That was a bit grim. No real inspiration so I thought I'd go back to my Lincolnshire commercial and try a few of those things that I keep seeing in fishing magazines, but never do: popped up baits, bread discs, pellet cones, wafters. I'd bought a couple of related bits and pieces, and some bait that looks like children's sweets. Everywhere I'd prefer to fish is too low and too clear, so why not join the 21st century for an afternoon?
The lake is fine, and there's no lack of features in front of you
But the bait tray looked a bit weird. Far too colourful
If you're used to impaling a maggot or a couple of casters, like me, it's striking how much paraphernalia is involved in getting a bait on the hook, commercial style. Everything seems to need a bait stop. Or a bait band. Or a baiting needle. Or a pellet compressor. Or a mould to get them on your feeder. Or a tool to open up the band so you can get a pellet in. Etc.
Anyway, I tried to remember the stuff I'd read in the articles about what to do to get bites on stone-cold mid-winter commercials, and tried this and that here and there but to no great effect. For what it's worth, the Guru mini feeders and mould seem good, the little Shimano baitrunner I got cheap on ebay was very nice, and the Ringers pellet cones - with a slit in the side so you can "use them without taking off your hooklength" are hopeless - with no way to centralise the line, the line always end up, when you've packed the cone, at the side, and the compressed pellets fall off as soon as you push them out. Add that to the hideous colour, and it makes for a truly naff product I'm embarrassed to have bought
I set up two rods, so as to try out the various set-ups, but the action was slow. Nothing was being caught. The bailiff, when I said I'd had two, said oh you're doing well.
I think I had 8 fish between 12 and 3, and then I was off to beat the traffic.
I'm off tomorrow to meet a friend and check out a stretch of the Derwent where the odd chub is rumoured to be caught. Hard to believe it used to be Chub City down there not all that long ago.
The lake is fine, and there's no lack of features in front of you
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But the bait tray looked a bit weird. Far too colourful

If you're used to impaling a maggot or a couple of casters, like me, it's striking how much paraphernalia is involved in getting a bait on the hook, commercial style. Everything seems to need a bait stop. Or a bait band. Or a baiting needle. Or a pellet compressor. Or a mould to get them on your feeder. Or a tool to open up the band so you can get a pellet in. Etc.
Anyway, I tried to remember the stuff I'd read in the articles about what to do to get bites on stone-cold mid-winter commercials, and tried this and that here and there but to no great effect. For what it's worth, the Guru mini feeders and mould seem good, the little Shimano baitrunner I got cheap on ebay was very nice, and the Ringers pellet cones - with a slit in the side so you can "use them without taking off your hooklength" are hopeless - with no way to centralise the line, the line always end up, when you've packed the cone, at the side, and the compressed pellets fall off as soon as you push them out. Add that to the hideous colour, and it makes for a truly naff product I'm embarrassed to have bought
I set up two rods, so as to try out the various set-ups, but the action was slow. Nothing was being caught. The bailiff, when I said I'd had two, said oh you're doing well.
I think I had 8 fish between 12 and 3, and then I was off to beat the traffic.

I'm off tomorrow to meet a friend and check out a stretch of the Derwent where the odd chub is rumoured to be caught. Hard to believe it used to be Chub City down there not all that long ago.