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Any advice on breeding lob worms??
Where to start etc?? -- Regards Andy "Glad All Over!!" |
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Very easy really, set up a compost heap with old fruit, vegetables etc at
the back of your garden and turn it over every other day to put air into the heap, buy some worms from your local tackle shop and place them in the compost at different places and let nature take its course. You should have a ready supply in approx 3 month's. "Andy" wrote in message ... Any advice on breeding lob worms?? Where to start etc?? -- Regards Andy "Glad All Over!!" |
#3
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![]() "Ray" wrote in message ... Very easy really, set up a compost heap with old fruit, vegetables etc at the back of your garden and turn it over every other day to put air into the heap, buy some worms from your local tackle shop and place them in the compost at different places and let nature take its course. You should have a ready supply in approx 3 month's. But, they will not be LOBWORMS! |
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Ken, please enlighten me.....
I am an ardent carper but wish to move from boilies, pastes etc to more traditional baits. Therefore the trusty worm intrigues me but they (like most bait) are expensive to buy. Even feel like trying a new par-boiled potato and revisiting the 1960s carpers hey-days...lol! But seriously, what did you mean about the worms? Cheers, Keith http://www.helden.org.uk "Ken Ward" wrote in message ... "Ray" wrote in message ... Very easy really, set up a compost heap with old fruit, vegetables etc at the back of your garden and turn it over every other day to put air into the heap, buy some worms from your local tackle shop and place them in the compost at different places and let nature take its course. You should have a ready supply in approx 3 month's. But, they will not be LOBWORMS! *** Free account sponsored by SecureIX.com *** *** Encrypt your Internet usage with a free VPN account from http://www.SecureIX.com *** |
#5
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![]() "Baal" wrote in message om... Ken, please enlighten me..... I am an ardent carper but wish to move from boilies, pastes etc to more traditional baits. Therefore the trusty worm intrigues me but they (like most bait) are expensive to buy. Even feel like trying a new par-boiled potato and revisiting the 1960s carpers hey-days...lol! But seriously, what did you mean about the worms? Compost heaps produce Brandling and Redworms. The really big Lobworms or "Night Crawlers" as the yanks call then cost about 10p. each. You need to go out at night when it has been raining so that the grass will be very wet. You also need a night when there is not much wind as this makes the worms cold and not very obliging. The worms are both Male and Female but, they don't mess with thenselves. So on a wet night they come out of the grass and look for a mate and when found they "twist around" each other. If you are very lucky the worm will fully remove itself from its hole but, most will still have the flat end firmly fixed in the ground. What you need to do is grip gently the worm above where it enters the ground and hold on applying a little outward pulling pressure. Soon the worm will loosen its grip and you can then pull it from its hole. Now drop it in a bucket containing shredded paper and garden moss and continue until you have a hundred or so! When you first start Lobworm collecting you will not see them but after a while you will be able to tell them from the grass. Then you will start to scare them off as you go to pick them up.. it does get better with a little practice.. honest! Don't go armed with a torch... it puts them down! Find a large patch of well mowed short grass. One of my favourite places is an Industrial estate with verges only about 4 feet wide but quite long and the road lighting is constant and adequate. If you have a good lawn of your own and dont have a water meter, then get the "Hose pipe" out on the lawn about 2 hours before dark and watch the buggers creep out after dark! The productive times for the worms are from about the end of March or earlier if the temperature rises. Dont forget the want "warm and wet". Hope that is of help and don't be put of by your eary failures... it happened to us all! Ken Ward, Bolton. (Ex Eel angler and worm catcher). |
#6
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On Sun, 19 Feb 2006, Ken Ward, gave forth these words of wisdom:
Ken Ward, Bolton. (Ex Eel angler and worm catcher). Hi Ken, Were you involved with the National Anguilla Society some years back? Used to be a keen eel man myself until I discovered trout. Might have a go for them again in the spring though. (Dead baiting sprats on the Thames near here was my forte). Cheers, Alec BTW the other way to get lobs is to get an allotment like mine and dig 'em up! How many do you want? :-) -- Alec Powell Watlington Oxon. UK |
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