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The ultimate time to be on the bank! Posted by Adam Reed
Adam Reed talks about his favourite time of the year to be on the bank!
As we know spring is often seen as the ultimate time to be on the bank when fishing for carp. The fish are coming out of their winter slumber and making the most of the beautiful spring sunshine and becoming more and more active by the day. With that, the carp’s metabolism is obviously rocketing and that means their appetite goes into overdrive and bait becomes a weapon that can give you amazing results.
Over the years I’ve had some incredible results in the spring with multiple fish hits and bait has always been the key. Unlike the winter, when small food parcels or single hookbaits are catching you roaming single fish or inquisitive carp, the spring certainly brings that pack mentality and lots of hungry mouths. With that in mind; I like lots of small food particles to keep large amounts of carp in your swim and maximise your results.
I’ve found using a mix with large amounts of small food particles will keep the carp coming back as they never completely clear you out. Just using boilie can often get you a couple of bites and then the fish are gone as they’ve cleared you out and simply move on, unless you keep baiting up which can obviously risk spooking the carp. My mix of choice has been the same for the last three or four years and consists of the following:
2 kilos of Cell in 10mm
1 kilo of 15mm Cell chops
2 kilos of Active-8 pellet
1 kilo of Cell ground bait or crushed Cell boilies
A good helping of Cell Smart Liquid
Depending on the stock and situation I will often start with the above all mixed up in a 17ltr bucket and if I’m fishing three rods on a spot that will all go in. That may seem a lot to some people but believe you me, when that’s all mixed and in the zone, it takes no time for three or four carp to work through. Coming back to the small food particles that’s key to keeping the carp both grazing on your spot and keep coming back sieving through the silt and gravel for all that goodness.
Regards, Adam
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About Author
Like many my fishing started at a very young age tagging along with both my Dad and Uncle whenever I could, learing as much as possible befor I was old enough by myself or with friends. Since the age of 10 or 11 I've taken my fishing for all specis very seriously and still do to this day. Wat... Find out more
articles by Adam Reed
- The ultimate time to be on the bank Posted
- Adam Reed Winter Tips Posted
- Adam Reed on maximising your chances of results Posted
- Summer Strategy with Adam Reed Posted
- Spring Tips Posted
- WINTER 101 Posted
- Tackling Your Syndicate Posted