Sand and maggots
- Slumption
- Bleak
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Sand and maggots
I'm reading an old book at the moment 'Roach, Rudd and Bream fishing' it's a reprint of a 100 year old book. Anyway this book and several others reference keeping maggots in sand. Has anyone tried this? the book goes on to say they will last far longer than if kept this way. I have had squats supplied in sand but normally I've used them within a day of getting them.
- Aitch
- Pike
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Re: Sand and maggots
Squatts were historically kept in the red foundry sand and maggots usually in sawdaust... more latterly just naked in a tub and the lad in the shop asks if you want sawdust or maize meal... but I've bever heard of them being sold in sand
Just one more cast love, and I'll be on me way home
Leave nothing but footprints, take nothing but pictures and memories
Leave nothing but footprints, take nothing but pictures and memories
- Slumption
- Bleak
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Re: Sand and maggots
I've had squatts supplied in brick dust / sand but this is the only time I have seen it. The Frank Oates bait book discusses preparing maggots by putting them into a container of sand then shining a light on them so they burrow in. The sand is then riddled off after a few days. In the 'Roach, Rudd and Bream fishing book' the author is breeding maggots and then storing them in large pickle jars filled with damp sharp sand, he says this is to to scour the skin and then keep them. I would presume given the books age this was because they didn't have a fridge. I might try it and see what happens!
- Troydog
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Re: Sand and maggots
I always keep my maggots in bread crumb. This stops them sweating in the fridge and when I riddle them off I use the crumb in my ground bait.
Trouble is, the fish just don't read the books......
John Harding
John Harding
- Chubman
- Crucian Carp
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Re: Sand and maggots
i use bran flake as it stops them sweating, maize goes into lumps in the fridge
- Slumption
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Re: Sand and maggots
I use rough bran and keep them in a big open box when their in the garage.
- Olly
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Re: Sand and maggots
I kept them in France in a fridge - they came with a little sawdust so I added about the same amount of maize meal. They would keep for 2 weeks. I would take off a half-pint from the litre in the box to use. €8.00 per litre or about £3.75 per pint. I removed the lumps and replaced with fresh meal every 3-4 days.
Strangely they were not the going bait - but bread was - esp. punched. Up to 10+ bream excluding skimmers in a couple of hours or so.
It was hot!
Strangely they were not the going bait - but bread was - esp. punched. Up to 10+ bream excluding skimmers in a couple of hours or so.
It was hot!
- Chubman
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Re: Sand and maggots
I use porridge oats as maise go's a bit lumpy,
- MWithell
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Re: Sand and maggots
Slightly off topic, but do people find that maggots don't keep so long these days? I don't use them often but I find that a week later most of them are casters. I don't add any extra sawdust/bran etc. Does that help, or am I just being sold elderly maggots?
Malcolm
Catching lob-worms is one of the greater Outdoor Sports. It is the most hilarious game in the world (John C Moore)
Catching lob-worms is one of the greater Outdoor Sports. It is the most hilarious game in the world (John C Moore)
- John Milford
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Re: Sand and maggots
Keeping maggots in damp sand makes perfect sense in the days prior to everyone having refrigerators.Slumption wrote: ↑Wed May 02, 2018 1:10 am I've had squatts supplied in brick dust / sand but this is the only time I have seen it. The Frank Oates bait book discusses preparing maggots by putting them into a container of sand then shining a light on them so they burrow in. The sand is then riddled off after a few days. In the 'Roach, Rudd and Bream fishing book' the author is breeding maggots and then storing them in large pickle jars filled with damp sharp sand, he says this is to to scour the skin and then keep them. I would presume given the books age this was because they didn't have a fridge. I might try it and see what happens!
The slow evaporation of the moisture in the sand would have provided quite effective cooling.
(I remember my old nan keeping her bottles of milk in a galvanised bucket of water in a shady spot by her back door step before she had a fridge. That would have been around 1959).
A seeker of "the fell tyrant of the liquid plain".