TOM MAKER IS KNOWN FOR HIS HAULING OF CARP! ONE BAITING METHOD THAT HE USES A LOT IS A PELLET ONLY MIX, HERE HE EXPLAINS HOW HE GETS THE BEST FROM THEM...


For years now, pellets have played a huge part in my bait application. Quite often they are just an afterthought by anglers, perhaps a small addition to the mix, but really, using them as the bulk of your mix can be a real edge. Carp absolutely love them, as they are designed to be feed for carp.

They can get so much nutrition from eating them and once they are in the water for a short period of time, they really soften up and become very easy for them to digest too. They can gauge on them for hours and a lot of the fish that we are fishing for nowadays have been reared on them, so it makes sense to use pellets a lot more as a loose feed.

I found myself using them almost exclusively at times last year. A lot of the lakes I fish have young carp in them and as I have mentioned, have been reared on pellets, so they almost see them as a natural food source.

TOM MAKER'S 6 STEP GUIDETO HIS PELLET MIX

STEP 1

Start by adding some 9mm Ellipse Pellets.

STEP 2

Follow with some 4mm Krill Pellets.

STEP 3

Add 2.3mm Krill Pellets to break down fast.

STEP 4

Add a helping of Salmon Oil and mix.

STEP 5

A sprinkling of Krill Powder will cling on to the pellets.

STEP 6

The finished mix, full of attraction.


If you put some pellets in a bucket of water, you can see the leakage coming off them within minutes. In the past I have used Bloodworm pellets a lot and to great success, but last year I went for a really fishy, Krill mix that worked really well for me.

The idea was to knock a bucket of bait up, which would be my loose feed, as well as a bag mix. That way I could fish solid bags of the same mix that I was feeding out there. I start off by taking some of the 9mm Ellipse Pellets, which are super oily and have a much different shape to a normal pellet.

I then add the Krill Pellets in 2.3mm and 4mm. The different sizes are there to firstly confuse the carp and to get them feeding on various sizes. A 2.3mm pellet takes much less effort to inhale, compared to a 4mm or one of the larger ellipse, which in turn I think helps you catch them. They also offer varied break down times, some will be mush within minutes while the others stay whole.

I then add some Salmon Oil, which is always a great addition, especially in the warmer months. Fish love oils and they go hand in hand with pellets. It also allows the next addition to stick to the pellets. That is Krill Powder, a great carp attractor and very pungent.

The powder will cling onto the pellets and when you Spomb it out, you are left with a huge carpet of small food items, which will keep the carp grazing for hours. Even if they have eaten all the bait, that smell will still be lingering on the bottom and when you recast the bags to the spot, you always have pellets down there.

This mix will keep too, so I can have it in the back of the van and use it when I see fit. It works brilliantly as a solid bag mix on its own, full of attraction and oils, but in the summer months, it comes in to its own as a straight spod mix.

PUTTING OUT PELLETS LEAVES A FLAT SPOT, GREAT FOR KNOWING WHEN THE FISH ARE FEEDING ON THE BAIT.



There is no doubt what good quality hemp can do, carp absolutely love the stuff. They add that crunch factor to the mix and the pellets take on the wonderful hemp juice, which carp are addicted to. Not only is this a super attractive mix, its also a cheaper alternative to using a lot of boilies. What’s more, those thousands of small food items on the bottom help hold the carp on the spot for longer periods of time. I want to create a competitive feeding response, and this is the best way of doing so in my opinion.

To get the bites quickly, I do like to use a brighter hook bait. This isn’t always the best way though, as the fish can become preoccupied on the smaller items. The bright ones will get my quick bites, but if they don’t, something like a Krill Wafter will pick out the wary or sometimes bigger fish. They look like a larger pellet and the fish won’t become cautious of them.

The main thing that I am looking for with my hook bait, is that element of buoyancy, which is why a small pop-up or wafter suits this. The hook bait will be sat on top of the bag mix, with the buoyancy allowing it to fight its way to the top. This way, when the fish approach the bag, this will be the first thing they see, and the first thing that goes in their mouth is the hook bait. That buoyancy also allows the bait to behave like the freebies, which are very light and don’t take too much effort for the carp to suck in.