Showing posts with label trout. Show all posts
Showing posts with label trout. Show all posts

Thursday, May 28, 2009

How Do I Catch More Trout? 3 Tips to Help Almost Anyone Catch More Trout

Are you interested in catching more trout? You must be, seeing as how you're reading this article, so I'm going to take a couple of minutes and list 3 tip[s that will help almost anyone catch more trout. During my 25 or so years of trout fishing, I've learned a few things that have served me quite well in catching trout. These 3 tips are my three favorites, and will certainly help you answer the question of 'how do I catch more trout'.

Before I get to the tips themselves I want to begin this article by stating that there are no magic formulas when it comes to trout fishing (or any type of fishing for that matter). Nothing will help your ability to catch fish like spending time on the water practicing your craft. There is simply no substitute for practice, and the more little nuances you learn about your particular style of fishing, the better off you will be. With that being said, let's get down to business, shall we?

  • Clean Your Hands - This might sound so simple that you think I'm nuts, but making sure that your hands are clean is very important to trout fishing. I don't mean clean like before you eat dinner, but rather clean as in free on any unnatural odors. Trout have a very sensitive sense of smell and can easily detect unnatural odors on their food. I bet you can guess what happens if the trout detect unnatural odors on your bait or lure? Yep, they are much less apt to bite it. The easiest way to make sure that your hands are clean is to rub them in a handful of grass or dirt before baiting up.
  • Don't "Spook" The Area - This tip is mainly for those of you who fish in small rivers and streams for trout. You don't want to "spook" the trout because if you do, they are very hard to catch. A fishing area becomes spooked when the trout become aware of something "out of the ordinary". Things like making loud noises or splashes and casting your shadow on the area you're trying to fish will "spook" the trout. Pay attention to what you're doing and do your best not to "spook" your fishing area.
  • Present Bait Naturally - When trout fishing it is extremely important to present your bait in the most natural way possible. The best way to accomplish this task is through the use of gang hooks. Gang hooks are simply a pair of small hooks tied back to back which enable bait to be presented in a totally natural manner. This is especially true when using live or synthetic worms for bait (which is great trout bait by the way). A worm rigged on a gang hook rig and allowed to flow naturally with the current of a river or stream is a deadly trout fishing tactic.

These 3 tips will help anyone catch more trout on their next trout fishing excursion. How am I so sure of this fact? Because I've been using every one of the above trout fishing tips with great success for more that twenty years and if they work for me, they will work for you. Put one or all of these tips into practice as soon as you get the chance.

Trevor Kugler is co-founder of JRWfishing.com and an avid angler. He has more than 20 years experience fishing for all types of fish, and 15 years of business and internet experience. He currently raises his five year old daughter in the heart of trout fishing country.....Montana.

Gang Hooks Tied & Ready To Fish: http://www.jrwfishing.com/gang_hooks.asp

Friday, May 15, 2009

Trout Fishing Tips & Tricks

If you want to know how to catch trout, then this is the place for you. Trout are a (mostly) freshwater fish that are finicky and cunning. They can be very difficult to catch at times and often dwell in clear mountain streams where they can see you better than you can see them. It is seldom that fishing becomes such a delicate experience as trying to toss a bait close enough to a fish to get its attention, but not too close as to startle and spook it off.

There are many ways to catch trout and outwit the cunning devils of our waterways. There are different rod and reel setups, different kinds of lures as well as a myriad of myths and superstitions surrounding trout fishing. From my experience, these are the top five strategies that will catch you trout.

1. Live Bait Live bait is certainly the simplest and surest way to catch trout. If there are trout in the water, there is a chance that live bait is probably the most effective bait for them unless they happen to be very well fed. Often times trout are released from a hatchery and in the wild don't know what to eat so they are usually very hungry and will take just about any live bait. Especially for children I recommend beginning your trout fishing experience with live bait.

2. Spinning Lures Spinning lures are the easiest way to catch trout with an artificial lure. The benefit of using a spinning lure like this is that you can catch multiple fish on the lure. You also do away with the inevitable messy hands problem when dealing with live bait. To properly use a spinning lure, you should cast it out and reel it in against the flow of the current, perpendicular to it. This is best for aggravating fish who are not hungry into striking out of aggression.

