Dynamite Baits

2 febrero, 2018 | Match & Coarse | Artículos

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It might be the halfway house between the bomb and the feeder, but when it comes to catching winter carp, there’s no half-measures where the pellet cone is concerned. Robbie Taylor is your guide to this great tactic…

 

The prefect pellet cone, ready to cast

 

History of the cone…

Since its development in the mid-2000s, the pellet cone has revolutionised cold-water commercial carping. In the past, the choices where either to use some form of feeder, but running the risk of over feeding the swim, conversely, you could go negative and use straight bomb and corn tactics. The beauty of the pellet cone is that it sits neatly between the bomb and the higher loosefeed tactics of a pellet feeder or small Method and it has helped me to win more than the odd match or two in the past.

 

How to use it…

If you’ve never fished it before here’s a step by step guide to how to bait up

 

 

The advantages..

Early season the water in the nation’s stillwaters is as cold as it is going to get all year so it is always best to err on the side of caution. For me, the cone allows you too perfectly regulate the amount of loosefeed you’re introducing. The first advantage of the pellet cone over say the PVA bag is that when the water is really cold, a PVA bag could take up to five-minutes to dissolve. Also, when I fish the PVA bag, I like to use Dynamite Baits’ 4mm or more often 8mm XL pellets. At this time of year, you can very easily overfeed the swim. In comparison to the Method feeder, regards the pellet cone, I can alter the size of cone, every cast if needs be. A Method feeder has to be fully-loaded every time so the presentation is correct. This will see me loosefeeding around 10-times the amount of 2mm XL pellets every cast than I will when fishing the cone. By only feeding a minimal amount every cast, you are able to cast around, rather than building one area, as you would with the feeder if you see a showing fish for example. This is important because when the water is cold, the fish will often be tightly shoaled, so casting around, you can often fall on the shoal or alternatively get lines bites, which helps you to track down where the fish might be sitting. Thirdly, there are no rules that you have to use pellets as the loosefeed.

amount of bait in pellet cones

Pellet cones don’t hold as much bait as you’d think. Perfect for this time of year

 

Bait choice..

When it comes to pellets, I will use Dynamite 4mm XLs, but my general go-to is the 2mm version. These will be soaked for two-minutes, before being drained and allowed to stand for around 60-minutes to get nice and tacky. This is a must regards the pellet cone, as there is no ‘hopper’ to contain the payload – as with a feeder – so you need to be 100 per cent confident that the pellet cone won’t explode on impact with the water’s surface. To help this, you can add a little groundbait to act as a ‘glue’. The other mistake many anglers make is in thinking that as it’s called a pellet cone, you can only use pellets with the tactic. I have used and caught very well using either pure groundbait or a mixture of pellets and groundbait in the past. For my groundbait choice, I use my standard Method mix, which is Dynamite’s Green Swim Stim mixed 50:50 with Marine Halibut. You’d probably think this would be too heavy and oily for winter but that is what is want. When I’m using groundbait with the pellet cone I want that strong flavour and attraction in the water. The other thing is that I’m using so little of it, compared to the Method that its high food value shouldn’t pose a problem fact, it works in my favour if anything. On the hook

 

dynamite carp pellets

Robbie uses Dynamite 2mm carp pellets for his pellet cone along with SwimStim Betaine Green Groundbait

 

 

The one thing to remember, regardless of what you load the cone with, is to ensure it is well compressed I always have a couple of cones filled with bait between casts. I then squeeze the bait into the cone a few times prior to rigging it onto the hooklink and casting.

compress pellets into the pellet cone

Make sure you squeeze the pellets hard so they hold their shape on the cast

This ensures that the cone doesn’t burst upon impact with the water, which would see you effectively fishing a straight bomb over a very light smattering of loose feed, rather than a neat pile around the hookbait.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hookbaits..

With the hookbait, you day my choices were either an 8mm Dynamite XL pellet or a simple 10mm punch of plain luncheon meat. I like to use a big hookbait so that it standout well over the small micro pellets and/or groundbait, so it is hopefully the first item the fish picks up when they come over the loosefeed.

hookbait for pellet cone fishing

Robbie likes to use luncheon meat or Dynamite Corn as his hookbait

Fishing the cone…

As well as ensuring the loosefeed is well compressed, the other big mistake made by novice cone anglers is using too light a bomb. Even if I was only fishing 25-yards out, I would still use a one-ounce-plus bomb. The reason for the heavy bomb being is that if I used a much lighter weight – under one ounce – I would end up casting the cone, not the lead. This means the 10-inch hooklink will tumble and ‘windmill’ through the air and the rig will tangle nearly every time. Either that, or the cone will explode on the cast! Also, well as easier, the larger weight amplifies the bolt effect. The rest of the tackle is very standard. A typical 11-foot feeder rod, 8lb Pulse mainline to a free-running bomb and a 0.22mm (5lb 8oz) Pure Fluorocarbon hooklink to a size 10 QM1 hook. The one thing I do like to add at this time of year though is a three-feet length of 0.30mm Pure Fluorocarbon as a leader. The same way a carp angler would use a length of leadcore. It ensures the line behand the lead is pinned to the floor, well out of the way of the feeding fish.

When the water is really cold, I’m looking for fish at a time, not a bag of fish. This means making very few casts and really sitting on your hands. In a five-hour match I might make as little as eight casts. You need to give the fish time to find the bait and get the confidence to take it after the disturbance of the large lead entering the water. The thing that has really revolutionised my fishing is the use of a stop watch. This means I can precisely time each cast. I’m looking to leave the rig out for 35-minutes at a time and by having the watch it allows me to accurately do that.

watching the rod tip

Looking for line bites will help show where the fish are

 

 

 

Robbie’s tackle

what tackle needed for pellet cone fishing

Robbie’s leader, hooklink and hooks

Rod – Daiwa Tournament SLR 11ft feeder rod

Reel – Daiwa Cerate 3000

Mainline – Guru Pulse 8lb

Bomb – Guru 1.5oz Distance bomb

Hooklink – Guru 0.22mm (5lb 8oz) Pure Fluorocarbon

Hook – Guru QM1 size 10

Loosefeed – Dynamite Baits’ XL Carp Pellets 2mm

Hookbaits – Dynamite Baits’ XL Carp Pellets 8mm, Luncheon Meat (10mm punch)

 

 

 

pellet cone fishing net of carp

Robbie with fine winter’s catch taken on the pellet cone

 

 

 

 

 

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