Shrimp baiting
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Shrimp Baiting is the act of catching shrimp using a cast net and bait. Long poles are used to mark a specific location and then bait is thrown in the water near the pole. After several minutes a cast net is thrown as close to the bait as possible and the shrimp are caught in the net. In the 1980s the sport of shrimp baiting became very popular in the Southeastern costal states of North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida. Since this time several state regulations were implemented to better regulate catch limits, methods, and seasons.
In South Carolina a Shrimp Baiting permit is required with a total of 10 tags which must be place on the pole. The poles (used to mark the bait location) must be one inch in diameter or less and have reflective tape. The typical setup is to place your ten poles in a single row and then drive a boat beside the poles and drop bait balls 6 to 10 feet from each pole. The shrimp will find the bait and begin feeding as the tide caries the bait to them.
The bait balls can be made of just about anything a shrimp will eat. The most common bait is a mixture of powdered clay and fish meal (typically ground menhaden). Other popular baits are flour, corn meal, cat food, chicken feed. The bait typically includes a binding agent such as clay or Portland cement. The balls range in size from a tennis ball to a softball and are typically flattened out to a hamburger shape.
In addition to "running the poles" from a boat, some people bait from the shore or docks, a permit is required for this as well, along with the land owners permission. Some people will place a single pole out in front of the boat and use three anchors in a Y pattern to hold the boat still. Then they throw the bait out around the boat. Shrimpers have also begun using an auger type pole to hold the boat in a fixed point and then using there trolling motor to rotate around this fixed point, allowing them to bait in a 360 degree arc the radius of the boat. This technique can be highly effective.

