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Reybann1
Intermediate Member

108 Posts

Posted - 03/24/2012 :  11:06:42 AM  Show Profile Send Reybann1 a Private Message  Reply with Quote
Marina slips are covered up with the nasty aliens. Supposed to be good for the trout bite I guess.

Any man that doesn't know how to catch a fish, shouldn't disgrace a fish, by catching it.

tugcapt29
New Member



8 Posts

Posted - 03/24/2012 :  5:13:05 PM  Show Profile Send tugcapt29 a Private Message  Reply with Quote
Yeah, I work on a local Tug and have seen these all around the Wando terminal the past couple of days. You are right about the nasty alien part.
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sophish
Senior Member



187 Posts

Posted - 03/25/2012 :  10:41:55 AM  Show Profile Send sophish a Private Message  Reply with Quote
I remember using them for Spot, Croaker, and Whiting when fishing in Surfside. Smack them on a cutting board cut into 1/2-3/4 inch pieces on a # 7 long shank hook and catching 4-6 fish on one lil piece of bait. I always thought they came from up in New England,I suppose I was wrong. I would be interested to know from the more experienced folks on here, thier thought on bait for trout sounds reasonable to me???
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pawayne
Senior Member



1518 Posts

Posted - 03/26/2012 :  06:57:34 AM  Show Profile Send pawayne a Private Message  Reply with Quote
Doubt they're blood worms. Cinder worms maybe?
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barbawang
Senior Member



1594 Posts

Posted - 03/26/2012 :  5:23:42 PM  Show Profile  Send barbawang an AOL message Send barbawang a Private Message  Reply with Quote
i saw the swarm on friday too. they're the spawning form of polychaete (bristle) worms, which live throughout the pluff and almost every other substrate around here.

http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/annelida/polyintro.html

they engage in synchronized spawning on new moons here- seen most of them april-june so we're ahead of the curve for spring already. the gonads break off the bottom-dwelling worm and go swimming off to join up with all the others. the entire swimming unit is called an "epitoke"- they have an eye spot so they mainly aggregate at the surface, then all release their stuff at the same time. the rest of the worm (the "atoke") continues living happily in the mud, and feeding almost every fish we like to catch.

Woods Hole (second and third paragraphs):
http://www.mbl.edu/marine_org/marine_org.php?func=detail&myID=ITA-65629&source_myID=D1


nasty? maybe.
alien? far less than white people in north america.
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Tmoney
Junior Member



36 Posts

Posted - 03/26/2012 :  5:24:34 PM  Show Profile Send Tmoney a Private Message  Reply with Quote
I was told by a marine biologist that they are Nereid worms.
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barbawang
Senior Member



1594 Posts

Posted - 03/27/2012 :  07:30:41 AM  Show Profile  Send barbawang an AOL message Send barbawang a Private Message  Reply with Quote
nereids are a family of polychaetes. they're also called ragworms according to wikipedia
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Reybann1
Intermediate Member



108 Posts

Posted - 03/27/2012 :  08:36:46 AM  Show Profile Send Reybann1 a Private Message  Reply with Quote
They should be called "Heebee-Geebee" worms

Any man that doesn't know how to catch a fish, shouldn't disgrace a fish, by catching it.
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Reybann1
Intermediate Member



108 Posts

Posted - 03/27/2012 :  08:43:45 AM  Show Profile Send Reybann1 a Private Message  Reply with Quote
Wait, Barbawang, I just read the second part of your post! Are you kidding me!!! That has to be the craziest S#%$^ I have ever heard!!! WOW Like I said HEEBEE-GEEBEE worms

Any man that doesn't know how to catch a fish, shouldn't disgrace a fish, by catching it.
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RADDADDY
Captain



573 Posts

Posted - 03/27/2012 :  08:48:19 AM  Show Profile Send RADDADDY a Private Message  Reply with Quote
Many times in the Spring, I have seen redfish stomachs packed with those things. I have found that when the reds have been feeding heavily on them, they can be extremely finicky on the flats using taditional lures and live baits. I have not been able to "match the hatch" to get them to respond like they should. BTW, great info provided by Barbawang. I never knew what they were. I just called them "those swimming wormy things".
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PeaPod
Senior Member



3517 Posts

Posted - 03/27/2012 :  08:54:19 AM  Show Profile Send PeaPod a Private Message  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by barbawang


the gonads break off the bottom-

then all release their stuff at the same time.



barbeque my hamhocks and hogtie me to a spruce pine. I've heard it all now.

