1 CHANGING TIMES
I would usually be casting a ground bait feeder into this beautiful lake at Woodland Waters, just outside Grantham, Lincolnshire. But this time last year I started to get strange indications while using my favourite open-end feeder rigs for bream. The bites were ghostly, as the quivertip moved about slowly, but nothing was on the end of the line when I struck. However, I began to get an inkling of what was going on when I tried moving the feeder. After I had gently worked my rig in, so that my hook bait was over the loading that the feeder had just emptied, I started to get more positive bites, indicating that the crafty bream were only selecting bait that they thought had come from the feeder.
2 UNLEASHING A PELLET FEEDER
Apart from looking for an alternative to an open-end feeder, I wanted something that didn’t involve groundbait and chopped worm, which has a tendency to attract the hoards of small perch, roach and skimmers in this lake. I reasoned that if I could give the bream something that they liked in discrete quantities, I might manage to avoid small fish action.
I experimented by switching to a Method feeder, first with groundbait, then micro pellets, but sizeable carp quickly muscled in on this tactic. I then decided to try a medium-sized pellet feeder, cast out with a soft-actioned 10.5 ft feeder rod with a 1 oz quivertip and 8 lb reel line.
3 RIGGING RIGHT
To get my hook bait among or very close to my feed, I use a free-running 20 g pellet feeder with a small connector bead at the end of the reel line, to which I attach a 4 in. trace of 7 lb line, tied to a size 16 eyed hook.
An eyed hook pattern is very important with such a short hook length, because spade-end patterns tend to cut through the line when hooked fish buffer against the feeder.
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