Trout Bait Info Blog


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baits-lures Trout Bait Info Blog

I had to buy several items just to realize that Trout Bait was the best choice for the price all along. The only negatives I’ve found were that there are better units available, but they are more expensive and the reviews I found on them were on the negative side. So here’s my final word. I 100% endorse Trout Bait and will even show you some places to get it even cheaper than retail.


Where can I find trout bait / lures?
Going to a fishing derby for Trout Bait trout at Lake Poway and the newspaper states that Trout have been biting on them and tommy Jhon lures and green power bait
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14 Responses to “Trout Bait Info Blog”

  1. James W Says:

    Power bait doesn’t work too well on wild trout. Those floating dough baits work much better on farm raised trout. Power worm on the other hand, will work on wild trout. Spinners will work on wild trout. Cream cheese or velveeta could work. Salmon eggs might or might not work depending on the season. If you fish around areas where there’s no salmon, yellow/orange colored eggs tend to work better than red ones. Cured trout roe (if you’re allowed to use it) will outperform salmon eggs. Salmon egg flies could work too. You could even try canned corn.

  2. bob123 Says:

    Local Wal Mart or bait store.

  3. chris w Says:

    Live crickets drifted on 2ft 2-4lb leader on a size 6 long shank hook and tied to a size 14 swivel.

  4. hoghunter Says:

    well you probably already know this one but i just use vinnilla extract, salt, flour/water it seems to work the best. for trout you can take garlic sent that you buy in the fish store or use garlic cloves chopped up and mix it with the dough. trout LOVE garlic so that is a good way to go

  5. Jonathan Says:

    live worms, minnows

  6. FishSteelhead Says:

    There’s quite a few ie., Nightcrawlers, Salmon eggs (jarred type) and everyones favorite Berkley’s Power Bait aka, “Colorful goop in little glass jars” ;) ). For spinners, Panther Martins and Blue Fox work well. Links will give you an idea of what to look for. Good luck next week ;) … < ' ( (( >

  7. Artie Says:

    I have three: the castmaster, the super duper and powerbait. But a friend of mine showed me what he called a Sierra Cocktail which is a treble hook with a salmon egg on one tip an inch of night-crawler on the second and a small marshmallow on the third all held on with a ball of power bait and I have always caught trout with this combo.As far as liars go, so goes idiocy. Trout are stocked to be caught and eaten who the —- cares if someone wants to know what to use? Without reading a basic fishing book about the lifecycle of trout and learning all there is known about them, the next problem is having the right bait, but not knowing how to present it or at what depth.

  8. Devyn Says:

    Try worms or powerbait.You can also try spinners like panther martin or rooster tails.As G G said, there is no best bait, it is all a matter of preference.

  9. enufofthisshit Says:

    ONE bait to catch ALL these species???only one thing will fill that bill.a NIGHTCRAWLER. you can add another dozen or more species to that list. many fish will fall to a well placed ‘crawler.

  10. your mama Says:

    Make sure the river you’ll be fishing has no ‘live-bait’ restrictions. As for lures – I always use a 1/16 (or so) rooster tail. They’re pretty cheap so buy a few different patterns and some light line.

  11. foo_fighter1980 Says:

    The best bait by far for trout is still a big juicy wriggly worm ! it never fails me.Also i find slugs work very well when the water is heavily coloured.Avoid non natural baits like power bait when fishing for wild trout as they dont see it as a foodsource and its usually only stocked fish that will take it.

  12. Fish Says:

    Try some small spinners or fly fishing. Grubs, Worms, and small minnows work good to.

  13. FishSteelhead Says:

    For lures think I’d go with either Panther Martin or Blue Fox Inline spinners along with a’ backup up of the Kastmaster castin’ spoon (size: 1/8oz., on them all). If it be specifically a’ trout pond chances are their stocked, so if that be the case then Berkley’s Trout Gulp will do ya’<);-3 Panther Martin:http://www.cabelas.com/cabelas/en/templates/product/standard-item.jsp?id=0065791123346a&navCount=1&podId=0065791&parentId=cat180001&masterpathid=&navAction=jump&cmCat=MainCatcat20166-cat180001&catalogCode=9IS&rid=&parentType=index&indexId=cat180001&hasJS=trueBlue Fox:http://www.cabelas.com/cabelas/en/templates/product/standard-item.jsp?id=0011720110248a&navCount=3&podId=0011720&parentId=cat180001&masterpathid=&navAction=jump&cmCat=MainCatcat20166-cat180001_TGP&catalogCode=9IS&rid=&parentType=index&indexId=cat180001&hasJS=trueKastmaster:http://www.cabelas.com/cabelas/en/templates/product/standard-item.jsp?id=0030481113624a&navCount=6&podId=0030481&parentId=cat20309&masterpathid=&navAction=jump&cmCat=MainCatcat20166-cat20309_TGP&catalogCode=9IS&rid=&parentType=index&indexId=cat20309&hasJS=trueBerkley’s Gulp (Trout Formula):http://www.cabelas.com/cabelas/en/templates/product/standard-item.jsp?id=0048353122245a&navCount=9&podId=0048353&parentId=cat600174&masterpathid=&navAction=jump&cmCat=MainCatcat20166-cat600174&catalogCode=IA&rid=&parentType=index&indexId=cat600174&hasJS=trueA’ medium retrieve with the spinners will catch their eyes and as for the spoon ~ in intervals, retrieve, pause and retrieve… Note: The inline spinners I’ve mentioned are personal favorites and not to many times have they let me/us down ~ trust me.Added: Thumbs ta’ BC…

  14. dave b Says:

    If you want to get down to the bare bones of it all…….flies. If the water you are fishing supports trout, there is no doubt that there are hundreds of species of flies living in the stream as well. They start off as nymphs or larva. This stage lasts anywhere from a year to 3 years. Because of that, trout spend 99% of their time feeding on these nymphs. As the season rolls along, these nymphs begin to hatch and come to the surface. This is where dry flies come into play. Other great baits would be streamers that imitate minnows and other larger aquatic creatures such as crayfish and frogs. You might even want to try a mouse pattern!

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