Cutlassfish preparation and consumption
7 November 2023
Chumming is a great way to draw those gleeful insects up close to your boat while catching fish, which can be very enjoyable. I had the opportunity to go fishing with renowned fish professional Captain. Some of the finer factors to chumming that Mark Sampson, the publisher of Modern Sharking, mentioned were very informative. To find more fish, would you like? Take a look at these suggestions.

For luring those fish up close to your bait, nothing beats chumming.
- Forget all the tales about eating meat parts, animal body, or ground beef together. When did a fish next see any of that, in your opinion? Not! Stay with the tried-and-true treats, such as ground basement or other fish, which sharks are really looking for. Provide them what they want to have, not what other people enjoy.
- Parts of all kinds of fishes generally work even better for your lures than cut baitfish. The bone cage and stomach, two typically discarded elements, are very effective. Bonus slices are also very effective.
- The key to successful clowning is regularity, not volume. You just need the water to be flowing continuously so the predators you follow the trail; you don’t need a ton of friends in it.
- Your bait should be dispersed throughout the water tower. Imagine your friend slicking away from the boat like a lover, getting wider and wider( and deeper and deeper). You should place some deep baits close to the vessel, some mid-depth bait a little further backwards( floats are useful for these lines ), and some bait on base behind those because you never know what depth the fish will be at. You can adjust your scatter of baits to concentrate on a particular area of the water column if it turns out to be especially effective.
- Hang your friend bottle over the side on a tight leash on quite peaceful days. In this manner, even the smallest ship action will aid in releasing the friend.