3. Small Jigs Small jigs and tube like lures are best for catching trout that you see lazily laying along the bottom of a stream. Using these lures involves applying a great degree of finesse, gently bouncing the lure along the bottom of the stream close to the trout, enticing and tricking them into taking the lure.

4. Fly Fishing Fly fishing is a very effective method of trout fishing. Fly fishing involves using an entirely different rod, reel and type of lure. You use a heavy line and cast "flies" out, which are very small lures that look like insects. It is the weight of the line that you use to cast. You drift these tiny bug lures made of string and feathers down the stream and past the trout. This is another very effective trout fishing method when used correctly, but requires even a greater degree of finesse than using jigs.

5. Ice Fishing Ice fishing for trout can be very fun if you know what you're doing. Of course you need to live in the right climate to ice fish. The best trout to ice fish for can grow very large and are called lake trout. In order to ice fish you drill several holes deep into the ice, then hook live bait deep down into the water through the holes. You use a setup that makes a little flag pop up when the fish bites and when he does, you pull the line up. A good lake trout can feed a family twice over.

That's all for now. As I said there are many methods to catch trout and these are only the top five that I have employed in my history. Feel free to experiment and try out other methods, you never know if peanut butter on a hook might work and suddenly become the next trout fishing fad!


About the Author

For more Trout Fishing Tips & Tricks please check out my website at Trout Fishing Pro Tips.

Trout Fishing Tips & Tricks

If you want to know how to catch trout, then this is the place for you. Trout are a (mostly) freshwater fish that are finicky and cunning. They can be very difficult to catch at times and often dwell in clear mountain streams where they can see you better than you can see them. It is seldom that fishing becomes such a delicate experience as trying to toss a bait close enough to a fish to get its attention, but not too close as to startle and spook it off.

There are many ways to catch trout and outwit the cunning devils of our waterways. There are different rod and reel setups, different kinds of lures as well as a myriad of myths and superstitions surrounding trout fishing. From my experience, these are the top five strategies that will catch you trout.

1. Live Bait Live bait is certainly the simplest and surest way to catch trout. If there are trout in the water, there is a chance that live bait is probably the most effective bait for them unless they happen to be very well fed. Often times trout are released from a hatchery and in the wild don't know what to eat so they are usually very hungry and will take just about any live bait. Especially for children I recommend beginning your trout fishing experience with live bait.

2. Spinning Lures Spinning lures are the easiest way to catch trout with an artificial lure. The benefit of using a spinning lure like this is that you can catch multiple fish on the lure. You also do away with the inevitable messy hands problem when dealing with live bait. To properly use a spinning lure, you should cast it out and reel it in against the flow of the current, perpendicular to it. This is best for aggravating fish who are not hungry into striking out of aggression.

3. Small Jigs Small jigs and tube like lures are best for catching trout that you see lazily laying along the bottom of a stream. Using these lures involves applying a great degree of finesse, gently bouncing the lure along the bottom of the stream close to the trout, enticing and tricking them into taking the lure.

4. Fly Fishing Fly fishing is a very effective method of trout fishing. Fly fishing involves using an entirely different rod, reel and type of lure. You use a heavy line and cast "flies" out, which are very small lures that look like insects. It is the weight of the line that you use to cast. You drift these tiny bug lures made of string and feathers down the stream and past the trout. This is another very effective trout fishing method when used correctly, but requires even a greater degree of finesse than using jigs.

5. Ice Fishing Ice fishing for trout can be very fun if you know what you're doing. Of course you need to live in the right climate to ice fish. The best trout to ice fish for can grow very large and are called lake trout. In order to ice fish you drill several holes deep into the ice, then hook live bait deep down into the water through the holes. You use a setup that makes a little flag pop up when the fish bites and when he does, you pull the line up. A good lake trout can feed a family twice over.

That's all for now. As I said there are many methods to catch trout and these are only the top five that I have employed in my history. Feel free to experiment and try out other methods, you never know if peanut butter on a hook might work and suddenly become the next trout fishing fad!


About the Author

For more Trout Fishing Tips & Tricks please check out my website at Trout Fishing Pro Tips.