Crawdad and 'mudbug' is something I always heard down South... I think the real words are 'crawfish' or 'crayfish' - basically they're tiny freshwater lobsters. Wiki says that they use 'crawfish' in Louisiana, but you only see that on fancy restaurant menus. I've never been to a 'crawfish boil' but I have been to a 'mudbug boil' and a 'crawdad boil'.
The photos I saw of someone holding a 'yabbie' made me wonder small lobster/big crawdad because it was bigger than the person's hand, but in the US our crawdads are usually only a few inches long (and oh-so-tasty), like big shrimp (what we'd call a prawn - they come about 10 - 15 per pound).
If what Moonvoice says is true, that for you a yabbie is a 'small' crawdad, I'd hate to see your 'large' crawdads! They could probably eat your head!
I pinch!
Date: 2008-08-04 03:46 pm (UTC)I love the blues in this! Is it a small lobster or a big crawdad?
Re: I pinch!
Date: 2008-08-04 03:48 pm (UTC)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marron
We know them as yabbies, and some people also call them koonacs.
Re: I pinch!
Date: 2008-08-06 06:57 am (UTC)Re: I pinch!
Date: 2008-08-06 05:39 pm (UTC)The photos I saw of someone holding a 'yabbie' made me wonder small lobster/big crawdad because it was bigger than the person's hand, but in the US our crawdads are usually only a few inches long (and oh-so-tasty), like big shrimp (what we'd call a prawn - they come about 10 - 15 per pound).
If what Moonvoice says is true, that for you a yabbie is a 'small' crawdad, I'd hate to see your 'large' crawdads! They could probably eat your head!