patrickg
Veteran Member
Crayfish, AKA crawdads, may be caught on a fish line baited with pork rind, a chunk of bacon, or whatever. Often they will hold on and allow then selves to be draged to the surface. Bait needs to be tough enough to not come off during the tug-o-war.
Water softener pellets are SALT. Not a good idea where you E V E R want A N Y T H I N G to grow that won't grow in a salt marsh. They realy are good eating, don't waste.
I was dipping water out of a hole at the pad for my mom's new house and filling it with dry dirt the other day using FEL. Ran off two frogs and a mid sized crawdad. The crawdad was headed for a quieter neighborhood but every time I got near him with the FEL he would stop, rear up, brandish his claws, and look like he wanted to go a couple rounds with me. I guess the FEL looked a bit like a giant crawdad to him. To draw a quote from "Top Gun", "It was the gutsiest manuever I've ever seen".
If you simply M U S T kill these beautiful creatures to have a compleat life then use Rotenone, sparingly. Rotenone is used in pond management to kill every oxygen dependent life form it contacts in the pond. It takes up all available oxygen and they are suffocated/asphyxiated (SP?) Run off from the treated area, should it rain before it biodegrades will be the gift that keeps on killing. It does biodegrade (search net for details) rather quickly and new life forms (like desireable fish etc) can be reintroduced in the water real soon thereafter. Usually you pump the pond WAY DOWN LOW before use. Limits amount needed, reduces chance of pond overflow if it rains, and concentrates those about to die so they are easier to remove and bury.
Check safety of using near potable water source!!! It biodegrades quickly, well before it could migrate through much soil but if there were an easy path to the water well, who knows...
Borrow some river otters, they love to eat crawdads.
Patrick
Water softener pellets are SALT. Not a good idea where you E V E R want A N Y T H I N G to grow that won't grow in a salt marsh. They realy are good eating, don't waste.
I was dipping water out of a hole at the pad for my mom's new house and filling it with dry dirt the other day using FEL. Ran off two frogs and a mid sized crawdad. The crawdad was headed for a quieter neighborhood but every time I got near him with the FEL he would stop, rear up, brandish his claws, and look like he wanted to go a couple rounds with me. I guess the FEL looked a bit like a giant crawdad to him. To draw a quote from "Top Gun", "It was the gutsiest manuever I've ever seen".
If you simply M U S T kill these beautiful creatures to have a compleat life then use Rotenone, sparingly. Rotenone is used in pond management to kill every oxygen dependent life form it contacts in the pond. It takes up all available oxygen and they are suffocated/asphyxiated (SP?) Run off from the treated area, should it rain before it biodegrades will be the gift that keeps on killing. It does biodegrade (search net for details) rather quickly and new life forms (like desireable fish etc) can be reintroduced in the water real soon thereafter. Usually you pump the pond WAY DOWN LOW before use. Limits amount needed, reduces chance of pond overflow if it rains, and concentrates those about to die so they are easier to remove and bury.
Check safety of using near potable water source!!! It biodegrades quickly, well before it could migrate through much soil but if there were an easy path to the water well, who knows...
Borrow some river otters, they love to eat crawdads.
Patrick