Lmao wtf with the fancy equipments and buckets and yukkuariums and such they looked like some sort of yukkuri researchers and then suddenly they're typical yu abusers
Lmao wtf with the fancy equipments and buckets and yukkuariums and such they looked like some sort of yukkuri researchers and then suddenly they're typical yu abusers
They're abusing these yukkuri to make a kind of fish bait. The sweeter the more effective.
They're abusing these yukkuri to make a kind of fish bait. The sweeter the more effective.
Which makes no sense in reality as fish barely eat the bread crumbs you throw in the park ponds and only really take a quick nip to test if it's edible and normally do not like the bread taste and spit it right out. Only when the fish is particularly voracious or hungry would it eat bread.
Which makes no sense in reality as fish barely eat the bread crumbs you throw in the park ponds and only really take a quick nip to test if it's edible and normally do not like the bread taste and spit it right out. Only when the fish is particularly voracious or hungry would it eat bread.
Maybe I forgot to elaborate that this is merely a kind of area-based gathering bait. They're spread out to attract fish to an area, not to actually make them eat it.
Maybe I forgot to elaborate that this is merely a kind of area-based gathering bait. They're spread out to attract fish to an area, not to actually make them eat it.
The fishermen could achieve the same effect by thwacking the water with a long pole -_-
Except yukkuris generally do not contain blood or meat (exceptions are Remilia and Yoshika and probably something else) .
The practice tosyl is talking about is likely to be packbaiting and it works only on certain fishes (carp and catfish) on certain conditions.
Like I've written earlier you can probably draw the same attention to your area by thwacking the water with a pole because while the fish do scatter because of the initial disturbance, the more predatory ones come back fairly quick to nibble at whatever foreign object draws their attention.
Except yukkuris generally do not contain blood or meat (exceptions are Remilia and Yoshika and probably something else) .
The practice tosyl is talking about is likely to be packbaiting and it works only on certain fishes (carp and catfish) on certain conditions.
Like I've written earlier you can probably draw the same attention to your area by thwacking the water with a pole because while the fish do scatter because of the initial disturbance, the more predatory ones come back fairly quick to nibble at whatever foreign object draws their attention.
well now the proper English term is cited, I'm sure the use of roasted rice is a kind of chumming. you need to know how strongly fragrant and attractive its smell is to understand its effect. for long it has been used to attract kinds of small fish and shrimps in freshwater ponds in my country, believe me.
now onto the bait the anons here prepared: I'm dumbfounded by the way you dismiss it as chumming just because "yukkuri have no blood or meat". then what do you call their paste? particularly here they prepared the bait made from yukkuri's guts to attract kinds of fish that have a taste for sweet stuff, so I don't see why wouldn't this fit the definition.
well now the proper English term is cited, I'm sure the use of roasted rice is a kind of chumming. you need to know how strongly fragrant and attractive its smell is to understand its effect. for long it has been used to attract kinds of small fish and shrimps in freshwater ponds in my country, believe me.
now onto the bait the anons here prepared: I'm dumbfounded by the way you dismiss it as chumming just because "yukkuri have no blood or meat". then what do you call their paste? particularly here they prepared the bait made from yukkuri's guts to attract kinds of fish that have a taste for sweet stuff, so I don't see why wouldn't this fit the definition.
Their paste is processed beans and not actual blood and meat so it cannot be called chumming if you are to restrict the definition to the use of blood, meat and bone as bait.
While I see that some sites apparently consider the use of grains for bait as chumming as well, so you might be right on that I suppose.
I have fished on and off for over 20 years and while I am not particularly good at it,I was taught that the slurry of blood and meat used was chum and shark week taught me it was chum as well so I sort of assumed the definition has not been expanded to include grains and cereals.