Feel Alive.

Glugging your hook-baits can really up the attraction levels, and don't forget it's also worth thinking about getting away from, just one bait on the hair. Try Doubles, Boilie Bits, or Combo's!
On many of the lakes we fish, the fish have become used to standard boilies, and it can pay to do something a little different. There are several ways to do this but one of the best is to glug your bait. Glugging is the name given to the technique of letting your boilies soak for a long period of time in a liquid attractor, so that they soak up and get coated with whatever you’ve picked. Several bait companies make ready to use bait soaks/glugs or you can design your own. The best ones are thin enough to soak into the boilie but also thick enough to provide a coating that doesn’t wash off to quickly.

A pot of glugged baits can last for ages, I've had some glugged baits for over a year, and the pot doesn't take up a lot of space in the tackle bag.
Over a period of time the glug will soak into the boilies. As a high attract bait they will just get better and better. One slight disadvantage is that the glug will tend to soften the boilies, so bear this in mind if you want to leave the bait out for long periods of time, or if the water is stuffed with nuisance fish.

Why not take it a step further and create a glug bag with a range of glugged hook-baits, giving you even more choice.
Another variation on the glugging theme is to wash your baits in glug. This is ideal if you are fishing a river, or a large expanse of water, where you need to get the maximum amount of attraction into your swim. Again it is very easy to do. Just put your bait into a tub or bait bucket, pour a small amount of glug into the container and shake them up so all the baits get coated. They can go straight into the water at this point. A lot of the glug will wash off as the baits fall through the water, but that’s a positive, as the attraction covers all the layer of the water, hopefully pulling fish down to your bait. In the case of running water, it is washed off and gets carried downstream again hopefully encouraging fish to move upstream to your bait.