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Fishing With Bread

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By hbng84

Field Update - Dated 10/23/2009

Looks like fishing with bread is still working in the local area. Caught a Bruiser that went almost 22" in size.

Used a small spit-shot rig to weight the bait down in lieu of free-lining because of windy conditions.

Not bad for a small community lake, especially on light tackle (4lbs test line)!

See pictures below.

Catfish Caught 10/23/2009





"Testing" the Waters.

While walking by a city pond, I watched people feeding bread to the ducks and geese. The birds were eating the bread quickly but they did miss a few pieces.

As the pieces floated away from the birds, I noticed swirls start to form on the water's surface, and shortly after, I saw the pieces of bread disappear in a splash. The swirls were small at first but soon larger and larger swirls began to show.

Luckily I was wearing polarized glasses and could see the larger swirls were caused by decent size Catfish feeding on the bread. I never knew the pond contained Catfish of that size. I had always assumed it held fingerling Catfish and small Bullheads.

Having seen the Catfish, I could not pass on the opportunity to test the waters and fish for them. And, since the Catfish were accustomed to being fed bread, I tested the waters by fishing with bread.

The first test took place in March 2008 (see the video in the sidebar). I considered it a success but decided more "testing" was required.

Since then, I continue "testing the waters" as an excuse to enjoy excellent catch and release fishing and highly recommend others try fishing with bread in their area!

 


First Bruiser!

I considered the first test a success because it showed the Catfish could be caught using bread for bait.

Although the largest Catfish caught that day went 10" in size, follow on fishing trips produced slighty larger Catfish.

But, they were not like the big ones I first saw when the ducks and geese were being fed.

So, I continued fishing with bread on a regular basis in pursuit of the big ones or "Bruisers" that I know were in the pond.

Finally, about six weeks after the first test, I hooked and landed one (see the video in the sidebar). The Catfish measured slightly over 20" in size and was released back into the pond.

Not bad for a pond no larger than a 1/2 acre at best!

FYI: I define a "Bruiser" Catfish as one that measures larger than 19" and is caught in a community lake or pond. The 19" was arbitrarily set because the ruler I used in many of the pictures that year was 19" long. My Zebco Deliar broke, and I did not replace it until a year later.


Another Pond. Another Bruiser!

I continued fishing with bread and catching other "Bruisers". One outing in particular proved that fishing with bread was not limited to one city pond.

In this case, it was a trip to a larger community lake frequented by area fishermen. I did not expect to catch any "Bruisers" as the lake is hit hard almost daily. Luckily, it was not the case (see video in the sidebar).

In the video, the first Catfish was hooked but lost when it slipped from my grasp. I was not able to measure it but felt it would have made the 19" benchmark for a "Bruiser".

The second Catfish measured about 22" in size and weighed 5 pounds.  And, as the video showed, it was released and may still be there!

Note: I apologize for the video quality, the camera person is not paid money but in Slurpees from the 7-11 Convenience Store.


Bottom-Line!

Bottom-line: Fishing with bread in community lakes and ponds is a viable fishing method for catching fish that are accustomed to being fed bread.

Given people feed resident ducks and geese on a regular basis, the fish learn to associate this activity with food - almost like ringing a dinner bell for them!

As further evidence, checkout the pictures in the Bruisers Slide-show below. All were caught using white bread purchased from the grocery store and formed in to a ball as shown in the photo sidebar.

The most recent Catfish was caught July 2009!

Remember:  The ruler shown in the slideshow is 19" in length.

Bruisers Slide-show.


Comments

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storm jackson profile image

storm jackson  says:
4 months ago

Ok, this is a very nice unique method to fishing. But why don't you show people step by step how to use the bread with their fishing pole?

hbng84  says:
4 months ago

Good point. Posted a follow-on HubPages article, "Fishing With Bread: Fishing Rigs".

J  Rosewater profile image

J Rosewater  says:
4 months ago

People have been fishing with bread since the year dot. It's not that hard. This is the way I do it: save all your stale crusts and bits and pieces. They must be dry but not mouldy. Soak them briefly in water (or seawater if you are on the shore) and squeeze out all excess moisture quickly. At this point you can knead in some cheese ends, grated old cheese or left overs. Make a big ball and keep kneading it.

To bait your hook, take a ball that is enough to cover all the hook in an egg-shaped oval. No metal must show. But don't make the oval ball too big. Squash it on so it's firm and does not dissolve the minute it hits the water.

Good luck.

TFF - Post  says:
4 months ago

Tip for the Texas Fishing Forum: "if you will take a syringe and cut the top off even with the tube where the needle goes and stab it into the bread over and over again until its about 1/2 way full and then press the plunger down and have the cut end against the palm of your hand then push the compressed bread disk out you will have a bread disk that will last a very very long time....in england they use this for carp fishing and call it a bread punch you can also flavor the disk with what ever you like....they catch a ton of fish!"

badley777 profile image

badley777  says:
4 months ago

thats true i use to make my own catfish bait and carp bait with bread and starch and a little suger it works pretty good.but do you think blue gills would eat it to.that would be awesome. thanks for the info.

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