Top 8 tips for more bream

Bream fishing can be a lot of fun, as well as very productive — if you know the right approach.
Bream fishing can be a lot of fun, as well as very productive — if you know the right approach.

Try out this veteran angler’s ideas and fill that cooler with slab-sized sunfish

Bass fishermen might be happy with a few bites in a day, but fishing for bream is about numbers. Filling the box.

And Louisiana’s Freddie McMullen has learned how to up his odds of success.

Here are some of his tips:

1. Catching bull bream is largely a matter of finding their spawning beds in the shallows near the lake edge.

This is best done early in the spawning season before aquatic plant growth obscures the outlines of the nests. Once the beds are located, male bluegill will use them all season; almost as quickly as some males are removed, others occupy the spots.

Early in the season, the beds are more densely populated, and it is easier to “git on ’em.” Bed fishing later in the season demands more movement because the fish are more scattered.

2. Be stealthy. Approach bream beds with a trolling motor or paddle rather than a big motor. Don’t bang around in the boat and make noise.

3. Don’t fish too close to the boat. McMullen said he sees people all the time with cane poles or big reels and heavy line. The fish don’t bite as well because the boat’s closeness scares the fish.

You can also cover more water with ultralight rods and reels than with cane poles or heavier reels.

4. Keep needle-nosed pliers handy. Even big bull bluegills have small mouths, and a swallowed hook is difficult to get out.

5. Near the end of spawning season, some male bream get what McMullen calls “poor.” They are skinny and run down from fighting with other males for nesting space instead of feeding. Others develop sores on their skin.

McMullen keeps them all. He knows the lesions on scuffed up fish are only skin deep, and that skinny bream taste as good as fat ones.

6. Add some kind of moist vegetable, such as potatoes, celery or carrots, to cricket cages. The crickets get both food and water from them that will keep them alive and alert.

7. McMullen is a big fan of wax worms, partly because they stay on the hook longer. Leftover wax worms can be stored for several months in a refrigerator.

8. Bream fishing doesn’t have to be an all-day job. Some of the best fishing can take place after 3 p.m., when the heat of the day has passed. Two guys who know what they are doing, McMullen said, can easily catch 60 to 100 bream in an afternoon.

About Jerald Horst 47 Articles
Jerald Horst is a retired Louisiana State University professor of fisheries. He is an active writer, book author and outdoorsman. Jerald may be reached at jerald@rockinghorst.com.