Ferdinand Library Hosts Free Fishing Lure Demonstration with Tuggle Feb. 11
Will Tuggle led a free fishing-lure demonstration at the Ferdinand Library tonight, offering techniques and community time that help local anglers prepare for the season.

Will Tuggle of a local bait-making business is leading a hands-on fishing lure demonstration at the Ferdinand Library tonight, giving residents a chance to see lure construction and pick up techniques ahead of spring fishing. The program began at 6:00 p.m. at the library, 112 E. 16th Street in Ferdinand, and organizers said the event is free and open to the public with no registration required.
Library event listings promoted the gathering as both instructional and social. One announcement said, "We are very excited to be hosting Mr. Will Tuggle from Bitem' Baits." Another description noted, "He will be talking about fishing lures and giving a demonstration on how he makes them." Local notices framed the timing as seasonal preparation: "Great time of year to prepare for the season!" LocalHop listed the program window as 6:00-7:30 p.m., while other community outlets cited a 6 p.m. start without specifying an end time.
Organizers and local outlets presented the program as educational and family friendly, encouraging attendees to trade tips and local knowledge. Dubois County Free Press called it "a great time to share fish stories and knowledge," highlighting the event's role as a community forum as much as a technical demonstration. The presentation appeared on several local calendars and a regional radio site, with a WITZ posting dated Feb. 9 promoting the appearance.
Announcements vary in how they reference Tuggle's business, listing both "Bite'em Baits" and "Bitem' Baits" and citing a Facebook handle shown as btm.baits in one notice. Event listings do not provide a library contact or staff quote in the available notices; the Ferdinand Library is the listed host and provided the venue address through the LocalHop event page.

For Dubois County residents, the program offered practical benefit and local cohesion: novice anglers could observe lure-making steps, while experienced fishers could refresh techniques and swap local intel on water, baits, and season timing. The free, no-registration format lowered barriers for families and first-time attendees, reinforcing the library's role as a convening place for skill-building outside traditional stacks and storytime.
The demonstration underscores a pattern of small, hands-on workshops that serve both recreational and civic functions in Dubois County. Residents interested in similar programs should consult the Ferdinand Library calendar or contact library staff for future events and confirmed times; the library continues to position itself as a community hub where local craft, conservation knowledge, and seasonal preparedness intersect.
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