniques in magazines can show you current fashions, like bait flavours, boilies, pellets etc and current manufacturers or sponsors thinking but don’t forget the bigger picture – things go in cycles and don’t just progress in a linear direction; so why not think for yourself, get more and bigger edge and break those cycles. Think about it; a fishing rod is for Christmas, but an injection of fresh knowledge and new insights and creative ideas are for life...

 

By Tim Richardson.

Why not seize this moment to improve your catches for life with this unique E-books series:

Together, the Ebooks below will maximise your catches and bait feed-triggering potential in real fishing situations, by leveraging details of unique bioactively potent substances - keeping you ahead of constantly adapting fish instincts and behaviours, and beating competing anglers' baits to land the warier fish. Your improved deeper practical understanding of bait and its application secrets will seriously speed up and enhance your success and give you the biggest picture as quickly as possible to keep ahead of the crowd big-time!

 

*SEE THE SPECIAL 2 AND 3 EBOOK SERIES DEALS ON A LIMITED TIME OFFER: 

“BIG CARP FLAVOURS FEEDING TRIGGERS AND CARP SENSES EXPLOITATION SECRETS!”

“BIG CARP AND CATFISH BAIT SECRETS!”

And “BIG CARP BAIT SECRETS!” - the world-wide proven homemade bait making and readymade bait success secrets bibles!

big_carp__catfish_flavours__triggers_secrets_ebook_front.jpgbig_carp_ebookcover.jpgbig_carp_and_catfish_bait_secrets_front.jpg

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Get all 3 Ebooks on a great deal - see the bottom of the Baitbigfish order page  Click Here Now!

 
 
Making Homemade Carp And Catfish Baits - For Beginners!

 

It’s exciting and fun to make your own bait. So why not and go fishing and catch fish on your own bait! It adds a special great feeling of satisfaction to your catches! If you’ve never made your own bait, before it can be like a door of new possibilities and potential being opened wide for you. You’ll discover there’s no going back!

 

A dough, paste or boilie bait will catch many different species of fish and very big ones at that. They are very easy to make too, although more advanced baits designed to seriously select the biggest fish are very often able to catch you far more fish overall than just a ‘basic’ bait.

 

A bewildering variety of different ingredients, additives and flavours can make your baits more attractive to individual species more than others. Let’s look at the basics of making a bait that will catch you catfish or carp but many other species too!

 

Most dough, paste and boilie baits are made with eggs as a major binder substance to bind together usually dry flours, meals and powders to form the bait dough. ‘Boilies’

are simply dough baits boiled in water for a short period of time enough to make a protective surface on the bait to make it last longer and be thrown out at range to ‘free bait’ swims at range.

 

They do not necessarily deter small fish, but normally ensure you have your hook bait intact when you reel in your rig after it being in the water for a number of hours.

 

The main question I get is about how to make a bait bind and roll well. This is because your bait needs to last long enough in the water to survive attentions of ‘pest smaller fish’ while waiting for bigger ones to eat your bait.

 

‘Rolling’ is about the making of usually round shapes for dough baits to be boiled, but boiling is not always a necessary procedure by any means. In fact I recommend not boiling baits to wherever possible as this actually locks in perhaps 70% or more of the initial bait attraction which by definition really needs to be water soluble for fish to readily detect and respond quickly to.

 

It is funny to notice that having boiled baits and even destroyed much of the initial attraction nutrition and soluble effect of the bait, that many anglers now have to soak them in extra soluble liquids, additives and flavours etc, just to make them do what they would do far better when not boiled!

 

Making a basic bait:

 

To begin with the first principle to make a dough is always add dry ingredients (as a combined single powder, gradually mixing them into the combined mixed wet ingredients including eggs.

 

Always write down the amounts of ingredients in your first batch mixed to make things very easy and quicker to repeat successfully.

 

For example, crack 4 large hen eggs into a bowl. Whisk them up with your chosen flavour and sweetener, perhaps 5 milliliters of strawberry flavour, with a tablespoon full of honey. By adding the dry powder, a large spoon full at a time to the liquid mixture gradually, you can see exactly how much dry powder mixes with your liquid so you can make this stage very quick subsequently.

 

The level of dry powder mix to liquid mix can change between different ingredients used in different mixes because their absorbency or solubility will be different, so it may take more or less liquid to mix into a bread like dough for bait making.

 

So you see how keeping note of exactly what you use really helps, especially when your bait really catches lots of fish and you want to make another batch! (This even goes as far as which shop or supplier all your ingredients come from; it pays to be consistent with these details.)

 

The easiest way to make a dough bait or boilie mix is to purchase a proprietary one in pound or kilogram weight from a commercial fishing bait supplier. These are usually in dry powder form and mixed with water, eggs or other liquids to make a bait dough.You can trust that this bait mixture will bind together, roll into baits for boilie making and hopefully catch you some fish!

 

Proprietary ‘base mixes’ suitable for carp, catfish and many other species have often been formulated using many years of experience. Using quite sophisticated ingredients, these baits have normally been thoroughly tested over a long and successful period by ‘field testers,’ before the refined product is released into the market place.

