Just hook on their tail end, from the belly side on up and out their back. Hook just the end, not through their main body. They will work on small jigs too.
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Just hook on their tail end, from the belly side on up and out their back. Hook just the end, not through their main body. They will work on small jigs too.
Bill, I saw your name and thought that I was on the RefugeWhen I was a kid, I spent summers at my cousin's out on Bailey Station Road. He had a dairy " I think the silos are still there, just north of Fed Ex." anyway, we caught alot of roaches there just using our hands at night. We also went to a dairy on Hwy 20 on the right just going into Mississippi. The walls would be covered floor to ceiling (millions) we scopped them into 5 gal. buckets then them into our bait box. The silos still stand there too. I think about those days when I head you way. LOL Mr. Buck sure loved to drown a roach too.
Now that's funny at the bottom of pg 1 there was an advertisement for Orkin with roaches running around.![]()
In 1970 when I was stationed with the USAF in Goose Bay, Labrador, I worked with those ol boy from Memphis. His daddy was a Methodist preacher and he told me they used roaches for crappie where he fished in Tennessee and also down around Holly Springs, Mississippi, Sardis Reservoir, I think he said.
Anyway he said they'd take a coffee can and grease the inside of it with bacon grease. They'd poke a hole in the side of the can and insert a nail with a piece of bacon on it. Then he lay a 1"x4" board as a ramp going up to the rim of the can. They'd set the can in a dark corner in the basement of the parsonage. He said roaches would crawl up the board and fall down in the can to get to the bacon and wouldn't be able to get out due to the greasy inside of the can. He said the next morning the can would be about half full of roaches and they go fishing.
I've never got around to trying this 'cause I don't think I could bring myself to handle one in order to put it on the hook. Anyway me and him had been drinking a tad and it was real late at night or maybe morning so I could be a little foggy on the details but that's what he told me.
Hi Bill,
When I was growing up, one of my best fishing partners besides my dad was my Baptist preacher. He was an orphan as a child in Memphis and he would tell the story of how he would make extra spending money selling roaches for bream bait. He and a buddy would go to the bakery and buy day old loaves of bread and drop them into storm drains at night. They would come back and grab the loaf of bread and give it a shake over a large washpan. Seems like they were paid something like a 1/2 a cent per roach. I don't think they got rich, but he was able to live off of that plus a paper route.