Yea it really is a craft isn't it. It looks so easy at first then u get out and try ..... and it's just not. What part of Australia u from? I'm south Australia. Well they definitely worth learning to catch. I'm yet to find a fish that won't bite down on a worm and also saves me carrying 4 or 5 different baits. Most of witch goes back in the freezer or in the bin when I'm done. I use a scaling bag with fish heads, and frames tied to a stick. That way when I find worms I spike the bag and it continues to bring worms up while I target the ones I initially saw. Plus a stocking with about 8 pilchards in it as my hand bait. It took me a while but I kept at it and after about a dozen trips I got real good at it.
@@armanskinner9347 thats a great idea, im located in the mid coast of NSW and frozen worms still work a treat as long as they are either salted or with some dry-damp sand so it doesnt ‘’mush” up
@@bstfishing I use methylated spirits and red food colouring. Just drop Ur worms on paper towel and lightly dry them. Then pour some metho in a small container and add some food colouring. Just drip it in until the metho goes red but make sure u can still see through it. Then get Ur live worms and drop them in (use enough metho to completely submerge the worms). Let them sit for 10 minutes and them pop them back on paper towel for a couple minutes. Then package and freeze. Now bear in mind i used to salt them aswell.... try this mate and I promise you won't look back.
What do the sand worms catch?? Everything?
Keep up the good work and tight lines brother 🎣
They’re great for just about anything off the beaches such as mulloway, bream, whiting and stingrays 😂. Probably just behind fresh squid as bait IMO
Hey dude, good job! Without a doubt. Worming is the hardest aspect of fishing I have ever had to learn. How many times u been out?
Thanks Arman, ive probably been out for a dozen of times before successfully catching worms
Yea it really is a craft isn't it. It looks so easy at first then u get out and try ..... and it's just not. What part of Australia u from? I'm south Australia. Well they definitely worth learning to catch. I'm yet to find a fish that won't bite down on a worm and also saves me carrying 4 or 5 different baits. Most of witch goes back in the freezer or in the bin when I'm done. I use a scaling bag with fish heads, and frames tied to a stick. That way when I find worms I spike the bag and it continues to bring worms up while I target the ones I initially saw. Plus a stocking with about 8 pilchards in it as my hand bait. It took me a while but I kept at it and after about a dozen trips I got real good at it.
@@armanskinner9347 thats a great idea, im located in the mid coast of NSW and frozen worms still work a treat as long as they are either salted or with some dry-damp sand so it doesnt ‘’mush” up
@@bstfishing I use methylated spirits and red food colouring. Just drop Ur worms on paper towel and lightly dry them. Then pour some metho in a small container and add some food colouring. Just drip it in until the metho goes red but make sure u can still see through it. Then get Ur live worms and drop them in (use enough metho to completely submerge the worms). Let them sit for 10 minutes and them pop them back on paper towel for a couple minutes. Then package and freeze.
Now bear in mind i used to salt them aswell.... try this mate and I promise you won't look back.
Just tried the methylated spirits and they work a treat! Thank you for the tip and I definitely won't be looking back haha
Wrum
Wiggle wiggle wiggle