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In reply to Post #27 Jimbo, the guy having success with it. How was he applying it.....in the bait or on the bait as a dip/glug. Do you know ? All very interesting info
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In reply to Post #27 Fair enough Jimbo cheers
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In reply to Post #30 I did both
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In reply to Post #29 were/are you guys including into your boiled baits or applying it afterwards ?
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In reply to Post #28 I started to use it a good few years ago now in my own bait, i didn't notice any difference in catch rates so dropped it from the bait and again didn't notice any difference so no longer use it.
As others have said i certainly dont think its the holy grail @post 27 james i very much doubt this is the only thing that is making your well known angler catch so well compared to others
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In reply to Post #27 In my personal use of dmpt, I I would conclude the following: it can give you an edge on others, but I wouldn't say it triples your catch rate.
I used it a lot in the past and I'm not missing it.
So, this makes me conclude it isn't the holy grale.
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In reply to Post #25 Ocelot it was a genuine question about a product I was interested in. I did a bit of research and couldn’t find any evidence to say it was harmful in fact quite the opposite. I didn’t really want the whole debate Just a bit of direction on use to get the best out of the product. I really didn’t want to go into the whole backstory of why I wanted to use it but if you must.
I know a well known angler on a lake I fish is using it. To the point he literally begged me not to tell the other lads which I wouldn’t anyway he got a bit upset about it if truth be told. I hadn’t fished the water before and a lad told me to keep a eye out on him as he has had more in 1 session then people have had all year. After a chat he said people had been going around to his peg when recasting baiting up etc using the same rigs and baits on the same spots with no results. I know it’s DMPT he is using as I was in the right place at the right time and got lucky. He had more fish in a winter than good anglers had in 5 years. Hence why I wanted to give it a go.
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In reply to Post #23 It will cost them a couple of thousand of euro to perform necessary test and most likely 30k for the registration of this product.
And you will be doing it for all other competitors too if they are not willing to share the costs.
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In reply to Post #22 I'm not surprised you want it deleted. What was the reason you wanted to use it over what's currently available and not banned?
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In reply to Post #23 Also, DMPT occurs in nature, mainly in algae and creatures that consume this including plankton and crustaceans etc that form part of a carp's natural diet.
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In reply to Post #22 Please don't ask for thread to be deleted, surely much better to discuss sensibly even if people are not in agreement?
As for EU approval of feed additives such as this one - just because it is banned does not mean it is harmful, it might just mean that nobody has been willing to pay for the extensive testing required to prove it meets EU standards. I don't know exactly how much it costs to produce a study on a feed additive to EU standards but it is certainly expensive; I would think hundreds of thousands of pounds at a minimum? If anyone has a better handle on the true figure then please share.
So, if a company wants to bring an additive such as DMPT to the market then they would have to pay to get it approved. It would have to sell a lot of units to justify the cost. If they don't own a patent on the product, or other IP protection, there is no barrier to other companies releasing the same product for cheaper after it is approved thus undercutting the price of the original supplier. (A bit like Cyprinus and Aqua bivvies)
If anyone thinks this is far fetched I can mention an environmentally friendly weed killer, recommended by various organic growing associations that is not currently legal in the EU for weedkilling purposes but is available to buy as a compost accelerator.
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Might as well delete the thread it’s pointless arguments about the EU.
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| BRB | Posts: 1389 |  | |
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In reply to Post #17 Scientific experts frequently disagree mate, look at the experts on the SAGE committee. Two of the members disagreed today on the timing of the lockdown. The governing body have a duty to look at all the evidence both positive and negative and make a decision. In this case they banned it
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In reply to Post #18 The 'EU' bans things based on several tests. Rulings are not only based on the toxicity for humans and animals but also for the environment.
Final verdict is a well balanced decision with the information available from the tests.
When a certain chemical is very important for company's revenue and they are not happy with the outcome. They can always request a more indepth study to prove EU wrongs. When nobody is objecting things can be banne' quite easily'.
