Simple things are worth blogging about
15 May
If you don’t know what I could possibly be talking about with corn and worms; then you probably never been fishing before. I like to do all sorts of fishing and I will do whatever it takes to catch a fish. One of the best ways to teach children to fish and get them into the sport of fishing, is to take them bream fishing. This is perfect for the impatient fishermen who must have a bite every minute or they don’t think the fish are biting.
Bream are a small fish and they are easy to find. Just about any lake or river, you can find schools of small bream hugging the shorelines. You don’t have to cast out to catch them. Just release about a fishing rod’s length of line out and bait your small hook with corn or worms and you can catch bream all day long. Just toss the line out by hand, keep your hands on the pole, because it won’t take these little fish long to bite. In fact, if you haven’t gotten a bite in less than 1 minute, you may want to check your hook to see if any bait is still left on it. If this isn’t the problem, then go find a new place to bream fish.
I always like to go bream fishing one time a year. The first fishing trip of the year is perfect for bream fishing. It gives fishermen a chance to develop their fish-catching skills for the upcoming fishing season. You get a chance to anticipate the bite and get to jerk your rod, while you try to hook these fish with very small mouths. A small hook is a must for bream fishing. They will have a hard time getting their lips around the larger hooks and you will just be feeding them. You can catch a lot more bream, by using the smallest hooks you have in your tackle box. Be sure to carry plenty of bait, if you plan to fish for any length of time. You can go through a whole tub of worms or can of corn in 1 hour or less; when you go bream fishing. I have been digging up worms around the house now and putting them in a 5 gallon bucket. So when I get ready to go bream fishing, I will have my worms ready to go.
Most bream are too small to keep. If you can find some that are bigger enough to string, you will want to take them home and clean them. Bream is one of the best tasting fish our fresh waters in North America offer. I love to eat bream and they are even more fun to catch. If you have a small child you would like to take fishing this year, get them set up with a bream gear (corn and earthworms). Buying the worms in the store is pretty expensive, considering how fast the bream will eat your store-bought worms. You can do yourself a favor, if you will start digging your worms now and giving them a chance to multiply, before you go fishing again. Creating a worm bed is pretty simple. I just use a 5 gallon bucket and feed them the table scraps. You can put just about anything in your worm bucket or worm bed; when it comes to food. Avoid the meats and cheeses and your worms will grow really fast and multiply faster than rabbits. A little cornmeal in the bucket every now and then is a great food source for your worms. Don’t forget to add a little water (don’t drown them), so your soil stays good and moist for the worms to thrive in.
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