Hey deathb4disco. your like a walking fish encylopedia. lol. how you know so much? boring days at work?
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Hey deathb4disco. your like a walking fish encylopedia. lol. how you know so much? boring days at work?
Compared to fishing, every day at work is boring. :D
Actually, I know about the European bream because:
1) I fished in Europe a little and caught a young bream (skimmer)
2) I have a couple of English friends who taught me a lot about their fish and fishing methods
3) Based on #1 and #2, I got very interested in English/European methods, so I subscribed to several English fishing mags for a few years.
Caught it with worm. I didn't have any lure or bait with me while on travel, so I simply dropped by a bait shop in the city and bought some worms. Interestingly, the worms I bought there are so tiny and thin (compared what I'd get from here in Canada: Canadian crawlers, that is:-)
Looks like a big shiner!
lOOKS LIKE A BIG GIZZARD SHAD TO ME
i only know that that is called a bream because of my fishing game on my iphone that had to be developed in europe.
Looks like a river shad, but a little different color.
Common bream - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
looks like a common bream. In the north we call them a gold shiner.
Noticed the dorsel "hump" and deeply forked tail, am not saying it isn`t a "bream" but does not appear to be a bluegill/ sunfish for those reasons, LOOKS like member of the shad or alewife? family? Tail is TOO deeply forked to be a white bass...