If you want to catch big carp or catfish consistently, few
baits and ingredients match fish meals. But how do you make them work best in
all conditions and enhance them of them to keep big fish coming - here's a few tips
1. Tinned fish make excellent baits. Putting them in a
liquidiser and adding ordinary wholemeal flour and eggs is one of the simplest
ways to make a fish meal bait!
2. Even using tinned tuna or salmon flakes or chunks in
natural oil used in ground baits or one of the new round plastic hollow hook
bait holders; both work effectively.
3. Many fish meal fishing baits can taste sour or bitter and
benefit from use of ingredients to improve taste, (and smell) and most
importantly; ‘palatability’ which can cause fish to ingest baits more
repeatedly to create more chances of a hook bait being taken.
4. It takes roughly 4 to 5 tonnes of live fish in order to
process and produce 1 tonne of fish meal, (fish have a high water content like
us humans among many other similarities!)
5. Due to world-wide over-fishing, certain fish species used
for human consumption and in fish meals, especially of the north Atlantic white
lean fish like cod, haddock, whiting and pollack are more in short supply these
days but their place is filled by smaller still very valuable fish species.
6. You can mix various fish oils together or with vegetable
oils, to create your own personalised ‘fish feed inducing’ oil.
7. Lecithins improve the beneficial dispersal of fish oils
from baits when in water; making them far more ‘semi-soluble’ and easier for
fish receptor cells to ‘detect.’
8. Use of fish oils in low temperatures can severely inhibit
fish bait digestion and even ‘lock-up’ other less soluble ingredients which
could sit in the gut and go rancid.
9. Often when fishing a fishery containing large catfish,
having baited a swim with fish meal type baits can produce a ‘slick’ of oil on
the waters surface which can take some time to reduce depending on the oil
content of the baits.
10. Often a fish oil induced ‘oil slick’ can be confused
with the large ‘slicks’ which large catfish produce, (and the reverse is also
true!)
11. Putting together a fish meal bait is very easy at the
beginners level and gets more in-depth at the levels of optimising the
digestive biological value and nutritional profiles of substances in the baits
(especially involving first and second ‘limiting amino acids,’ for instance.)
12. Ideal fish meal boilies and pellets and pastes should
contain much reduced oil levels and exploit lecithins (like the commercial carp
bait “Trigger Ice” for example.)
13. A good fish meal bait in winter (in contrast to summer)
needs to have an open texture which allows soluble components to leach-out more
effectively.
14. Using crushed egg-shells or crushed cockle shells adds
much more than just more effective open bait texture.
15. The use of wheat germ, wheat and barley bran and milk
proteins, are all beneficial digestive ingredients in cold temperatures either
helping other ingredients to be absorbed or helping further natural bacterial
enzyme of proteins for example.
16. When your simple straight fish meal bait loses some of
its ‘edge’ you can add to its nutritional profile by using various milk
proteins, yeast powders, ‘Robin Red’ additive type products ,or kelp powder for
instance. (But there are thousands of choices and combinations to exploit while
keeping a very favourable stimulatory nutritional value of your bait!)
17. You can rejuvenate the fish response to an already
established fish meal bait, by adding various herbs and spices (which also aid
more effective digestion and raise fish metabolism.)
18. Many simple baits based on cat foods and dog foods
containing fishmeals and cereals make highly successful carp and catfish baits
which are enzyme active and in the case of dogs, are most often than not,
sweetened for added palatability!
19. Fish ‘oils’ are liquid at room temperature but can
solidify in cold temperatures so making normal summer type fish meal baits very
ineffective.
20. You can test some of the ‘functional effectiveness’ of
your fish meal baits and pellets, by placing samples in a glass of cold water
and assessing the time it takes for baits to ‘colour’ the water in the glass
and release soluble attractors you can smell.
21. The marine stocks of smaller fish used in ‘brown’
fishmeals especially have stabilised and are claimed to be ‘sustainable’ so it
looks like these fishing bait ingredients are here to stay!
Although there are thousands of other bait variations,
additives, attractors, enhancers, feeding triggering ingredients and substances
etc, the basic fish meal bait and its nutritional profile is a proven winner
for consistent big fish results!
By Tim Richardson.
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