Nah it's just a type of common yabby nothing to do with sex.Banjo68 said:I was always told the blue ones were males
Correct me if I'm wrong
Smoky bandit said:We call em fesh water crayfish. layful:
Yabbies are the ones you suck up on the salt flats with a yabby pump. :lol: :Y:
Its just a common blue yabby.
Taste good with a boil and a bit of salt. :Y:
Your sick Goody :lol: by the way if you want to tell a yabbies sex flip it over and look for the two soft little burs females have under there tails to hold onto the eggs when they lay them.goody2shoes said:Sex ? someone say sex hahaha :lol: :lol: :lol:
We have them on Kangaroo Island too. They escaped from a farm and do well because there are no foxes there. Big buggers. My neighbour had some on the mainland in SA but did not fence his growing ponds. So they decided to all get out and walk off. Neighbour wasn't happy but the local foxes loved it.grubstake said:Here in WA, we have the mighty blue marron down in the southwest:
https://tinyurl.com/y3t7fnvs
Mighty tasty they are too! :Y:
goody2shoes said:Sex ? someone say sex hahaha :lol: :lol: :lol:
That would be awesome on a plate but I think they are very slow growers and breeders so probably rules them out being farmed and also the reason they are protected.DrDuck said:These would have to be the champions of the yabby family. Apparently they taste delicious, too. However they are totally protected.
I reckon they would be a good candidate for aquaculture. Big ones can be up to a meter long.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-10-22/tas-giant-freshwater-lobster-fears-for-iconic-species/9072950
https://www.prospectingaustralia.com/forum/img/member-images/158/1600397721_lobster.jpg
Thanks for the education :Y:mbasko said:Nah it's just a type of common yabby nothing to do with sex.Banjo68 said:I was always told the blue ones were males
Correct me if I'm wrong
They are very common around here in creeks & dams.
Have been told that you will only get them west of the Great Dividing Range in NSW & not east of it? All I know is there are dams full of them around here.
I've also caught them as far north as Lightning Ridge.
Enter your email address to join: