P
Paul Wilkinson
Guest
Whilst I enjoy all methods of fishing for salmon, few things give me so much pleasure as that tap, tap, tap as a salmon first picks up a trotted lob worm and those tense moments (or is it hours) until the fish moves off and you finally sink the hook.
The down side is digging the damned worms. When conditions fall right for fishing the worm it always seems that the ground is too wet, too dry or you fork over what seems like half an acre to get couple of dozen, when the only place you want to be is on the river bank.
With this in mind can anyone offer any advice, or a source of advice, on creating my own little "worm farm" or methods of keeping worms in good condition until those all too few days when the water is just right and the salmon are running?
The down side is digging the damned worms. When conditions fall right for fishing the worm it always seems that the ground is too wet, too dry or you fork over what seems like half an acre to get couple of dozen, when the only place you want to be is on the river bank.
With this in mind can anyone offer any advice, or a source of advice, on creating my own little "worm farm" or methods of keeping worms in good condition until those all too few days when the water is just right and the salmon are running?