Worm Grunting: A Strange Way to Catch Animals

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers around the practice of worm grunting, a method used to attract earthworms for fishing and other purposes. Participants explore the cultural and historical aspects of this practice, as well as the tools and techniques involved.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant describes the technique of worm grunting, detailing the tools used, such as the "stob" and "iron," and the process of creating vibrations to attract worms.
  • Another participant questions the rationale behind the practice, expressing curiosity about the origins of the term "stob" and the motivations for using this method.
  • A different participant humorously suggests that the naming of the town "Sopchoppy" may be related to the quirky nature of worm grunting.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express curiosity and humor about the practice and its terminology, but there is no consensus on the motivations or origins of worm grunting or the term "stob."

Contextual Notes

The discussion includes anecdotal references to the cultural significance of worm grunting in Sopchoppy, but lacks detailed historical context or scientific explanations for the effectiveness of the technique.

zoobyshoe
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In order to block Miss Evo from winning this year's banner for best thread about strange ways to catch animals I bring you:

WORM GRUNTING

SOPCHOPPY -- One foggy spring morning deep in the Apalachicola National Forest, William Johnson took a friend to watch while he "grunted" for worms.

He pierced the loose soil with his "stob," a well-worn stake about three-foot-long, carved from the wood of a black gum tree. His other tool was an "iron," a flat piece of metal, twice as wide as a ruler and 2 feet long.

Johnson, 41, used the iron to bang in the stob: "Tink, tink, tink." He rubbed the iron against the stob: "grunt, grunt, grunt."

Up came hundreds of fat, footlong earthworms, powerless against this man-made vibration. Johnson's friend bolted from the forest.

"It's an art," Johnson said Saturday as he took part in the second annual Worm Gruntin' Festival in this Wakulla County hamlet south of Tallahassee..."

"...The Diplocardia mississippiensis has 12 hearts, each the size of pinhead. Those who use it for fishing admire the thick, long body and the robust constitution that will withstand the trauma of being hooked. This worm does not go limp in the water or easily wilt in the sun..."

"...There are easier ways to draw earthworms out of the ground, including electrical shock or vibrations from heavy construction equipment. But time has proven that the gentler practice of grunting is less traumatic for the worms, which means they last longer.
No one knows why the vibration draws them out of the ground.
"They can't stand it," said Johnson, the Sopchoppy grunter..."

"...And if you rest in a quiet forest after a few minutes of grunting, he said, you can hear the sound of worms rustling up through soil and slithering across the surface..."

"...Sanders, a 28-year-old Sopchoppy native who was one of 10 children. His grandfather paid off a house and raised 10 children, largely from worm money..."

"...The kids at school would make fun of worm grunters, but the money was good, said Sanders, an electrician..."

"..."Charles Kuralt came down here and destroyed it," said Johnson, the longtime grunter from Sopchoppy. "He got good publicity, but he made it bad for the people that lived here. It ain't like it used to be."..."

State: Gruntin' and gathering
Address:http://www.sptimes.com/2002/04/14/news_pf/State/Gruntin__and_gatherin.shtml
 
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OK, so we have a plausible origin for how noodling got started... but what in the world would possesses one to grind an iron against a stob? For that matter, what in the world would possesses someone to name something a 'stob'?
 
I bet it's somehow connected to the same impulse that causes someone to name a town "Sopchoppy".
 
zoobyshoe said:
I bet it's somehow connected to the same impulse that causes someone to name a town "Sopchoppy".
:smile: :smile: :smile:
 

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