I would agree that they are plentiful. You can also break them into smaller pieces depending on the size of fish you are targeting. I wouldn't say they are ideal in all conditions. In dark water, they don't stand out very well. They also aren't very durable. If you are fishing for 80-100+ fish in a day, you will spend most of your time baiting your hook. My go to is Gulp, usually a white or chartreuse split tail minnow. It's much more expensive, but it stays on your hook a lot longer.
Definitely not a bait I’d use in every situation. The plastics still amazing for crappies and things like that. But man what a great natural, cheap and plentiful bait that you can catch anything with.
Good advice.
Thank you!
brown trout like worm too..
It was a nice surprise catch …my biggest surprise was the Chinook!
You can find bunch of them on the ground after raining
You sure can, those worms in the beginning came out after the rain
I would agree that they are plentiful. You can also break them into smaller pieces depending on the size of fish you are targeting. I wouldn't say they are ideal in all conditions. In dark water, they don't stand out very well. They also aren't very durable. If you are fishing for 80-100+ fish in a day, you will spend most of your time baiting your hook. My go to is Gulp, usually a white or chartreuse split tail minnow. It's much more expensive, but it stays on your hook a lot longer.
Definitely not a bait I’d use in every situation. The plastics still amazing for crappies and things like that. But man what a great natural, cheap and plentiful bait that you can catch anything with.
@@ToothyWally Keep it up. Great content.
@@someguy-k2h thank you sir, tight lines
Salmon too?
And trout! You bet!
Hi there
Hi there back!
Nightcrawler
Yup!
kinda obvious, nice vid tho
Cool how such a simple bait can catch so many different species
Apps. censuses questionnaires, conversations propaganda and social media is best.
God bless