Make your own boilies.
Making boilies is not as difficult as
some anglers would have you believe.
Although ready-made or shelf life boilies
are extremely effective and do catch a great
number of carp, making boilies will improve
your catches, save you money and can be fun.
Many serious carp anglers would not consider
using ready mades and insist on making their
own. Their argument being that by using only
fresh ingredients, which will be more
acceptable to the carp, your catch rates
will increase dramatically. The other
argument in favour of home made boilies is
of course cost. Making a reasonable sized
batch of your own boilies, especially if you
share the cost with a friend, can save a
good deal of expense, and once you have some
of the basic tools and flavours in stock,
they become increasingly cheaper with each
batch. So here is a quick guide to get you
started in the art of boilie making. With
practice you will soon be making baits that
those carp just can't resist.
What you need
The basic ingredients of any boilie are a
good base mix, ½ a dozen eggs, flavourings, colourings and maybe
sweetener. You will also find the job a lot easier if you have available
a bait gun and a rolling table. Although these are not essentials, they
will save a lot of time, mess and hassle. Other pieces of equipment you
will require are a mixing bowl, a fork, whisk or electric mixer, a
syringe, kitchen scales, saucepan, metal sieve and an air drying tray in
which to finish off the baits. A clean surface on which to work with the
equipment laid out ready will help you to complete the job more easily.
Mix it up
Before going into much detail, the rule here
is to always mix the dry ingredients together in one container, and the
wet ingredients in another. That said, let' start with the dry. Place
the required amount of base mix into your mixing bowl. For half a dozen
eggs, this will probably be 16 oz, but you can always add a little more
later if needed. Most mixes will come with mixing instructions from the
manufacturer, so always follow these. Add any powdered additives such as
sweetener, about ½ a teaspoon of each usually, but again, follow
instructions on the container. Mix this well, ensuring that all of the
additives are well incorporated into the base mix. Now in a separate
bowl, mix the liquid ingredients. First crack open the eggs and place in
a large mixing bowl. Now add your liquid flavours. Use a syringe and
measure the exact quantity stated. Never overdo it, even if you can't
smell it, it is there, and even slightly too much flavour can repel the
carp rather than attract them. Now whisk the eggs and flavours very
thoroughly or the flavour will not be evenly distributed amongst your
finished baits.
Bring it together
Now add the powdered ingredients to the egg
mix, slowly stirring together with a fork as you gradually add more
powder. An electric mixer can be used here if you prefer, but do start
it off on a slow speed, or your ingredients will end up everywhere. Keep
adding the base mix and form a paste which is just sticky to the touch
but not too dry or your baits will split. If you find the mix sticking
to your hands, a little cooking oil on them will stop it happening.
Ready, load, fire
Now is the time to load the paste into your
bait gun. First roll it into a sausage shape that fits into the gun.
Squeeze the bait out of the gun across your rolling table, forming 3
thin sausage shapes. Place the top of the table over the baits and roll
it backwards and forwards a few times. Lift it off again and you should
have a batch of raw boilies. If the paste sticks to the table, you need
to add more powder next time. If you don't have a rolling table and gun,
you are going to be there for a while as you hand roll each bait into a
ball.
Prepare to boil
Now boil your water and have ready a metal
sieve. Placing few baits at a time into the sieve, dunk it into the
water. About 30 baits at a time is good depending on the size of your
container. Allow them to boil for about 45 - 60 seconds depending on
their size. The longer you leave them, the harder they will, be, so if
you have to suffer crayfish in your water, you may want to leave them a
little longer. Also the bigger the boilie, the longer they take. I would
estimate 45 seconds for a 14mm boilie of average hardness. Once boiled,
remove them and place them in a drying tray while you get on with the
next lot.
Dry, store, freeze and use
When all of your baits have dried, you can
store them for use. If you want them very dry, a week or two in the
airing cupboard will help, remember that if they are still moist, they
will start to mould unless you freeze them. Freezing is best done in
small polythene bags. Remove as much air as you can and place straight
into the freezer.
Pop-Ups
If you want to make some pop ups during
the above process, this is easily achieved
by hand rolling some of your mixture around
cork balls. Then cook and store as normal.
Don't forget to keep them separately or you
wont know which is which when you come to
use them. Some anglers make their pop-ups
bigger so that they can tell them apart.
Hint. - Always keep a log of the boilies
that you make, and always use the same size
eggs. This way, to repeat a successful
recipe or refine a not so good one, you will
be able to look up exactly what you did last
time you made it. Remember - Too much
flavour is a waste of boilie mixture. It
won't help you catch but will have the
opposite effect and scare the carp off.
Have fun and go give those carp a gourmet
meal.