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What kind of bait is good for wild fishing? Small fish products Big fish fermentation, but pay attention to the collocation

When anglers fish together, they always talk about where to fish well, how many catches there are, and how big fish they have caught, but when talking about good catches, I can't forget to add: I didn't use any particularly good bait that day, I only used XXX.

What kind of bait is good for wild fishing? Small fish products Big fish fermentation, but pay attention to the collocation

Wild fishing baits are actually not complicated

In fact, as long as you pay close attention, most of the bait used by these shared anglers is "not very good", and it can be said that it is not very expensive. To be honest with wild fishing, in most cases, it is not how good the bait is, but the density of the fish and the skill of choosing a fishing position (good fishing positions have a high density of fish). In fact, wild fishing sometimes has "good" (expensive) baits that don't perform well, because the more expensive the bait, the more animal protein (that is, the fishier), and this kind of bait is really just fishing for white strips in waters with too many small fish.

What kind of bait is good for wild fishing? Small fish products Big fish fermentation, but pay attention to the collocation

Fish in the wild are not very picky eaters

I often see anglers on the fishing social platform asking: What kind of bait is good for wild fishing? In fact, this question is very broad as long as people who have fished for more than two years know that it is particularly broad, anyway, I don't know how to answer it. However, there is a main idea: small fish use thick and fishy commodity bait, and large fish use grain fermentation material, which is in principle no problem.

According to more than two decades of fishing experience, this is also the case: whether the commercial bait is bagged or square, the probability of catching a big fish in the wild fish is really small, unless you use the chaff cake (block material) to hit the sea rod. But fermentation materials or grains are different: as long as you keep them, you can more or less catch them. Most of the tutorials on catching big fish over the years have been to use grains to make nests, and then hang up the bait to stick to it.

What kind of bait is good for wild fishing? Small fish products Big fish fermentation, but pay attention to the collocation

Big fish grains

But this leads to two questions: there are so many grains, which one should I use? Since the nest is made of grains, what should be used as bait, and if there is no difference between the bait and the nest, will the fish still give priority to the bait? These two problems can be said to plague many anglers, and the previous problem is easy to solve: use corn on the line, cheap and easy to use, and there are things to buy everywhere. The latter problem is not easy to solve, but more caused by psychological thinking misunderstandings: a big fish into the nest to eat a lot of nest material, bait and nest material even if not without routine also have a high probability of being eaten by the big fish into the nest.

Not to mention that we have a "force him to eat the hook on the bait first" routine, about this, half a month ago there was a detailed analysis of various fishing conditions and underwater terrain strategies. Roughly: by nesting according to their habit of eating the nest first, by fishing for the bottom to let it be discovered first, through the more attractive bait to achieve this. The first method is best because: it has the habit of eating nest edges, and we force it to prioritize the bait it hangs according to the underwater terrain.

What kind of bait is good for wild fishing? Small fish products Big fish fermentation, but pay attention to the collocation

Fish can be allowed to take bait first

As for the latter two, it should be determined according to the target fish and the feeding habits of local fish, because we think that good bait fish do not necessarily think so. You throw away what you think is good and expensive bait, and the fish don't necessarily buy it, which can be found from the experience of grass carp fishing in the past few years: I use tender corn every time, but the commodity bait they buy is very expensive, and most of the performance is not as good as tender corn. The same is true of carp and crucian carp, and sometimes homemade sweet potato bait is far better than expensive commercial bait.

Finally: what kind of bait is good for wild fishing? You have to first clarify the target fish, clear the target fishing point, the reservoir with a good aroma but the river is thick and fishy, they are all wild fishing but can not be generalized. And after you know these factors, you also need to find the right fishing spots according to these factors, think about the nesting routine, and prepare the right line group. Otherwise, if you hit a heavy nest and make a small hook and thin line to catch carp, it is not easy to pull them up even if you are on it.

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