The Pike Season That Changed How I Fish Deadbaits

Winter before last was the season that broke my confidence in deadbaiting, and then rebuilt it completely differently.

I’d fished dead baits the same way for over a decade: cast out, sit behind two rods, wait for a run. It had always produced. That winter, on the Broads waters I know best, it produced almost nothing for six straight sessions. I know those pike are there – I’ve caught them before and since – so something in my approach had stopped working.

What changed things was, almost by accident, fishing far more actively. Recasting every 45 minutes rather than every two hours. Moving swims after 90 minutes without a take instead of sitting it out for a full session. Treating deadbaiting less like a static, sit-and-wait method and more like searching water the way I would with a lure.

The takes started coming back almost immediately. My theory, for what it’s worth, is that on hard-fished waters pike become conditioned to a static bait sitting in one place for hours – it stops looking like an easy meal and starts looking like exactly what it is. A bait that’s been recast into a slightly different spot every 45 minutes presents fresh each time.

I still deadbait. But I fish it far more like an active method now, and it’s the single biggest change I’ve made to my winter pike fishing in years.

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