 

The big drawback of using proprietary baits is often you do not know precisely what ingredients are in the bait, in what amounts and ratios. This might seem unimportant, but if you are targeting big fish, this knowledge and how you exploit it could be crucial. The best rule of thumb for good baits of any description perhaps, for a beginner’s bait, is to pack them with high levels of liquid protein amino acid supplements.

 

These can be purchased from chemists or drug stores and are used for body building in drinks. Fish have essential requirements for certain amino acids and many of their most essential are supplied in abundance in these supplements. There are many proprietary forms starting with ‘Minamino’ and bait suppliers have various different versions at many concentrations often with added oils, flavours etc.

 

This supplement is most effective when soaked into your bait after boiling. In the case of dough, I would add as much as possible, for example making your dough with a 50 – 50 percent mixture of eggs and ‘Minamino.’

 

Some of the simplest dough mixes are of ordinary white flour with an equal amount of ground up sausage meat, or trout pellets, or ground up dry dog biscuits or canned cat food or fish for example. These combinations can be used individually or added together to make them more complex baits.

 

To each of these combinations just add eggs and your sweetener at perhaps 5 milliliters per 4 large eggs and perhaps your flavour and away you go. If your bait is too wet, just add more dry flour. Added semolina, maize meal or ground rice is commonly used as an added binder material. If your mix is too dry, just add more eggs with sweetener and flavour if desired.

 

One thing about pet foods is they are very cost effective, are designed to make animals very much want to eat them and are often very highly nutritious and complex balances of essential nutrients and food groups of essential dietary ingredients, often with added enzyme or bacteria to make them more attractive and digestible. Ground up bird foods make excellent baits on their own with added eggs and sweetener. Often the cost of a flavour is not necessary at all for good results.

 

The key with baits very often is the ability to ground bait your swim regularly sometimes even with very large quantities of bait, either in advance or while fishing. This helps your fish recognise your bait as food and really gets the smells and attraction into the water to pull in the fish. This has a massive impact upon your results, especially for catching the bigger fish.

 

If the bigger fish are your thing, them far more involved bait components and more complex design considerations can really guarantee results more than basic baits like these.

 

By Tim Richardson.  

 

Why not seize this moment to improve your catches for life with this unique E-books series:

Together, the Ebooks below will maximise your catches and bait feed-triggering potential in real fishing situations, by leveraging details of unique bioactively potent substances - keeping you ahead of constantly adapting fish instincts and behaviours, and beating competing anglers' baits to land the warier fish. Your improved deeper practical understanding of bait and its application secrets will seriously speed up and enhance your success and give you the biggest picture as quickly as possible to keep ahead of the crowd big-time!

 

*SEE THE SPECIAL 2 AND 3 EBOOK SERIES DEALS ON A LIMITED TIME OFFER: 

“BIG CARP FLAVOURS FEEDING TRIGGERS AND CARP SENSES EXPLOITATION SECRETS!”

“BIG CARP AND CATFISH BAIT SECRETS!”

And “BIG CARP BAIT SECRETS!” - the world-wide proven homemade bait making and readymade bait success secrets bibles!

big_carp__catfish_flavours__triggers_secrets_ebook_front.jpgbig_carp_ebookcover.jpgbig_carp_and_catfish_bait_secrets_front.jpg

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Get all 3 Ebooks on a great deal - see the bottom of the Baitbigfish order page  Click Here Now!

 
Better Homemade Carp Baits - Easy Flavour and Taste Choices

 

Flavours are one of the favourite topics of discussion among carp anglers. But some are many times more effective and have literally caught millions more carp than others!

 

Many flavours general effectiveness on different waters differs over the season and in which bait they are used. Probably the biggest variable in using flavours is the best level to use in a bait or bait soak or dip mixture.

 

Flavours are often used conventionally as a ‘label’ to differentiate your bait from others, perhaps even on a similar base mix. The orthodox thinking of most anglers on ‘the bank’ is that flavours effect your bait pretty much solely by making it smell good Perhaps in a fruity, fishy, sweet or other appetising way. True, flavours can do this and at least this is how we as humans experience many flavours.

 

Many of the flavours which have stood the test of time in an increasingly competitive carp fishing market are (or contain) feeding triggers of extraordinary impact on carp senses, often internal and external; big-time! They can often stimulate a search locate and feed response from various ranges in the water and impact on multiple carp senses and responses simultaneously.

 

My personal opinion is that this is the whole point of a bait anyway...

 

Most flavours can catch carp very effectively even if only for limited periods when used directly as a neat soak. Although the very much less water soluble propylene glycol flavours have been very much used in the UK, being a cheaper alternative, their use is now far less prevalent.

 

In the States and many parts of the world, propylene flavours and those supermarket cooking flavours based on acetic acid are used by the majority of anglers to good effect still. However, the fully water soluble alcohol and glycerol flavour, for example are much more popular in the UK for pressured carp water fishing.

 

Many Americans will mention the still popular ‘supermarket flavours’ as part of their homemade bait recipes. This goes for even those fishing competitively in pay lake tournaments; although many are learning there are much superior options available.

