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Anyone ever heard of this? I dont believe it, heres a story though.
IN OTHER WORDS: Even the catfish were smiling By SONJA GLEATON, T&D Staff Writer Vacation memories are meant to endure for a lifetime. After 40 years of marriage and three fun-loving children, I have many wonderful, unique vacation memories to share. When our children, Connie, Michael and Matthew, were very young, we traveled to Hackleburg, Ala., my mother's hometown. It was an eight-hour journey, and when we reached Jasper, Mother called out directions along the backroads to where Aunt Inez lived. Upon our arrival, Aunt Inez served a vegetarian meal of green beans, stewed squash, creamed corn, cole slaw, potato salad and butter rolls, Over the next four days, we would take flowers to the family cemetery, visit great-aunt Verdie, Aunt Ethel, Uncle Clovis and Aunt Willie and go fishing. We would travel across a one-lane bridge, collect colorful rocks from a popular mountainside and go swimming in Bear Creek. Time passed quickly, and the day of our fishing trip arrived. Everybody was excited as we loaded fishing poles and a bait bucket into the trunk of the car. As we started to leave, Aunt Inez suddenly announced that she had to get her hand saw. As she dashed around the house to the barn, the kids said in unison, "A hand saw?" Aunt Inez was a woman of great humor, so we didn't ask any questions and played along. We parked the car at the edge of a dark swamp. Mom carried the bait bucket, and Aunt Inez hurried into the woods with her hand saw. The kids whispered and giggled as we stepped over tree stumps and broken branches, and because Aunt Inez was chuckling to herself, I suspected one of her crafty jokes was unfolding. Aunt Inez said, "We are now going to fiddle for worms. Spread out and be quiet and stand very still until I say move." Then she took hold of a young tree and bent it over. With my husband holding the top of the tree near ground level, the boys giggled. Aunt Inez "tuned" her saw, and I began to question everybody's sanity. "Let the music begin," Aunt Inez said, as she grated the hand saw across the trunk of the bent tree. "Grate, grate, grate" went the saw in the semi-darkened woods. The song played too long for my nerves, but we all stood still with most eyes focused on the woman fiddling' the bark off a helpless sapling. A wild scream interrupted the rhythm of the music. A desperate wailing echoed throughout the forest. Michael quickly clasped a sweaty hand over my big mouth and said, "It's okay Mom. They won't hurt ya. Be quiet or they'll all crawl away." Aunt Inez started to laugh into her apron. All around the woods were monstrous worms that the fiddlin' had serenaded from deep within the earth. The ugly things stretched out to about two feet long when the children held them up and slung them into the bucket. When we returned to our car, I climbed down off my husband's back, while a smiling Aunt Inez tossed the hand saw and bait bucket into the trunk. As the kids argued over who found the biggest worm, we headed to Uncle Clovis' fishing pond. The kids baited their hooks with pieces of the giant worms. Still pouting, I fished with crickets on the opposite side of the pond. A few hours later, nobody had a single bite. Uncle Clovis consoled us, but I noticed he was chuckling under his breath. Sometime later, he threw a bucket of feed into the water, and thousands of big catfish surfaced. On this family vacation, we learned that worms don't like "fiddlin' music" and that Uncle Clovis' catfish wouldn't bite a hook no matter how big the worms were. I don't know who got the last laugh that fishing day, but I'm almost certain those catfish were smiling, too. a.. T&D Staff Writer Sonja Gleaton can be reached by e-mail at and by telephone at 533-5523. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---- |
#2
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I've heard of it several times over the years but not lately.
I think it was practiced more in the Northern areas of the Country. I can't comment on how productive it is. |
#3
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Tightwad wrote:
I've heard of it several times over the years but not lately. I think it was practiced more in the Northern areas of the Country. I can't comment on how productive it is. It is VERY productive,, if "fiddle" worms are there, it has also went high tech, today we do it with a chain saw,, you clear the leaves out, and sit a running chain saw on the bear ground, the vibrations really bring the worms to the top, it is better than using a hand saw,, sometimes we drive a steel 1/2 inch pipe in the ground about 6 inches, then tap it with a hammer,, any type vibrations bring them out of the ground. Scientist think that moles create vibrations when they tun through our dig their tunnels,, moles favorite food is earth worms, this species of worm escapes the moles -- Rodney Long, Inventor of the Long Shot "WIGGLE" rig, SpecTastic Thread Boomerang Fishing Pro. ,Stand Out Hooks ,Stand Out Lures, Mojo's Rock Hopper & Rig Saver weights, Decoy Activator and the EZKnot http://www.ezknot.com |
#4
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![]() "Rodney" wrote in message ... Tightwad wrote: I've heard of it several times over the years but not lately. I think it was practiced more in the Northern areas of the Country. I can't comment on how productive it is. It is VERY productive,, if "fiddle" worms are there, it has also went high tech, today we do it with a chain saw,, you clear the leaves out, and sit a running chain saw on the bear ground, the vibrations really bring the worms to the top, it is better than using a hand saw,, sometimes we drive a steel 1/2 inch pipe in the ground about 6 inches, then tap it with a hammer,, any type vibrations bring them out of the ground. Scientist think that moles create vibrations when they tun through our dig their tunnels,, moles favorite food is earth worms, this species of worm escapes the moles -- Cant tell whether you are joking or not but (I dont know about fiddlin for worms) we used to run a rod into the ground and hook it to a battery IIRC and drive the worms out of the ground. |
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Jeff wrote:
Cant tell whether you are joking or not I don't joke about fishing, it's how I make my living -- Rodney Long, Inventor of the Long Shot "WIGGLE" rig, SpecTastic Thread Boomerang Fishing Pro. ,Stand Out Hooks ,Stand Out Lures, Mojo's Rock Hopper & Rig Saver weights, Decoy Activator and the EZKnot http://www.ezknot.com |
#6
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The story is a good story, and YES it is true. A typical fiddle worm
is about 12-16 inches long, and produces a yucky yellowish slime when cut up for catfish bait, and catfish love them. I use to live in north Alabama, and I have done this to get fiddle worms. You rake an area of leaves back to clear an area about 10 feet around a small tree, about 2 inch diameter, cut the tree off about 2 feet above the ground, and then begin sawing straight down the tree to vibrate the ground. The fiddle worms will crawl up out of the ground, and you just pick them up. Of course you have to be in a wooded, damp, and shady area where the fiddle worms are. I had always heard of my grandfather and other people doing this when I was a kid, but had never done this until I was an adult. I had always purchased them in a bait store. One day I was short on cash and wanted to go catfishing, so I went to an area and gave it a try. I was amazed at how easy it was. It was a whole lot easier than digging earth worms. I now live in south Alabama, and people here have never heard of them. They think I am crazy when I start talking about fiddle worms. I guess rightfully so, If you have never went out and fiddled for them, it does sound like an Alabama wise tail, but it is true. Wish I could find them where I live now. |
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