Free: Contests & Raffles.
Were Going after the Big Daddies this weekend..... I see a 10 incher hittin the dirt....
Crawdadin has me so frustrated. I've got to be doing something wrong. I've put pots out in several king county lakes, a river, even in kapowsin in pierce county. Used trout, chum salmon, chicken, even fuel brined chicken, bacon, lunch meat, tuna you name it. Obviously I don't mind putting in the work, but at this point I think I need some direction.
I'm using the Frabill tubular type traps and I have one of the 12x12 ones too. Time of day varies, I've soaked overnight in one lake, most are early morning when I head out to fish but not always, two or three times in the afternoon. Usually let them soak for at least two hours before checking them. Some get up to a four hour soak.
I'm thinking its more of where I'm putting them. I've read that they like rock bottom with coverage like downed trees and such. But I've also read sandy bottom with vegetation?
Well, went out on Friday night to camp and crawdad but my night ended prematurely by a dust storm. Left camp at 1am and pulled my pots. Got about 20 and two just over 7inches. I tried a different spot and noticed this time that over half my crawdads only had one claw. Is this normal?
Quote from: Evil_EdwardO on August 12, 2013, 12:42:55 PMWell, went out on Friday night to camp and crawdad but my night ended prematurely by a dust storm. Left camp at 1am and pulled my pots. Got about 20 and two just over 7inches. I tried a different spot and noticed this time that over half my crawdads only had one claw. Is this normal? Sweet catch. The last crawdad trip we did, some of the dads had one claw that was bigger than the other side. I was wondering if they "shed" there claws and evidently grow new ones?