BW, Beer on me anytime.

the things you can learn on here.

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claim
Senior Member



2092 Posts

Posted - 03/27/2012 :  09:16:17 AM  Show Profile Send claim a Private Message  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by barbawang

i saw the swarm on friday too. they're the spawning form of polychaete (bristle) worms, which live throughout the pluff and almost every other substrate around here.

http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/annelida/polyintro.html

they engage in synchronized spawning on new moons here- seen most of them april-june so we're ahead of the curve for spring already. the gonads break off the bottom-dwelling worm and go swimming off to join up with all the others. the entire swimming unit is called an "epitoke"- they have an eye spot so they mainly aggregate at the surface, then all release their stuff at the same time. the rest of the worm (the "atoke") continues living happily in the mud, and feeding almost every fish we like to catch.

Woods Hole (second and third paragraphs):
http://www.mbl.edu/marine_org/marine_org.php?func=detail&myID=ITA-65629&source_myID=D1


nasty? maybe.
alien? far less than white people in north america.



Bristle worms are pretty, but don't pick one up with your hands! Down in Jamaica I picked up a pretty one with my scuba knife and one of our girl students said "Oh, how pretty" and took the bristle worm into the palm of her hand. The oh, how pretty was quickly replaces with SOB!!! as it stung her in a s-shaped pattern in her palm.

Nasty buggers.

______________________________________________________
"I am constantly amazed at the stupidity of the general public."
~my dad

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Easy
Senior Member



2817 Posts

Posted - 03/27/2012 :  11:13:15 AM  Show Profile Send Easy a Private Message  Reply with Quote
Ain't no wonder, they release their stuff! That, has to hurt!
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CarlWinslow
Intermediate Member



86 Posts

Posted - 03/27/2012 :  12:01:18 PM  Show Profile Send CarlWinslow a Private Message  Reply with Quote
The things were THICK on Folly when I surfed on Sunday morning. I'm pretty sure I ate a few - and maybe got some down the wetsuit - Wheeeeeeeee!

I figure it must mean good things for the whiting bite. Maybe it's time to get out the surf rod again.
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barbawang
Senior Member



1594 Posts

Posted - 03/27/2012 :  1:31:29 PM  Show Profile  Send barbawang an AOL message Send barbawang a Private Message  Reply with Quote
carl, see below. peapod, you're gonna need to bring over a case of blue cans before i think about trying this (pic is huge so i didn't link it):

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/5d/Nereididae_in_Cuisine_of_Vietnam_2.JPG

rapchizzle and i have seen swarms of ladyfish going at them in the creeks, so we pulled up and messed with them till we were tired.

i once happened upon a "hatch" in the first week of may at the jetties (new moon) that resulted in an all-out blitz: as the current swept them over the rocks, there were bluefish and redfish (and who knows what else) in the wash going ballistic on them. didn't matter that we threw rapala plugs and mackerel spoons that looked nothing like the worms, we caught blues up to 4lbs and a 32" red.

i have always heard that trout fishing is a good idea when the epitokes are out- in a google image search i found a few flies patterned on polychaetes for tarpon (called "palolo worms" in florida it seems):

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Vinman
Senior Member



1584 Posts

Posted - 03/27/2012 :  4:01:56 PM  Show Profile  Visit Vinman's Homepage Send Vinman a Private Message  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by PeaPod

quote:
Originally posted by barbawang


the gonads break off the bottom-

then all release their stuff at the same time.



barbeque my hamhocks and hogtie me to a spruce pine. I've heard it all now.

BW, Beer on me anytime.

the things you can learn on here.





That reminds me, I'm coming up on the 15th Anniversary of getting mine snapped. I was clinging to a dock, too.

Man how time flies............

Vinman
"Every saint has a past, every sinner a future"
www.summervillesaltwateranglers.com
2011 Carolina Skiff 178DLV
90 HP Honda

Edited by - Vinman on 03/27/2012 4:03:07 PM
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PeaPod
Senior Member



3517 Posts

Posted - 03/27/2012 :  4:31:39 PM  Show Profile Send PeaPod a Private Message  Reply with Quote
snapped huh?

i've heard of gettin em snipped. your way sounds much worser.
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barbawang
Senior Member



1594 Posts

Posted - 03/27/2012 :  4:39:30 PM  Show Profile  Send barbawang an AOL message Send barbawang a Private Message  Reply with Quote
never snapped a spruce pine before...







BTW, the excuse "it swam away on its own and came back at daybreak" probably shouldn't be the first one you use
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