Brain you let you daddy take a lot more of the dinks out, Scott has gotten where he likes the little ones whole too. Carol only likes the fillets unless it is bream then she likes them whole, wish I knew where and how to catch bream.
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Brain you let you daddy take a lot more of the dinks out, Scott has gotten where he likes the little ones whole too. Carol only likes the fillets unless it is bream then she likes them whole, wish I knew where and how to catch bream.
I blessed to have grown up in the Pearl River swamp in Philadelphia. Our deer camp land is littered with slews and old creeks that a full of bream, perch(mostly small ones) and bass. That is where I catch most of my bream at. It has always been tough to find big bream on large bodies of water(except Washington). I guess one of my favorite ways to fish is throwing a beatle spin with a minicast and catching a big blue bream.
I caught most of those at Kemper Steve, they are big but finicky. The best eating ones come from the Pearl river area like Macpappy said. Their are countless bream beds in the Ratliff Ferry area just above the Ross Barnett Resivoir which are easy to fish. I grew up catching those swamp bream up near the Nanih Waiya Indian mound, the creek is small there and you've got to fight snakes, and drag over logs and beaver dams to get to them. I like to use a 10' pole and a tiny balsa wood cork, my next favorite is on an ultra light.
A Kemper trip or Ratliff Ferry trip would be easy and fun. I will do some checking on Neshoba Lake cause that's a little closer to you guys.
Very nice
Now that I live in Madison I fish Ratliff ferry a good bit and you are right, when the bream are right its easy.
Chris and Brian, whenever the bream get right let me know, I think I can talk Scott into taking me to either place.