I d use something besides maggots-ooh.And a small lead sinker.
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I have read that maggots are good for feeding the swim because they sink. Well, mine float. I tried them frozen and dead...the floated. I tried nice healty ones...they floated. I am thinking of making a few PVA bags with maggots and a few pebbles to take them to the bottom. Then if they float it won't matter much because they will be floating up from the bottom. But when I toss them out they just swim around on the top of the water and drift with the wind.
Sometimes the magic works, and sometimes...oh well, it was a nice day at the lake.
I d use something besides maggots-ooh.And a small lead sinker.
I PRACTICE CATCH & FRY---DONT EVERYBODY ? Thumbs Up
inject some lead in them.
stick a hook in em and thow em out!!
I've been chumming with maggots for about 15 years and have never had this happen.
Remind me again how you got them. Did you buy them or grow your own? If you grew them, what kind of flies are they? Bluebottles (the kind I use), greenbottles and house flies all sink. If you grew them yourself, maybe you have something else.Can you post a pic of some of them?
Here's something else to consider: what bedding are you storing them in? I use yellow corn meal. Among other things, the corn meal helps to "degrease" the maggots. Anything that small with grease on it will tend to float.
P.S. I saw your post on "Maggotdrowning". groundhog gives some advice similar to mine.
Here's a picture of a waxworm
And here's a maggot
The waxworms are larger and plumper than the maggots.
maggots also have a harder shell, waxies are typically softer to the touch, and all the wax worms i have ever fished with are smaller than the maggots that are sold around here.
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