Miracle bait or wishful thinking?

me brother stuck a jelly worm on a float rigg last time he was down the tyne for a bit of fun and got some really positive knocks on it but alas no fish so
the jurys still out on that!:D
berkley gulp is very good so im told and seen on youtube! soaked in atractent so it leaves a sent trail! very good for flatties im told also! theres another one called sea spawn getting rave reveiws to!
 
very true :thumbup:

personally i wouldnt bother with any of the imitation stuff if i coudnt get the bait i needed i wouldnt bother going

fresh bait has and always will outfish soft plastic imitation bait
 
Nothing and I do mean NOTHING beats gulp ragworm on a size1 crab hook when spinning for pollack I have caught litterally hundreds of pollack using this infact I am happy to go to whithorn with only gulp ragworm as bait/ attractor, I have also taken mackerel and wrasse with this bait
 
Nothing and I do mean NOTHING beats gulp ragworm on a size1 crab hook when spinning for pollack I have caught litterally hundreds of pollack using this infact I am happy to go to whithorn with only gulp ragworm as bait/ attractor, I have also taken mackerel and wrasse with this bait
Cheers M8 might give em a go afterall :)
 
Imitation baits are great when used in the right conditions.... dont use them to bait fish but if your spinning / lure fishing then they defo have their place.... can be deadly when fishing for pollock etc
 
i think it all depend on the sea conditions, if the sea is gin clear yes the jelly worms ect will be viable lures but only as a lure, try fishing with them on the bottom with a strong nor eastley blowing in the middle of january and the sea is the colour of mud and i'm afraid you haven't a cat in hells chance of hooking into a fish,this is when fresh bait that put out a scent trace comes into there own,and then it all depends on which fresh bait you are using but thats a whole different story
 
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