Showing posts with label pond. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pond. Show all posts

Monday, June 24, 2024

Runnin' The Traps

Late the other afternoon Tricia and I got on our bicycles and rode a couple of miles west down our road.  It was a nice afternoon.  We stopped at the edge of a pasture and watched a cow in labor give birth to a little calf.  Cottontail rabbits were hopping this way and that across the road.  We came upon a crawfish boat at the edge of a pond.  It made a nice photo against the sunset and brought back some old memories.

In the early 80's my grandfather bought an aluminum pull boat and some traps for me and I crawfished and sold the catch to people in Oberlin for their crawfish boils.  There were very few people crawfishing back then.  Today, it's a bigger cash crop than rice for lots and lots of farmers.

Fast forward a couple of decades and I was back on the farm in Oberlin and crawfishing a little better than 120 acres of crawfish.  The boat was powered by a Honda engine.  You steer it with your feet with pedals on the floor.  A hydraulic pump turned a wheel in the back that pushed you through the water.  The reason that you steered with your feet is that you needed both hands for picking up the trap, emptying it out in the tray, and rebaiting it.  

All this was done on the run.  You never stopped the boat.  It seemed like a lot to do, but once you got in the rhythm, it was easy.  When the water was cold, you used fish bait.  That required you to chop up the fish into pieces in the morning.  The blood attracted the crawfish into the trap.  Fish bait was a stinky deal.  Blood and guts would get all over you.  Once the water temperature hit about 70 degrees, you switched to cubed bait.  No more chopping up fish and it didn't stink as bad.

Crawfishing was fun because you could see the money coming into the boat.  You knew what the price per pound was and could calculate your revenue and expenses as you caught.  Sometimes you caught more than crawfish.  Snakes liked to get in the traps.  You'd pick up a trap and dump it in the tray and come face to face with a big snake looking at you!  I kept a shovel in the boat and I'd chop up the snake and use it for bait.  (It's a dog eat dog world)

There were competitors out there trying to catch the crawfish, too.  Raccoons learned to nocturnally run my traps.  They'd swim out and reach their arms into the trap and eat the crawfish, leaving just the heads in the trap for me to find the next morning.  Oftentimes, they'd turn the traps over sideways.  I couldn't see the traps and I'd run over them with the boat, ruining an $8 trap for each one I'd hit.  I would set some traps and try to catch and kill the coons and would hunt for them, shooting them out of trees where they would be napping all full of crawfish.

The season ran from December until June, give or take.  In winter it would be SO cold, with ice on the water sometimes.  In summer it would be SO hot!  As it warmed up, it became hard to keep water in the ponds.  Crawfish like to burrow in the levees and that caused leaks.  Nutria and muskrats would cut the levees, too.  You'd arrive the next morning to fish and the levee would be dry.

I'd sell my catch to boil & go restaurants in Kinder, Hathaway, and Jennings.  Prices were high early in the season, but you weren't catching much.  As the weather warmed, the catch got better, but the prices dropped.  You learned everything you wanted to know about supply and demand.  Good Friday was the high point of the season and then prices dropped off a cliff.  I kept meticulous records, documenting the thousands and thousands of pounds we'd catch.

As summer approached, we began catching crawfish not to sell, but to restock.  We would 'seed' other ponds with crawfish for next year.  After seeding them, you'd slowly let the water out.  As the water level went down, the crawfish would burrow into the ground, down to the water table.  In October, when you would re-flood the pond, the crawfish would come out of their burrows with their young and the whole process would start again.

Crawfishing was a lot of fun!

Sunday, November 29, 2020

The Rains Come Down and the Crawfish Come Up

On Saturday morning we put together the church bulletin for Sunday Morning Worship Services.  We select the hymns, update the prayer list, edit announcements, and print it.  Then we drive over to church to make copies.  Our church is out in the country with farmland all around it.  It is less than a mile from our house.  The land directly east of the church is a rice field that also is a crawfish pond.  The farmer catches crawfish commercially and sells his catch.

In July, the farmer will slowly drain his pond as the oxygen content in the water drops due to the heat and the catch falls off.  Slowly draining the pond signals the crawfish to burrow down into the ground, reaching the water table.  There they will live for a few months until the weather cools off and it either rains a great deal or the farmer begins pumping his pond back up with fresh water.

Once it rains, the crawfish emerge from their holes.  The females will be carrying their little ones on their tails.  It is quite a sight!  When we drove up to the church, I noticed many crawfish in the parking lot.  They were lifting their pinchers up in the air aggressively, as if to say, "Get back!"


Russ and I stopped and picked them up and turned them over.  Sure enough, they were females and had maybe a hundred babies clinging to their tails:  You can zoom in and see the little ones!


This is a good sign for the neighboring crawfish farmer.  The old cajuns used to say, "You gotta wait for a good thundering to get them up outta da ground."  Sure enough, it thundered and rained 3.7 inches and the crawfish are all over the place.  The farmers around here need a good crop of rice and crawfish to make up for a dismal 2020.  Soon they'll put their traps out once again to catch and people around here will be anxious to boil them up. 






Wednesday, September 13, 2017

Getting the Teal Pond Ready

Teal season opens on September 15th and runs through September 30th.  My buddy Gary called me and the boys and I met him this past Saturday morning.  It was a beautiful day to be alive.  Gary had stopped up the pond and caught some free rainwater.  We hooked up a plow to the back of Gary's ATV and he began plowing in the flooded duck pond.  The idea is to knock down enough stubble in the field to open up a "hole" where the ducks can see water and light on the pond with the decoys.


We began plowing planks to open up the pond.  Smelly, decomposing grass began floating to the top. Ducks can find plenty to eat in the pond.  I'll tell you what else was finding plenty to eat at our pond - mosquitoes!  They are terrible right now.


Now it was time to go ahead and put the decoys out in the pond.  The decoys in the blue tubs are many years old.  Gary purchased some new teal decoys to add to our mallard drake and hen decoys.


Gary is going to work the pond up with his plow one more time prior to opening day as there was still a lot of grass floating, but we put the decoys out just to see how it looked.  I think we'll be ready for them!


There is plenty of tall bitterweed and cane grass to hide behind at the pond's edge, so we'll just bring 5 gallon buckets to sit on while we hunt.  There is a daily bag limit of 6 birds.  It would be nice to get our limit.  Cooler weather will be here soon and we'd like to build a nice inventory of teal in the freezer from which to make duck gumbo this winter.
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