Spinner Trout Free Interesting Tip
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This Spinner Trout was exactly like they said it was. You won’t regret it. Spinner Trout is awesome.
what kind of spinners do i use for trout?
i need to know what Spinner Trout kind of spinners i would use for rainbows. i fish in the chatahooche so their not really big. but a brand/ type would be nice !
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December 11th, 2010 at 1:10 am
If you are inland fishing for Brook Trout, the only type of spinner I use is Panther Martin.Use a #6 size with the body of the lure either yellow with red dots or black with yellow dots. A #4 will work also but you might not get some of the bigger fish hitting it. Plain gold or silver blade, any blade with color or dots on it sucks.Definitly no fur on the hook.I have used Mepps spinners before with average results, in my personal opinion, Panther Martin blows them away.
December 11th, 2010 at 1:02 pm
youre bait is fine and so is your timing. sometimes its just luck of the draw. perseverance will win over the fish though!around dusk and dawn is the best time.
December 12th, 2010 at 1:30 am
That’s an incredibly large area, with plenty of opportunities. Just touching on some of the highlights:-Great Smoky Mountains National Park, on the Tennessee/North Carolina area. You’ve fished Gatlinburg, so you know it’s one of the gateways into the park. -Chattahoochee River System, in north Georgia. Most know for the section running from Lake Lanier to Atlanta, the Hooch above the lake, stretching to it’s headwaters way above Helen, is a less known, but great trout fishery. Check out the major feeder creeks as well as the main river. -Chattooga River System, in north Georgia. The site where Deliverance was filmed, there are too major natural trout streams in the system, along with their tributaries. -French Broad River System, in north Tennessee. A great trout fishing system found north of GSM National Park, many of it’s tributaries actuall extend into the park.
December 12th, 2010 at 1:16 pm
Pretty much any small crank bait can also be effective on trout. On a bigger stream or river, a small Rat-L-Trap or Rapala stick bait can be just what the doctor ordered. I have had great success on the Little Lehigh and larger sections of the Tobyhanna in the PA Poconos with crank baits. Berkley’s products have proven to be pretty reliable over the years. I have never used the scented trout worms but I have used some of their other products successfully.An old school, basic and often overlooked lure these days are casting spoons. I personally prefer the Acme Kastmaster in sizes and colors to match the conditions but there are others such as the Little Cleo or Dare Devil. For trout below 5lbs, usually 1/8 oz is plenty. For native trout streams, I stick with basic silver or gold to match the small bait fish. In stocked waters, you can go a little more colorful, a tiger fire, brown trout or clown patter. You fish it the same way you would a spinner, cast and retrieve to produce a swimming motion. They are available in 25 or so colors and all kinds of sizes. They are great for covering large areas of water because even the little one’s cast superbly. A 1/8 oz lure with 4lb test on a 5ft trout rod can be cast a good 50 yards. An added bonus is that you can catch many species with them since they imitate bait fish.
December 13th, 2010 at 12:53 am
Well it should still be fairly cold in PA, so I would guess the trout are in the top 10feet of the water column, making in-line spinners like panther martins a god choice. three basic colors whould be chrome, gold, and yellow/black.other choices are kastmasters in chrome or chrome/ blue.If you have a boat and decide to troll needlefish are a great lure behind flashers.Bait fishing worm and bobber or green powereggs are good on very small treble hooks.
December 13th, 2010 at 1:09 pm
Dark colors dark water, clear water bright colors. In the past i have had success with chartreuse or white for clear and black and silver for dark. Make sure you have a few different sizes and i like the smaller ones myself. I would do like the guy said above about taking the treble off and putting a single hook on, don’t cut them.
December 14th, 2010 at 12:57 am
I have a version of the rod shown in the ebay link below. It is 7 foot and the length is perfect for your needs. I am the same height and I can cast it for hours at a time without a problem. It is rated 3/8 to 1 ounce lure weight. It is a medium weight rod and has an extra fast action which works great for casting It will cast 1/4 ounce lead heads with rubber grubs beautifully. I’ve used it with 10 lb line but it is over kill.I fish a big river and it works great for catching 6 lb walleye. I match it with 8 lb line. I even pulled in a 3 1/2 foot sturgeon on the rod. But I probably had 12 lb line on at the time.What is important is matching the proper size reel to the pole for good balance. I use an earlier model as the one shown in the picture and it is a good size match.For baiting fishing I would rather use a steel head rod but they are usually about 8 1/2 feet long.For trout you only need a “Light” rod. For the other fish your are wanting to catch you normally use a “medium” rod because it has the backbone to fight the bigger fish.
