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The Common Bream has a
strikingly deep body with highly compressed sides and a distinctive mouth. Its
dark back frequently has a greenish tinge with silvery grey sides and a whitish
belly. Young fish are silvery, while the older Bream are dark and often have a
golden lustre on their sides. Bream generally are found in large shoals,
especially when young, favoring deep, slow or still water. The Bream can live to
the ripe old age of 20 - 25 years.
The UK record
was broken with this 18lb 9oz fish caught by Kerry Walker on sweetcorn, legered
over a handful of free offerings a rod length from the bank. The bream had a
length of 27inches and was 26.5inches in girth.
Methods of Capture. Predominantly feeding on
the soft bottom of ponds, lakes and the lower reaches of rivers, the Bream can
be caught with legered baits or laying on with a waggler. Bream tend to shoal
and move casually around looking for food. Large catches result from heavy
feeding, effectively laying down a carpet of bait and groundbait whereupon the
shoal once finding the food will stay either till disturbed or having 'mopped
up' the food when they will move on. Baits such as Redworm and Castor can be
used together quite successfully. Maggots, pinkies and chopped worm mixed in
with Groundbait used liberally can provide a feeding ground for the shoal. The
Bream has not got a reputation though as a fighting fish, generally coming to
the net with little resistance. Once a shoal starts to feed, any fish hooked
needs to be pulled away from the remainder quickly, otherwise the shoal will be
spooked and will move on. Large weights can be caught provided the shoal stays
over the feeding ground. A fairly consistent method is an open-end feeder filled
with a groundbait mix combined with a hook length of 18 - 24 inches. Once cast
in and the feeder reaches the bottom, take up the slack in the line and then
pull the rod a further 18 inches or so. This will place the hook over the
groundbait. |