Chumming (American English from Powhatan) is the practice of luring various animals, usually fish such as sharks, by throwing 'chum' into the water. Chum is bait consisting of fish parts, bone and blood, which attract fish, particularly sharks owing to their keen sense of smell. In Australia and New Zealand, 'chum' is referred to as burley. 'Ground bait' is the European term. The first phrase coined for chum was 'offal', meaning rejected or wasted parts of killed animals including their internal organs. Chumming (American English from Powhatan) is the practice of luring various animals, usually fish such as sharks, by throwing 'chum' into the water. Chum is bait consisting of fish parts, bone and blood, which attract fish, particularly sharks owing to their keen sense of smell. In Australia and New Zealand, 'chum' is referred to as burley. 'Ground bait' is the European term. The first phrase coined for chum was 'offal', meaning rejected or wasted parts of killed animals including their internal organs. Native Americans used two primitive methods of chumming. First, they would lie alongside a grasshopper and encourage it to jump into a flowing stream where the fish would consume the grasshopper. The Native American Indians would then bait their hook with a grasshopper and hence catch the fish. Additionally, the Indians would tie a dead animal from a tree above a stream encouraging flies to lay eggs. After weeks, the eggs become maggots and fell into the water bringing a concentration of fish into the area. Also known as rubby dubby (West Country and Yorkshire, UK), shirvey or chirvey (Guernsey, Channel Islands), burley, berley or berleying (Australasia), and bait balls. Chumming is illegal in some parts of the world (such as in the state of Alabama in the U.S.) because of the danger it can pose by conditioning sharks to associate feeding with the presence of humans. Chumming is a common practice seen as effective by fishermen all over the world, typically in ocean waters. Multiple forms of chum are available and used by anglers. Bunker consists of fish parts with a fish-enticing aroma. Stink bait contains oily fish parts and blood that releases the scent of dead fish into the water. Florida restrictions for chumming include local laws in salt water areas. Due to the vast barren sandy bottom structure around most of the state using chum is a necessity and common practice. The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission(FWC) approved changes to shark fishing regulations, including prohibiting chumming when fishing for any species from the beach. The new ruling will go into effect July 1, 2019.