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Making a personal crawfish pond... Updated pg. 7 fry pics

Posted on 3/12/14 at 9:12 am
Posted by Clyde Tipton
Planet Earth
Member since Dec 2007
38974 posts
Posted on 3/12/14 at 9:12 am
Okay, there is a pond on our property we recently pumped out and dug out a little to get some dirt for the foundation of a shop. It just an old cow watering hole and has never had any fish in it mostly because it was so small. Anyway, when we dug it, instead of going deeper, we made it wider/bigger. So now we have a pond about 3000 sq. feet and only about 4 ft deep in the middle. The surface area is about the size of a decent sized house foundation.

We were talking about stocking it, but the size still makes us hesitant. It's dried up in the past.

Last night while having a few cold ones and bitching about crawfish prices I had the genius idea to stock it with crawfish.

Questions:

About how many would you seed it with? I'm thinking about boiling a sack and selecting a couple pounds of the biggest reds to throw in there. Is that enough?

I know they eat rice stalks... Do they need to be fed or will they just eat whatever vegetation is growing in there? Should I throw any and all fish guts in there to feed them?

Or, is this the dumbest idea ever?

There is a bad boy buggy on the far levee for size reference...



We drained it this past summer and it was full of this stuff... it's already coming back.

This post was edited on 1/20/15 at 11:18 am
Posted by Biff Tannen
Member since Sep 2012
2522 posts
Posted on 3/12/14 at 9:16 am to
3000ft? What is that,.05 acres?

I'm not saying don't do it, but you might as well get a bobcat out there and expand it some while it is drained.
Posted by hardhead
stinky bayou
Member since Jun 2009
5746 posts
Posted on 3/12/14 at 9:16 am to
quote:

TClayboy99


Didnt you work at a crawfish farm?

they need something to eat, hay will do. They eat the stuff that grows on the stalks, not the stalks

2 sacks/acre is the rule of thumb

get a sack of selects and then we can discuss this further over dinner
Posted by SuzukiGoat
Atchafalaya Basin
Member since Jan 2014
1086 posts
Posted on 3/12/14 at 9:18 am to
Doesnt take nuch.

Wait till crawfish prices are 25$ a sack, toss a frw sacks of rejects in.

We did that with a corner of the property 20 years ago...still have a good number of crawfish there.
Posted by yellowfin
Coastal Bar
Member since May 2006
98083 posts
Posted on 3/12/14 at 9:30 am to
1-3 sacks an acre for stock

use half basin and half rice field

they'll eat anything
Posted by OldSouth
Folsom, LA
Member since Oct 2011
10950 posts
Posted on 3/12/14 at 9:48 am to
I was wondering this EXACT same thing last night about a similar sized pond.

What is TOO deep for crawfish?

When do you seed?

Should the hay etc. be in the pond for a while before you add the crawfish?

Thanks.
Posted by OldSouth
Folsom, LA
Member since Oct 2011
10950 posts
Posted on 3/12/14 at 9:53 am to
I found this online if it helps, TC:

LINK
Posted by TigerDeacon
West Monroe, LA
Member since Sep 2003
29586 posts
Posted on 3/12/14 at 10:01 am to
quote:

now we have a pond about 3000 sq. feet and only about 4 ft deep in the middle



So, about three times bigger than Nascarfan's?







(this pond thread had gone to long without a mention)
Posted by FelicianaTigerfan
Comanche County
Member since Aug 2009
26059 posts
Posted on 3/12/14 at 11:51 am to
Ive thought about this also. We have two ponds, both about half acre big. One is silted in and 4 foot deep at most with no fish in it.(levee busted and dried up3 years ago) The other is tear drop shaped. Deep at one end and silted in at the other but full of fish. Both have almost been taken over by alligatoorweed and Ive considered turning a few sacks of crawfish loose in each and see what happens.

I see that they feed off dead vegetable matter. Would grass clippings, old hay, etc be good enough food?
Posted by Cadello
Eunice
Member since Dec 2007
47874 posts
Posted on 3/12/14 at 2:37 pm to
If you can get Alligator Grass to grow in it you'll have a gold mine...
Posted by GeeOH
Louisiana
Member since Dec 2013
13376 posts
Posted on 3/13/14 at 8:47 am to
They will die if the water isn't kept reasonably fresh thru pumping or something, maybe aeration would work, i don't know. I do know that a real crawfish farmer spends money on pumping water constantly to maintain levels and growth quality.
Posted by jimbeam
University of LSU
Member since Oct 2011
75703 posts
Posted on 3/13/14 at 3:36 pm to
I'm sure this has been asked but do you have a way to drain and/or pump it
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