Mega Mesh Bags


This is a more substantial PVA approach — built for attraction, not just presentation.


The Castaway PVA Catfish Mesh (60mm, 7m) is designed for larger, heavier parcels, and you can see that in the size of these two finished mesh bags. They’re densely packed with chunky bait — like boilie pieces, pellets, or a coarse mix — compressed into tight, flat discs rather than elongated sticks. That shape is deliberate.


A large PVA parcel offers several advantages:


1. Concentrated food signal
With larger mesh like this, you can introduce a serious mouthful of feed around the hookbait. It creates an immediate dinner-plate-sized feeding zone rather than a light scattering.


2. Heavier casting weight
These parcels add mass to the rig, aiding casting distance and improving drop accuracy — particularly useful when fishing open water spots.


3. Controlled breakdown
Thicker catfish-grade mesh handles oil-rich or damp mixes well. Once submerged, it melts cleanly and leaves a tight pile rather than dispersing bait over too wide an area.


4. Ideal for bigger fish tactics
This sort of parcel suits situations where you’re targeting better fish and want to avoid nuisance bites. A larger food source often attracts confident, dominant carp that are willing to commit.


Compared to smaller, cable-tied PVA nuggets or sticks, this is a more assertive tactic. It’s not subtle — it’s designed to create impact. Perfect for situations where fish are actively feeding, pre-baited spots, or when you need to draw fish down quickly onto a known clear area.


It’s a good example of matching presentation size to feeding behaviour. When the fish are on it, give them something worth stopping for.

Hope this helps

Richard

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About richardhandel

I would like to give a brief snap shot of my life and introduce myself; My name is Richard Handel and was born in 1965 in Suffolk. I have worked as a UK Operation & Intermodule Manager for a shipping company. I live in Hampshire now and am married with 2 young children, both girls so I am a bit outnumbered even the cat is a girl! I have been fishing since I was about 7 years old. I started on small local rivers in Suffolk, then moved onto gravel pits and then carp fishing. My personal best is a 39.08 mirror, over recent years I have started river fishing again, on the Hampshire Avon, this is a nice break from the carp lakes. My life has turned a big corner this year, the company I was working for relocated their Operation centre to Estonia. I was offered a job at the head office in London. This would have meant a 5 day commute and working in Stratford. As a family, we did not fancy this, as I would hardly spend any time with the children (and the Mrs). So after 22.5 years, I was given a nice redundancy package and with my wife is working full time. I became the house husband. This has meant a complete turn around in my fishing, as I can pick and choose when I go. I have found a splendid new syndicate to fish this year, which includes 5 lakes and some 8 miles of river with only 150 members. It's an amazing change to the way I am able to fish. I am now trying to start my own tackle business and make a bit of a name for myself in the world of fishing, as I have retired from real work. Richard
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