bumpyjump.com bumpyjump.com bumpyjump.com
Search:    Home Page :> About Us :> Security & Privacy :> ToS :> Add Url :> Add Your Article   

 

Policies & Law

 

Family & Home

 

Creative Arts

 

Health & Therapy

 

Adventure & Sports

 

Companies & Business

 

Tour & Travel

 

Education & Learning

 

Automotive

 

Self Healing

 

Teens & Kids

 

Finance & Investment

 

Recreation & Entertainment

 

Shopping & Auction

 

People & Society

 

Computers & Software

 

News & Events

 

Fashion & Relationships

 

Property & Agents

 

Healthcare & Treatment

 

Jobs & Employment

 

Science & Research

 

Drink & Food

 

Online & Board Games

 

Home Page › Adventure & Sports › Fish Angling
 

How to Build Your Own Cricket Trap

 
Author: Albert McBee

When I was a kid, my father would choose a weekend for a catfishing trip to Lake Texoma, giving me ample notice to catch lots of trotline bait. The pond I liked to get bait from was full of black perch and bluegill from 3 inches to 3/4 pound each. They liked crickets. Lots of crickets.

It took me an hour after dark to chase and catch a dozen crickets to fish with the following morning. Then the perch ate them so fast that I ran out within a half-hour or so. I had to figure out a better way to supply myself with enough crickets to catch enough perch to run a 100 hook trotline at least four times. That takes a lot of perch and even more crickets.

I noticed that the crickets I needed were on the ground, dead, at the gas station on the corner every morning. They were piled up under the light that stayed on all night. Nowhere else were they so numerous.

That gave me a brainstorm. I went down to the grocer's and begged an orange crate from him. Don't laugh... oranges came in wooden crates in the mid 1950's. The slats failed to cover the entire box bottom, but it allowed air flow. I covered the box with window screen wire on the bottom and sides in order to keep the crickets from escaping. Then I made a tight-fitting frame covered with the same screen wire for a lid and hinged it to the box.

The box was half-filed with torn up lettuce leaves from the grocer and placed outside against the wall of the garage with the lid propped open. This was the trap.

The lure was a simple invention... an extension cord with a garage trouble light plugged in. The key was the red lightbulb. The red light was positioned so that the light fell on the lettuce bed in the box.

The crickets swarmed the red light at night, falling into the lettuce where they remained chomping merrily away all night. All I had to do was quietly remove the light and close the box lid at daybreak and I had thousands of crickets free of charge.

My live tank at the pond was filled on schedule and many church fish fries were supplied with fine catfish from that Lake Texoma trotline.

Author Bio:
Albert McBee is a renowned writer. Albert likes to compose articles about this field.
You can search for this article using: michigan salmon fishing, bass fishing, fly fishing, fishing boats, oscoda salmon fishing, fishing knots
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Getting to the Core of the Problem with Your Golf Game
 
Satisfy Your Thirst for Fishing - 3 Parts to the Fishing Cocktail
 
AFC Conference Championships Preview: Pittsburgh Steelers At Denver Broncos
 
Golf - Teaching Your Child How To Play
 
The World's Most Beloved Sport - The History of Soccer
 
How to Pick Your Next Camping Tent
 
Angles and Trends to Lay Off Betting a Team (Part 1)
 
Helping You To A Great Fishing Adventure: Humminbrid Fishfinder 515
 
The Best And Most Efficient Way To Carry Worms While River Fishing
 
Fishing Alaska: Just for the Halibut...The Alaskan Sampler Plate... Part IV
 
 
 
Home Page :> Security & Privacy :> ToS  
Copyright © 2006-2008 www.bumpyjump.com - All Rights Reserved.