December 14th, 2010 at 1:16 pm
You may want to visit this site and sign up for their free e-zine. Not only will you get great tips/info twice a month, you also get a free report that will help you out……http://www.jrwfishing.com/signup.asp
December 15th, 2010 at 1:15 am
i went last winter to mammoth lakes and caught a ton of brook trout. My wife and i caught limits 4 days straight. We used powerbait. green, orange and rainbow works great also we used bouyant spoons. i thing the rainbow trout color and the rusty red work great…..
December 15th, 2010 at 1:06 pm
Live crickets drifted on 2ft 2-4lb leader on a size 6 long shank hook and tied to a size 14 swivel.
December 16th, 2010 at 1:01 am
Don’t get frustrated, Trout are very very picky. If you want to know what lures would do great when you are river fishing I would highly recommend 1 inch to 1 1/2 inch Gold and Silver Kastmasters. I don’t know what kind of Trout you are fishing but my guess would be Rainbow or Brown? Try using the small 1 inch to 1 1/2 Rapala with Rainbow Trout and Brown Trout design. When you reel these lures do it in combination of slow reeling and light jerking to faster reeling and slighter faster and longer jerks with some pauses in between your jerks and reels. Oh I would highly recommend down grading your lb test. If you are using anything over 6lb test to fish these river Trout you are fishing with to heavy of a line and that might be the reason these fish aren’t hitting your stuff. I think if you try some of my suggestions you are going to be having Trout for dinner
I have my best luck with 2lb and 4lb test line but 6lb works great too and won’t require much skill to bring the bigger ones in.Oh I almost for got, does your river have any kind of falls or cascades? That’s the best place to fish with Nightcrawlers just have a sinker about 1 1/2 feet from your hook and let your work wiggle down there and you’ll catch lots and lots of Trout
You want to cast at the bottom of the falls where all the white water is. I used to catch many Brown Trout using that method. Good luck and I hope to hear some good news from you
December 16th, 2010 at 12:53 pm
Many ways. I’ll usually tie a Palomar knot to a “Sampo”, stainless ball-bearing snap swivel. With the snap swivel it’s easier for one ta’ change spinners. If you have ta’ use a weight say a split shot put it right at the end of your line at the top of the eye of the spinner. Only thing that accomplishes is a longer cast and or spinner ta’ go a little deeper, of course that depends on how fast the retrieve is. Try this link, shows ya’ how to tie a Palomar and other knots… http://www.animatedknots.com/palomar/index.php?LogoImage=LogoGrog.jpg&Website=www.animatedknots.com
December 17th, 2010 at 1:30 am
Use live bait, I dunno if you have salamanders there but they work great I like ones about 3 inches longer or better. A 2 inch or so live crawfish will work, Worms might work as well or a trout fly tipped with a worm , Maybe even a small live minnowYou can try a gold and black Rapala retrived slowly or even a black or brown crappie jig bounced off the bottom .One of those things should catch him ,Use light of pound test as you can, be sure not to wear bright clothes and try and keep a low profile so the trout isnt seeing you and being spooked.Good Luck
December 17th, 2010 at 1:46 pm
Casting will probably work better than trolling. When I’m fishing in a stream, I cast the lure upstream and across, and wind it in just fast enough to give it action. (Think about it — trout sit in a river looking for little struggling fish being washed downstream. They don’t expect their meals to come upstream against the current.)Cast toward some sort of structure, or into a riffle and work the lure into the calmer water below it.Do the same with bait — no weight if the water’s shallow and you can cast the light weight, otherwise a splitshot or something to get it deeper and help your cast. Remember, let the current carry the bait so it looks natural, but watch your line so you’ll know when you’re bit.
December 18th, 2010 at 1:45 am
i have used spinners, artificial worms and anything else you can think of to catch fish in Montana. just check the rules before you fish. quite a few streams are artificial lure only.
December 18th, 2010 at 12:55 pm
Sounds like you are looking for more than just hooks, maybe lures is what you are looking for. As one of the other posters said there are thousands to choose from varying in size and shape. For info on lures see if this may help. Copy and paste if you need to.http://www.bass-fishing-source.com/bass-fishing-lures.html
December 19th, 2010 at 1:33 am
get an ugly stik it is the best all around rod for you..unless you want to go buy 3 different 500 dollar rods for each fish species