Fishing with Rod Discussion Forum

Fishing in British Columbia => General Discussion => Topic started by: No_way on October 07, 2005, 11:27:50 PM

Title: Salted shrimp?
Post by: No_way on October 07, 2005, 11:27:50 PM
I was reading on the net that some people salt shrimp that they are using as bait (for flounders in that case).  It's meant to help it stay on the hook and taste better.  Have any of you heard of this?  I always just use fresh shrimp in the shell.

Thanks
Title: Re: Salted shrimp?
Post by: Fish Assassin on October 08, 2005, 12:18:28 AM
I use salted cocktail shrimps for steelheads and cohos.
Title: Re: Salted shrimp?
Post by: fishingbuddha on October 08, 2005, 09:03:50 PM
used to fish steelhead using ghost shrimp but lately due to lazyness i have been using shrimp. i find that if you cook them a bit (fresh shrimp) in salt water the shell is a little harder and therefore the shrimp stays on your hook better. i also find that i need to put a toothpick through the tail so that the tail is straight and doesn't spin.

i have also found that i have been catching just as much using shrimp as i did with ghost shrimp but i think overall ghost shrimp are better.
Title: Re: Salted shrimp?
Post by: Sam Salmon on October 09, 2005, 08:04:04 AM
For Flounder try Squid it stays on the hook better especially if it's salted down.
Title: Re: Salted shrimp?
Post by: IamCanadian on October 09, 2005, 10:26:22 PM
Salt it down? And is it used for making the bait smell even worse?

Thanks. Ian ;D
Title: Re: Salted shrimp?
Post by: No_way on October 12, 2005, 04:02:46 PM
For Flounder try Squid it stays on the hook better especially if it's salted down.

I tried using squid for just that reason, but never had any luck with it.  Dew worms and shrimp seem to work best for me.  Even sea worms didn't produce noticeably better.

As for salted shrimp, I've tried it for a couple days now off the dock.  Works really good for flounders and greenlings so far, and it's a nice bait to handle.  It doesn't stink as much as raw shrimp after a few hours out side, stays on better, and works as well as anything I've found.  NOTE: It gets quite hard so make sure that you use a big enough hook so that the point is well exposed.

Title: Re: Salted shrimp?
Post by: Fish Assassin on October 12, 2005, 06:35:11 PM
I've tried it with ghost shrimps. Doesn't work.
Title: Re: Salted shrimp?
Post by: No_way on October 12, 2005, 06:52:41 PM
I have never tried that. Would you be able to cure up dead bugs? I would like to try it with the ones that don't survive until the trip to the river :-[

Umm.. what kind of dead bugs?  Grasshoppers, maggots?
Title: Re: Salted shrimp?
Post by: Fish Assassin on October 12, 2005, 07:04:35 PM
I have never tried that. Would you be able to cure up dead bugs? I would like to try it with the ones that don't survive until the trip to the river :-[

Umm.. what kind of dead bugs?  Grasshoppers, maggots?

Ghost shrimps
Title: Re: Salted shrimp?
Post by: No_way on October 12, 2005, 09:12:58 PM
I have never tried that. Would you be able to cure up dead bugs? I would like to try it with the ones that don't survive until the trip to the river :-[

Umm.. what kind of dead bugs?  Grasshoppers, maggots?

Ghost shrimps

Ooops.  Sorry, I guess I'm not hip to the drift fisher's lexicon  ;)
Title: Re: Salted shrimp?
Post by: JiG_Head on October 12, 2005, 09:29:43 PM
i think the salt removes the exest liquid from the flesh of the shrimp/prawn. soo... that mite be the reason it holds better?
Title: Re: Salted shrimp?
Post by: Fish Assassin on October 12, 2005, 09:31:22 PM
Precisely
Title: Re: Salted shrimp?
Post by: No_way on October 12, 2005, 09:35:47 PM
It also denatures the proteins and makes the tissue itself tougher.  Like the denatured proteins in a cooked egg white are tougher than in a raw egg.
Title: Re: Salted shrimp?
Post by: BwiBwi on October 13, 2005, 12:08:06 AM
It also denatures the proteins and makes the tissue itself tougher.  Like the denatured proteins in a cooked egg white are tougher than in a raw egg.

So... is that good or bad? and for roe would it be a good way to cure roe?
Title: Re: Salted shrimp?
Post by: No_way on October 13, 2005, 03:13:51 PM
It also denatures the proteins and makes the tissue itself tougher.  Like the denatured proteins in a cooked egg white are tougher than in a raw egg.

So... is that good or bad? and for roe would it be a good way to cure roe?

It's good, if that is what you want.  That is why we salt bait.  Salting Roe is VERY VERY common.  Check in the bait fridge at the corner store.  But bare in mind what you are going to use the roe for.  For spring salmon in the lower Frazer it is used all of the time.  I don't know about up river, perhaps others can chime in on where salted roe is used commonly.  But not all fish will take it.  For example, boraxed roe is used for Cohos in the Frazer because they like it softer.  So yes, you can salt roe and it is very common.  If you know where you plan to use it then post a message and I'm sure others will suggest whether or not to salt it for that particular fishery.