If you want to catch silver carp and bighead carp, but don’t want to be an air force, what are the four taboos you should not commit?
If you want to fish for silver carp and bighead carp, what are the four taboos you should not commit if you don’t want to fly in the air force? 1. Avoid low water temperature
Silver carp likes high temperatures, and its most suitable water temperature is 22~32°C. Fishing silver carp at this water temperature, if the method and bait are feng shui, will definitely yield a great autumn harvest. If the water temperature is low, at 20°C, the hook-biting rate of silver carp will be significantly reduced. If the water temperature is below 17°C, silver carp will generally stop biting. However, because silver carp is a filter carnivore species, if you use bait that can easily disperse into mist at lower water temperatures, it is possible to catch silver carp in areas with dense concentrations of silver carp. Therefore, water temperature is the prerequisite for success or failure in fishing silver carp. Hot summer is of course the prime season for silver carp fishing. In early summer or autumn, when the water surface temperature is higher than underwater, silver carp will warm up and dive to the surface to move around. If the water temperature has reached 17°C, it may bite the hook, but the energy of the hook bite is very light. Only by fishing with a float can this kind of hook bite information be captured from the weak shaking of the float. 2. Avoid stuffy weather
Many experienced silver carp fishermen know that silver carp is not afraid of heat, but is afraid of stuffy weather. Stuffy means low air pressure and lack of oxygen in the water. Silver carp is the most intolerant of hypoxia. Sometimes people still can’t feel that they are holding their breath, but the silver carp no longer bites the hook. Most of the oxygen in water is produced by photosynthesis of aquatic flowers, and a small amount is dissolved from the air. There is no sunlight at night, photosynthesis subsides, and the oxygen in the water is either absorbed by fish or decomposed by other reasons. Therefore, from midnight to dawn, there is generally insufficient oxygen in the water. If the weather is dull and there is no wind, In a pond with a high density of silver carp, it may happen that the pit-turning silver carp floats on the water surface and extends its mouth out of the water to supply oxygen from the air. If the lack of oxygen is severe, it may range from coma to serious death. When you go out to fish for silver carp, if the weather is dull, especially when it is humid and muggy before a thunderstorm, silver carp will generally not bite the hook. Even bottom fish such as carp and crucian carp have better tolerance to hypoxia than silver carp and bighead carp, but the humidity and muggy weather are insufficient. When oxygen is available, they will not bite the hook. When hypoxia is severe, they will still fall into coma or die. 3. Avoid fishing for silver carp in deep water
The avoidance of fishing for silver carp in deep water means that it is not suitable to fish for silver carp with bottom hooks in deep water. If the water level is 2.5 to 3 meters deep, spreading more sour bait may lure silver carp to sink to eat. At this time, you can also catch silver carp with a bottom hook. If it exceeds this depth or is in deeper water, You can't catch silver carp. Especially in ponds with cold spring seepage in the water, silver carp will not stay underwater. Silver carp is a middle-pelagic fish, and it likes high temperatures. The water temperature in deep water is lower than the water temperature on the surface, so silver carp will definitely swim towards the surface of the water as it warms up. In addition, the water surface temperature is high, and various mayflies, animals and plants also gather on the water surface, where silver carp and bighead carp are still catching food. Therefore, when fishing for silver carp and bighead carp in deep water, you cannot fish on the bottom, but must fish on the float. The depth to fish must be selected based on the surface temperature of the water. If the surface temperature of the water is too high, the bait must be placed 1~ away from the water surface. 1.5 meters. This depth should be determined according to the specific conditions of each sea area. If you use multiple pairs of fishing rods to fish, you can try fishing in several depths to select the best water level for fishing. 4. Avoid excessive sour smell
This mainly refers to using fishy and smelly bait to catch silver carp. When it comes to the ability of smelly bait to catch silver carp and bighead carp, some fishing enthusiasts have a misunderstanding: they think that the more sour the bait for silver carp and bighead carp, the better, and the stinkier the bait, the better. So they turned their attention to these strange, sour and smelly things. If some people are looking for sour substances, they use chemical products such as vinegar, citric acid, etc. When using odorous substances, they even use human and animal feces as bait. This is really not advisable. These things carry many germs, and fishermen themselves are easily infected, and These pollutants can cause environmental pollution and hinder civilized fishing. Some people also fish with bait with a strong sour smell and occasionally catch silver carp, but this is not a good bait after all. What silver carp and bighead carp like is fishing bait with a sour smell. When using smelly bait, the depth of the smell is also affected by the temperature at that time and the fatness of the water in the fishing sea area. When fishing for silver carp in fertile water with high temperatures, the sourness The odor should be slightly stronger. Since the conditions of fishing grounds are different, every time fishermen go fishing in a new sea area, they should first prepare a small amount of bait for trial fishing, and adjust the sour and stinky smell according to the situation of fish biting the hook.