I fished boilies almost exclusively for about six years. It’s what everyone does, it’s what every magazine article assumes you’re using, and on a lot of waters it still works fine. But two seasons ago, on a day-ticket lake near me that gets hammered every weekend, I had four blanks in a row using the same approach that used to produce regularly.
The fifth session, out of frustration more than strategy, I put sweetcorn on instead. Landed three carp before lunch.
That wasn’t a fluke, and once I started paying attention I realised what should have been obvious: on a pressured commercial water, the resident carp have seen more boilies than most anglers have years of fishing experience. Every flavour, every hard round shape sitting on the bottom – they’ve had hookpulls, spooked runs, and probably a few close calls with a landing net over baits that look exactly like that.
Sweetcorn, bread, and pellet don’t carry the same weight of bad association on a lot of these waters, simply because fewer anglers bother with them. It’s not that boilies stopped working everywhere – on quieter, less pressured waters they’re still excellent – but on the specific type of commercial fishery most of us actually fish most weekends, I think we’ve collectively over-boilied the carp into wariness.
I still carry boilies. But sweetcorn, bread flake, and a pot of pellet are now the first things I reach for on any water I know gets heavy boilie pressure, and it’s changed my catch rate noticeably. Worth trying if your usual approach has gone quiet on a familiar water.
Dan Whitfield started fishing aged seven on the canal at the end of his road and never really stopped. He spent his twenties and thirties on the match circuit – club level rather than national – before deciding he’d rather catch one decent fish than a net of small ones.
These days he mostly fishes the River Trent for barbel (personal best 14lb 2oz), the Oxford Canal for roach and skimmers in winter, and the occasional gravel pit when tench are spawning and the surface fishing is too good to miss. He’s a former club secretary and still helps with junior coaching at his local angling club in Nottingham.
At The River Bend, Dan writes the coarse species guides, river fishing technique articles, and the match and pole content.
Covers: Barbel, bream, roach, tench, carp (coarse context), river fishing, canal fishing, feeder, float, match/pole