Lure Trout Guide
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It is difficult to provide accurate Lure Trout information, but we have gone through the rigor of putting together as much Lure Trout related information as possible.
The super duper lure How do you like it?
My favorite lure for trout is the super duper made by luhr Lure Trout jenson. I use it in ponds and small lakes with a real slow retrieve. The trout just cant seem to resist it. I want to know what you think of it , what you fish for with it and how you fish it
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Tags: Babs, Keyword, Rigor, Trout, Trout Guide





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December 13th, 2010 at 3:18 pm
I don’t believe in “best” lures. It’s all about personal preference.Probally the most popular lure for these species would be a 3″ GULP shrimp on a 1/4oz jig head, either under a popping cork or slowly jigged across the bottom. Live shrimp and pinfish work well but to me thats no fun. Topwater lures such as Mirrolure topdogs, Rapala skidderwalks and Heddon lures are my favorite way to catch Trout and reds but dont do well for Flounder. Inline spinnerbaits and johnson spoons are also good choices.
December 14th, 2010 at 3:18 am
royal coachman
December 14th, 2010 at 3:19 pm
Spinner. Try a bit of corn too!
December 15th, 2010 at 2:31 am
I would use the hydra fishing lure, its like no other and it comes in a verity of sizes.
December 15th, 2010 at 2:57 pm
Try the Original A.C. Plug.I BELIEVE Allen Cole invented his A.C. Plug in the mid-seventies for trolling Pyramid Lake and the Colorado River in Nevada for giant Lahontan cutthroat and rainbow trout.Guys in California didn’t start using them for largemouth bass until the mid-eighties and early-nineties.
December 16th, 2010 at 2:33 am
try a silver spoon or a rooster tail
December 16th, 2010 at 2:24 pm
For small streams, I like the Mepps Aglia size 0 (I think it’s 1/12 ounce) on 2 pound line. Cast upstream (or up and across) and bring it in just faster than the current. On bigger streams, where you need a bit more weight for casting distance, you could go with larger, heavier lures, but remember that the heavier the lure, the faster you’ll have to retrieve to keep it from snagging the bottom. If you’re fishing in a foot or so of water, this is important. Roostertails or Panther Martins, or the Aglia in size 1 work fine.Solid lures (Kastmaster, spoons) will sink faster, and I haven’t had much luck with them in small streams, though they’re my first choice in lakes.
December 17th, 2010 at 3:00 am
lol velveeta cheese is what I heard once…but then again, I don’t really know
December 17th, 2010 at 3:02 pm
I have caught many trout on spinners, many on bait, many on spoons and many on crankbaits, but, the biggest I have caught were on flatfish baits in Wyoming, here in California and Montana. I have caught big trout in rivers, but mostly lakes. in rivers I always face up stream and bring baits back downstream to me, I always look for a step down where I can hide behind a rock or downed tree and still look over to see the water I am fishing. If a pool (a deeper area) where the water gets dark and deep in front of the rocks I am behind, even better. In lakes I seek inlets where creeks and streams dump into the lake. I look for trees overhanging those tributaries and or shaded water almost always I have had my best success on the rainbow Rapalla deep diver when casting past the shadow and letting the rings disappear then beginning my retrieve I stop often and allow the bait to float up never letting it get to the surface and bump it sporadically making the bait jerk and nervous looking. I also use a silver black back deep diving long A Bomber when seeking large trout but more often it’s very late in the day or pretty early in the morning when the big ones cruise the lake’s shorelines looking to feed on bait fish. Sidelines that are closest to deep water is water I like to fish with these cranks but cast and let it sit without moving it for 30 seconds usually the schools of fish will see it hit and they go on past but when you start the retrive the fish under didn’t see it hit down and all they see is a mouthful having a problem trying to swim.
December 18th, 2010 at 2:48 am
Ahh man, Saltwater or FreshWater, For Gray Trout i use a flash bait, called a stinger, I prefer blue, Bounce it off the bottom and hold on. For Speckle i use live shrimp or grubs. (Artificial Grubs) Called Robot Chicken. Good Luck
December 18th, 2010 at 3:19 pm
Orange. Trout are also called cheese ball suckers, because cheese balls work well as bait.
December 19th, 2010 at 2:42 am
It is probably the best and most versatile lure out there. It can be fished at a slow pace or a fast pace, trolled, casted. You can fish it for trout, bass, perch, whatever you want to catch. The erratic movement makes it a killer lure.
December 19th, 2010 at 3:13 pm
Try putting more weight on the line, try standing in a different spot. Wade a little deeper? One thing that helps me is don’t worry about if the lure is coming back. Cast in there and hope for the best. If you are flyfishing try a full sinking line.Are you fishing the park? If you are try looking in “Flyfishers guide to Wyoming” by Ken Retallic. Good luck, catch & release.
December 20th, 2010 at 2:53 am
panther martin spinners, the holographic ones, i also have good luck with the black with yellow spots. if you have no self respect, use some dough bait like powerbait or gulp dough bait. use a bell weight or some splitshot sinkers and have that dough bait on a #6 hook or smaller so it will float, try to set it up so the dough is about a foot above the split shot.With the spinners, cast out as far as you can, and slowly reel it in. got four rainbows with my panther martin black and yellow spinner just the other day.oh, if you see them top feeding, use pistol pete dry flies.
December 20th, 2010 at 2:48 pm
I like Mepps, size 0 and 1, for streams, but in lakes I do better with heavier lures, like a Kastmaster, I think mainly because I can cast it farther and so cover more water. If there’s any real depth to the lake, I also vary the time I let the lure sink — at times fish will hit the lure near the surface; at other times I’ll do better letting it sink for 20 seconds or more.With any lure, I like to wind it in as slowly as I can while still getting it to spin (for a spinner) or wobble (for a spoon). And whether fishing a lake or a stream, I keep moving, making enough casts to cover the area (5-10 casts usually), then if I don’t get any bites, I head along the shore or upstream to another spot.
December 21st, 2010 at 2:49 am
Try casting some smaller sized rooster tails. Retrieving slowly. Manly earth tones in color. Present bait that the fish are used to.