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In reply to Post #16 Your missing a trick mate. Get a list of all the chemicals and products banned or regulated in the last 40 years for human/animal consumption and get ordering and do what you want. Might rinse a lake. See if you can find a country or a few unknown talking heads with an unknown agenda that reckon it's fine and pile it in. Ave it, get in, yeah right yeah....
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That’s what I read online Johnny English. As said I did do a bit of research and couldn’t find anything that it was deemed harmful to fish. Anyway **** it I think it’s more trouble than it’s worth
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In reply to Post #16 I prefer the opinion of professional scientists to those of scaremongers on a forum.
www.bouillettes-dependance-baits.com/res/site19627/res606220_DMS-DMTP.pdf
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| BRB | Posts: 1389 |  | |
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In reply to Post #15 Well I for one don't agree. It is not permitted to be used in this country in fish feed. At best you can use it in non digested hookbaits. This is recognised by the sellers with appropriate advice on their websites.
It is banned as a fish feed for a reason, as someone said below the EU can be a bit flakey but it is what it is.
Another comment below regarding using it despite the ban with no worries for fish safety is quite alarming.
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So agreeing that it is safe to use in free baits is it a worthwhile addition to a bait?. I’m currently using a high quality milk protein food bait using minimal free offerings. Or would it pay to limit it to hookbait only?.
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In reply to Post #6 Just be aware they addedan additive to avoid lumping of there dmpt.
And this additive doesn't dissolve in water as good as dmpt. Some sedimentation could occure
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In reply to Post #9 I’d be interested to know where you found evidence of DMPT being harmful to fish. I’m aware of the EU restrictions, this in itself does not support that it is harmful.
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The EU bans many chemicals that are regarded as safe/ accepable elsewhere in the world. Too many tree huggers in places like Scandinavia. The Eu looks at hazard (ie the toxicity of the pure substance), as opposed to risk (ie how it is used taking into account low concentration use rates).
The Eu is a joke. If Japan and the USA are ok with it, I would happily use it it and not worry about fish safety. A bait suuplier cannot sadly say the same thing.
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BRB is it really?. Did a little bit of research and couldn’t find anything that said it was harmful to fish?. I read a koi study on it and didn’t understand the majority of it granted but nowhere stated it was harmful. The only thing I found was it is only to be used in hookbaits due to not being on the EU list of feed ingredients
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In reply to Post #8 0.5g in 20ml is 2.5%
Recommended level is 0.5-1% for boilie soak
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| BRB | Posts: 1389 |  | |
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In reply to Post #8 Do not use this in your freebies either as a basemix ingredient or as a soak. It is a harmful substance that should not be fed to fish or animals.
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Thanks lads I will just mix up a litre of it and use it as and when. Mr bean Laden I ment half as in 1/2 not 1 or 2 grams.I know it can act as a repellent if used in excess. Andy I don’t know about emptying the lake a bite would do
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so....
Get a litre of water, add the dmpt at the recommended level ( 5gr) , shake and coat boilie maybe 2 times allowing it to soak in.
sorted.
Then proceed to empty the lake?
Feedback/confirmation needed
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Ex Feedstim site:
In soak/dip for hook bait we recommend around 5-10 gr per litre liquid. So far less than you are proposing.
Using less is often better. If used too much the bait will not be taken!
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Only using it to soak maybe 10 hookbaits. Was wondering if it would be too much neat as opposed to being boiled in a bait 👍🏼
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In reply to Post #3 Same dosing is applied. So, I've your going to use 20ml to soak 1kg of boilies you can add 2gram.
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It’s in powdered form?. And has a guideline of 2grams per kilo?. I didn’t want to include it in a mix and boil most of it away I would rather dissolve it in liquid and soak it into the bait?.
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I’ve just had some 9f this rolled into my latest custom boilie mix, they recommended addition at 3-4ml per 6 eggs.
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Alright lads, I want to soak some hookbaits in some DMPT dissolved into hookbait soak. So for 20ml how how much DMPT should I be looking at? I know less is more with it I was thinking of maybe 1/2 gram?
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