Sports and Fitness, Fishing
How to breed worms for fishing, or Bait, which will always be a lot
Paradise for the fisherman: a quiet backwater, a well-fed place, a working tackle, a bucket full of worms, a garden ready and great weather. What kind of annoyance is this if the biting is not over yet, and all worms in passion have already been consumed! Especially when the angler is a "multi-instrumentalist" who uses several float fishing rods or donkeys at once.
Worms feel comfortable in the compost of an average moisture level. To the touch, it should be like water-soaked and wrung gauze. This is important to achieve before you breed worms for fishing, otherwise with a shortage of water instead of them you will find in the compost a colony of ants, a bugbear family or a prefabricated bastard company.
To realize the importance of the following condition, one has to remember a little bit the school course of biology. Each dung worm is a living combine that processes every day plant residues as much as it weighs itself. So the breeding of worms for fishing at home is unthinkable without the constant maintenance of high-level compost in plant compost. Collect fallen leaves, mown grass, wilted flowers, sticks and peels from vegetables and fruits. Adding sawdust of fruit trees will make compost more friable, which means that it is permeable to oxygen. But sawdust from trees treated with chemicals is contraindicated categorically. Worms also do not like crusts of oranges and lemons, meat processing products, remains of strongly salted and peppered food.
Breeding worms for fishing will require the creation of an imitation biotope for them - the living space that best suits the natural conditions. The biotope for dung worms consists of the following layers (from bottom to top):
- Brick crumb, small clay fragments (drainage).
- Newsprint.
- Compost.
- Scraps of raw paper or raw sawdust.
- Compost.
- Scraps of raw paper or raw sawdust.
- Compost.
If you know how to breed worms for fishing, and do it in a plastic container, be sure to provide it with holes in the bottom and walls to ensure access to air and drain excess water. Do not forget, however, to cover them with gauze or a loose cloth so that fastidious worms do not go through them in search of a better life.
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