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Who Cares May 18th, 2005 03:12 PM

Trout Fishing Bait
 
Our local DNR just started stocking trout in a local pond, and I was
wondering what to use for bait? I've never fished for trout before.

Thanks in advance.


BobC May 18th, 2005 03:40 PM

On Wed, 18 May 2005 09:12:33 -0500, Who Cares wrote:

Our local DNR just started stocking trout in a local pond, and I was
wondering what to use for bait? I've never fished for trout before.

Thanks in advance.


Salmon eggs, powerbait, worms, mepps spinner, flys, ...

Da Chief May 18th, 2005 05:02 PM


"Who Cares" wrote in message
...
Our local DNR just started stocking trout in a local pond, and I was
wondering what to use for bait? I've never fished for trout before.

Thanks in advance.

I'd add a small can of kernel corn to the list as well. Just make sure it's
not "cream style", which by the way is my favorite but then again I'm not a
trout. ;)
--
Da Chief,
All outgoing mailed scanned by
Symantec Anti-virus



[email protected] May 19th, 2005 02:29 AM

Who Cares wrote:

Our local DNR just started stocking trout in a local pond, and I was
wondering what to use for bait? I've never fished for trout before.

Thanks in advance.

Power Bait or Corn, and probably worms work about equally as well.
Stocked trout tend to look up for their food as they have become
accustomed, at the hatchery to being fed that way. Fish from the top or
suspended up from the bottom.
Any little spinners should work fine also.

Dale Peterson May 19th, 2005 03:28 AM


wrote in message
...
Who Cares wrote:

Our local DNR just started stocking trout in a local pond, and I was
wondering what to use for bait? I've never fished for trout before.

Thanks in advance.

Power Bait or Corn, and probably worms work about equally as well. Stocked
trout tend to look up for their food as they have become accustomed, at
the hatchery to being fed that way. Fish from the top or suspended up from
the bottom.
Any little spinners should work fine also.



Hey when trout are bitting they would a porkchop and when not biting nothing
works.

Troll very slow and drag a night crawler or healthy worm

Dale P..............
In the sierra Nevada Moutains.


Tex John May 19th, 2005 01:50 PM

wrote:

Stocked trout tend to look up for their food as they have become
accustomed, at the hatchery to being fed that way. Fish from the top or
suspended up from the bottom.


After my grandad visited a hatchery, he switched flies. Rather than using a
fly the color of what was hatching, we went to brown - the color of the
pellets they were being fed - with a red tail. Worked great. Stayed withing
6" of the top of the water, too.

And as kids, we all had Zebco reels -- not so good for fly fishing. We'd
pass a clear bobber over the line, twist it tight about 3' above the fly,
and fish the fly slowly just like any other lure.

Good luck & wish I was there,

John
in Houston



BobC May 19th, 2005 03:13 PM

On Wed, 18 May 2005 09:12:33 -0500, Who Cares wrote:

Our local DNR just started stocking trout in a local pond, and I was
wondering what to use for bait? I've never fished for trout before.

Thanks in advance.


A trick that works with hatchery raised trout is to throw a handful of
small rocks into the pond where you want to fish. The trout think its the
dinner bell (sound of hatchery feed pellets hitting the water).

Pup May 19th, 2005 05:18 PM

How do you ge that cream corned to stay on the hook? Do they have to
go throught an 8 week "Trout/trot line" course?? :)

Pup
Fishing on the lower Michigan Peninsula



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