John's Journal...

You Can Catch Big Bream

Day 2: What Baits Catch Big Bream

Editor’s Note: Most fishermen, especially those in the Deep South, will name May as the month for catching big bream, and particularly the time around the full moon in May. But, to catch bluegills that weigh almost 5 pounds, certain conditions have to come together to produce a new world-record bluegill. Just like you can’t take a trophy whitetail, if a trophy whitetail doesn’t live on the property you hunt, the same is true for catching monster-sized bream. This week let’s look at what ingredients came together to produce two past world-record bluegills in the State of Alabama, and what conditions may have to be present in the lakes you fish this month for you to catch a big bluegill, which to most of us would be a 1-1/2- to 2-pound bream.

Flyfishing for Bream:

Click for Larger ViewBig baits must be employed for big bream. A No. 8 hook is the normal size for flyfishing with most bream bugs. However, a No. 6 hook will allow you to miss the small bream, while hooking only the big ones. Once you have the right-size hook on your bream bug, the color and the number of legs the bug has are the next considerations. Most commercial bream bugs don’t have enough legs to suit the trophy-bream flyfishermen. Rubber legs create action on the water and draw bream to the bug. A big, old bluegill is just like a 85-year-old, 300-pound man sitting in his rocking chair on his front porch. When a pretty girl walks by, he may notice her and momentarily stop his rocking. But, when a beautiful blond in a tight sweater and a short skirt and her backfield in motion comes slinking down the sidewalk, not only will he notice her, but he may get out of his chair, pick-up his cane and walk-out to meet her. He may only say, “Good morning,” or “Isn’t it a beautiful day,” but she has definitely held his attention. Well, that’s what happens when a bream bug has lots of legs. Those legs go to shimmering and shaking, and a trophy-size bream just has got to come off his porch to take a bite.

Click for Larger ViewThe visibility of the bait has a great deal to do with whether or not a bream will bite, because the fish can’t hit what it can’t see. Most flyfishermen consider white the best color for catching buster bluegills. Although yellow is the next-best choice, black will be the most productive in clear water. Of course, some bream flyfishermen swear by chartreuse. “Why, every serious flyfisherman I know uses chartreuse, and we always catch bream,” an old angler once told me. Although there’s no scientific evidence to prove that chartreuse is the best color, like you, I know that when an angler believes in a bait, he’ll catch more bream. So, if you’re a die-hard chartreuse flyfisherman, stick with your color. But, you may be surprised at what you can catch on white and yellow. Spots, stripes and pretty designs on bugs are decorations more to catch customers than fish. But, if you feel your bug has to have polka dots to catch fish, by all means, get a polka-dot bug. It won’t matter to the bream.

Click for Larger ViewThe late Alf Van Hoose of Birmingham, Ala., developed a technique of catching and baiting quicker when he was flyfishing for bream with crickets. “I use a tiny hook and light line, because I believe a smaller hook and smaller line is easier for a bream to get into its mouth and swallow the cricket. And, unless you really know what you’re doing, you’ll spend all afternoon just trying to get that small hook unhooked from that bream’s mouth. When you take a lot of time to get a fish off the hook, you’re lessening your time to fish. So, I try to lip-hook the bream to remove it faster. To lip-hook a bream, you must set the hook as soon as you see the cork move or the line twitch. Sure, I’ll miss a few bream like this. But, if I miss a bream I can swing right back to it and give it another shot at the bait. If I do hook it, I can get it into the boat easily and off the hook quickly.

“The next big problem of getting back into a bed of bream in a hurry is being able to bait-up quickly. If you’re fishing with worms, you have to dig through the box, find the worm, put it on the hook, rinse your hands off and swing your bait out to fish again – all of which takes entirely too much time. So, I prefer to fish with crickets, because they’re not nearly as nasty as worms and can be baited much quicker. The problem associated with crickets is getting them out of the cricket cage and then baiting the hook. For that reason, I take 6 or 8 crickets out at a time and squeeze their heads just a little to immobilize them. Click for Larger ViewThen those baits are ready to fish when I need them. Once I’m ready for bait, I reach down, pick-up one of those immobilized crickets and put it on the hook. Then I’m ready to fish again. If you’re catching big bream – getting your bait back into the water as quickly as possible is often the key to continuing to catch big bream.”

Using Live Worms:

Proper baiting for big bream is important. And according to Gayland Gilliken of south Ala., baiting for bluegills is different from baiting to catch shellcrackers. “Bluegills favor worms that wiggle at both ends. So, I hook my worm in the middle, swing it into the bedding bluegills and let it float to the bottom. The bluegill will suck its bait in rather than bite it. So, an angler must let a bluegill have a worm longer than he does a shellcracker. Too, when you’re baiting for shellcrackers, thread the worm on the hook. You really only just need half of a worm, but bury the whole hook in the worm and leave the end of the worm that wiggles, free to wiggle, right at the end of the hook. A large shellcracker will bite-down on the worm, especially the wiggly part, and you can hook it by baiting this way. If you bait for shellcrackers like you do for bluegills, the shellcracker will bite both sides of your worm and leave the middle, where the hook is.”

Tomorrow: How to Find a Bream Bed


Check back each day this week for more about "You Can Catch Big Bream "

Day 1: Where Some of the Biggest Bream Live
Day 2: What Baits Catch Big Bream
Day 3: How to Find a Bream Bed
Day 4: More Tactics to Find Bream
Day 5: Tips for Taking More Big Bream

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Entry 663, Day 2