 

Almost invariably the 2 most commonly used cheap supermarket flavours seem to be

Strawberry and vanilla, but chocolate and coffee are also popular along with other fruity ones. It might be a surprise that many Americans use ‘Cola’ or ‘Red Bull’ or ‘Cream Soda,’ or ‘Cool Aid’ to flavour carp baits in dough or boilie baits.

 

Flavours are most often complex combinations of quite volatile ingredients. Anglers have been able to achieve good results on many such alternatives from ‘Slush Puppy’ flavour, milk shakes, ice cream flavours and melted ice cream. I think at the last count the ‘MacDonald’s’ strawberry flavour formula had approaching 30 different components.

 

Everyday drinks make ideal flavours for many wide and deeply scientific reasons. From ‘vodka,’ ‘Tia Maria,’ whiskey, brand, liquors, condensed milk, coconut milk, in fact many nut and seed milks, like sesame seed ‘Tahini.’ Yeast extract and peanut butter blend with other ingredients and make great flavours; these 2 examples will enhance your bait’s taste and ‘palatability’ effects too.

 

In solution, kelp and seaweeds powders for example, add taste enhancing factors and very carp attractive minerals and certain important vitamins. There are many sugary concentrates that carp love and sugar extracts from various industrial processes and bye-products. Adding these gives a very attractive ‘difference’ to using simply straight liquid flavours.

 

For example, malt extract maltose, lactose, and fructose. Liquorice extract is another very sweet alternative if you are trying to avoid the usual use of the more commonly used sweeteners from fishing bait suppliers and supermarket ones like sodium saccharin, ‘Splenda’ and the like.

 

The fact is that some of most effective additives to sweeten your bait are the 2 extremely sweet natural proteins available from bait suppliers; namely ‘Talin’ and ‘Thaumatin B.’ If all you use presently is a supermarket flavour like vanilla, and are just adding molasses, honey, black treacle or brown sugar, then using one of these super sweeteners will make a big difference to results.

 

Real extracts in solution work very well giving off fine particles off the bait along with dissolved compounds, flavours and so on. Vanilla extract, blue cheese powder, anchovy extract, garlic powder, chilli powder, spirulina powder, ‘Robin Red’ type products and kelp powder are good examples of what I’d term as ‘innate’ bait flavourings.

 

There are numerous tastes to exploit in flavours and one not mentioned in angling circles is that Japanese originating one called ‘unami.’ This is a unique taste which will give quite an edge in some competitive fishing situations and is worth exploiting.

 

As for the usual sweet, savoury, salty, fishy, spicy, meaty and bitter type tastes most of us are familiar with I have noticed an important trend. It seems that if a bait has milk type ingredients or fishy ingredients for example, then the flavour added by the average angler might well reflect the perceived characteristic of those ingredients.

 

A milk powder based bait would usually have a milky, creamy, sweet or fruity flavour. A fish and shellfish based bait might get flavours like crab, lobster, salmon etc, although fruit flavours are often used and compliment the acid nature of these protein type baits. It does pay to experiment and use flavours that are not normally thought of as used in that type of bait.

 

Combinations of flavours have always been a good ‘edge’ whenever the ‘dominantly successful’ single flavour on a water is losing it’s effectiveness. For example, adding another flavour to ‘Scopex’ or ‘Tutti Frutti’ can produce good results. Care needs to be taken not to over-do flavours most especially in hard pressured waters where carp may by very wary of strongly flavoured baits of particular types.

 

The flavours from bait companies have mostly been evolved from decades of use and testing in fishing situations and these are best used as the basis of your flavour combination if you are new to the practice of making your bait as unique and different to the ‘norm’ as possible. The author has many more fishing and bait edges available and every single one can have a huge impact on your catches...

 

By Tim Richardson.


Why not seize this moment to improve your catches for life with this unique E-books series:

Together, the Ebooks below will maximise your catches and bait feed-triggering potential in real fishing situations, by leveraging details of unique bioactively potent substances - keeping you ahead of constantly adapting fish instincts and behaviours, and beating competing anglers' baits to land the warier fish. Your improved deeper practical understanding of bait and its application secrets will seriously speed up and enhance your success and give you the biggest picture as quickly as possible to keep ahead of the crowd big-time!

 

*SEE THE SPECIAL 2 AND 3 EBOOK SERIES DEALS ON A LIMITED TIME OFFER: 

“BIG CARP FLAVOURS FEEDING TRIGGERS AND CARP SENSES EXPLOITATION SECRETS!”

“BIG CARP AND CATFISH BAIT SECRETS!”

And “BIG CARP BAIT SECRETS!” - the world-wide proven homemade bait making and readymade bait success secrets bibles!

big_carp__catfish_flavours__triggers_secrets_ebook_front.jpgbig_carp_ebookcover.jpgbig_carp_and_catfish_bait_secrets_front.jpg

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Get all 3 Ebooks on a great deal - see the bottom of the Baitbigfish order page  Click Here Now!


 
<< Start < Prev 1 2 3 Next > End >>

Results 5 - 8 of 10