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locating bream by smell
I have never heard of locating bream by smell,until it was spoke about on another thread was very interesting.When It comes to locating fish to catch I want to know about it.
Has any one else know about this method,heard about it, or used this method please chime in.And does it work for other types of fish also.I know the next bream I catch I will smell it a little extra hard to see if I can remember the smell next time,thanks
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I would not call this a method of finding bream beds . At times the smell is present sometimes it is not . Not like you can run up in a cove and assume since you do not smell them they are not there . Never knew why the smell occurs , just that it does --------------sometimes . Maybe fixing to learn something here .Kind of a sweet musky smell to me .:popcorn
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I was once told by an older (than me) gentleman/friend that you could smell Bluegill beds, and the smell was similar to overripe watermelon. He told me to work my way down a specific bank, on the lake we both fished, and work my way upwind until I detected that smell ... then when I could no longer detect the smell, turn around and start fishing. I did as he suggested & did find the "smell", and eventually found the nesting area as predicted. I wasn't all that "into" Bluegill fishing at the time, but thought that "trick" was pretty cool. I have not used the trick, nor have I encountered that "smell" since then.
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I've known people who could smell 'em, but my sniffer isn't that good![emoji58]
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-J320A using Crappie.com Fishing mobile app
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Then that smell,as CrappiePappy said smelled like over ripe watermelon,is what smell your looking for.I would assume then this smell is when they are only on the nest,and maybe goes away after they leave the nesting area am I correct.Ill be using my nose from now on trying this method.Ive never seen the bubbles,but maybe its true fish do have gas,how else would it get in the air over that area,That might sound funny, but who can say.
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I grew up summers living on the lake during the summer vacations and weekends during school months. My bed was next to the window 70 ft away from the lake edge. During times when I awoke during the late spring and summer days I would be hit with that particular scent… those same times I would notice bedding gills sometimes many hundreds in numbers spawning in the shallows in front of our sea wall.
The lake was near eutrophic in identity with muck approaching several feet in thickness… our cottage shore line was kept free of muck by constant swimming and boating use as well as maintenance with raking. The bluegills apparently loved it bedding on the firm sand bottom. So through the years I always associated the smell with spawning gills … but never knew the reason.
Through some digging ansd research I learned it is a pheromone released by male and female bluegills to attract other to the colony to spawn.
“ Moreover, large bluegills tend to spawn first, occupying the best areas. ... Because this species nests in colonies, there may also be some involvement of pheromones from males and females that draws more fish to the colony, where over 100 adults may be in various phases of the spawn.” … In-Fisherman Mag
It is the pheromones being released into the water that some of us smell… I believe many of us cant smell the odor released as well as others.
I can smell it and hound down the areas of the spawning gills. If you know your lakes like I know mine… you know where these potential areas are and they vary from season to season. I do perimeter checks often on my BOW during the fishing Lull.Periods during the day… visually as well as side scan imaging. I feel confident in finding the areas that need to be fished.
Having guests in the boat during these times of pheromone release many don’t notice any particular smell at all when asked.
To add I don’t believe in fishing the spawn at all during this time… there is enough knowledge base out there to know that it is bad for the future fishing for all bodies of water period.
I do believe in fishing the deeper areas or the first breaks adjacent to the spawning areas … there are where the females will congregate. Best of advice is to leave the guarding males finish the process so the dominant gene gets passed.
Hope this helps
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If they're being fried, I can smell'em a mile away. :Rofl Sorry, couldn't resist!
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I can usually smell them when I see the foam.
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Ooooh that smell
Can't you smell that smell
Ooooh that smell
The smell of beds that surrounds you…
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I learned some time back that when I smell "fish" in general, bluegill are bedding. As someone else stated, the foam can be an Indicator as well..:twocents