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JonTrx450
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I am curious as to any places near Newberg, Oregon that I might be able to catch crawdads, either by hand or trap?
CESAR503 said:try the Tualatin or small creeks.....ive got them in the Tualatin before...if u can get ahold of fish heads those work hella good....remember what the crawdad eats....your gonna eat lol
It's not terribly hard to keep them in a bucket for half an our (maybe a couple times) with clean water or cornmeal and water etc, to encourage them to flush out the gross-tasting stuff. I wouldn't fish for crawdads with catfood when I was planning on eatin them that day however, if you want to leave out a trap overnight and then bring them home you can put a little effort in an really reduce the stank.CESAR503 said:try the Tualatin or small creeks.....ive got them in the Tualatin before...if u can get ahold of fish heads those work hella good....remember what the crawdad eats....your gonna eat lol
Pull the tail and split it and eat it, like a small shrimp. If they're nice and big you might try the claws as well.Raincatcher said:How the heck do you eat those lil critters? I can't imagine they have much meat on them. It must take a gazillion of them for a good meal. Oh, and if you suck their heads, I don't want to know...:sad:
pez75 said:my x wife and her family live in Louisiana and down there they put them in a salt bath to clean them out 30min and a quick rinse in clean water then toss into pot with all the Cajun fixes.
Seconding this. I had an uncle who lived a few miles up the Yachats Creek and we filled up two buckets in an afternoon, with a few kids and adults wading around a few hundred yards from where we were camping on his property and having a mini family reunion. Any small, shallow, clear, and rocky creek should have tons. (My uncle moved, and I've had success throwing a trap out in the same area - just follow the road east from Yachats until you come to a bridge which hits a T intersection looping south back toward cape perpetua. The stream there is full of 'dads. The river is also accessible along the road before that point and not by going through people's properties if you don't mind hoofing it with some waders, but my uncle says he got some guff from fly-fishermen back there.. I'm not sure if the creek is fly-fishing only, I've only ever hunted crawdads back there.)DrTheopolis said:Most coastal streams are loaded with them.