Archive for June, 2006

Trout Fishing Featured Product - Berkley Vanish

Friday, June 30th, 2006

Trout Fishing Blues - Check Your Line!

The kind of line you use in your Trout Fishing excursions is extremely important. It will make or break your experience. Remember nothing more than 2 - 4 lb. test line. Trout are very ‘nervous’ fish and get spooked easily. The more trout fishing information and knowledge you have the better you will be at fishing. Fishing is a skill. The skill comes from what you know and how you apply it. Good luck!

To vastly improve your knowledge about trout fishing, I highly recommend this book, it’s an easy read, it’s very clear and concise and for the cost of just a days worth of bait you will increase your knowledge and if applied and exercised properly, will have you leaving with a stringer full of fish.

http://www.troutfishingblues.com

Product Description
Berkleys Vanish fluorocarbon line is tough castable and virtually invisible. We carry Vanish in both filler spools and pony spools at a great price. It is made of 100% flourocarbon.

Product Features

  • Vanish is available in pony and filler spools in 2 pound test through 20 pound test.
  • The color is clear.

Trout Fishing Secrets (eBook)

Thursday, June 15th, 2006

In case you haven’t picked up the eBook Trout Fishing Secrets yet, here are a few tips covered in the book.

  • Know when a Trout can see you! (You must know what the Refractive Window is and how you might be scaring the fish away.)
  • The color of your clothing matters! Learn what the best colors are so that you’re camouflaged from the fish.
  • Learn why trout are so sensitive to noise. (The noise of breaking twigs or nudging a rock consistently scares fish away!)
  • Why having a cigarette while fishing can halve your chances of catching anything.
  • Learn what the ideal conditions are to cause a feeding frenzy among Trout. (Unfortunately, if one factor is out of place they will literally starve themselves until everything is in place again.)
  • Know what the ideal water temperature is for Trout to feed.
  • How to Identify Trout Rich Waters
  • The 4 things you should do before you even unpack your gear beside the river.

More tips are covered in the book, simply written and easily understood.

Pick up Your copy of the Trout Fishing Secrets NOW!

Trout Fishing Blues

Trout Fishing in the Heat

Thursday, June 15th, 2006

Trout Fishing in the Summer can be tough, and in some places impossible, but there still is hope.

Trout experts at this time will still find themselves with a full stringer, especially those who know how to get into the depths of the water. Trollers will find that using their favorite lures behind 4 to 8 colors of leadcore line to be an effective approach.

Dams and other deep pockets of water are excellent sources of getting to those cool hiding spots the remaining trout will find refuge in. Large chunks of power bait and nightcrawlers or a combination of both will draw them out of the dark, it just takes patience.

Good Luck.

Trout Fishing Blues

This Week’s Trout Fishing Plants in Southern California

Tuesday, June 13th, 2006

THIS WEEK’S TROUT PLANTS

Barring adverse weather, water or road conditions, the following lakes and streams, listed by county, will be restocked the week of June 12 with catchable-size rainbow trout from the Department of Fish and Game hatcheries:

LOS ANGELES Jackson Lake.

ORANGE — Trabuco Creek.

SAN BERNARDINO — Arrowbear Lake, Green Valley Lake, Gregory Lake, Jenks Lake, Miller Canyon Creek, Mojave Narrows Regional Park Lake, Santa Ana River, Santa Ana River (South Fork).

SAN DIEGO — Doane Pond.

INYO — Baker Creek, Big Pine Creek, Bishop Creek (Lower, Middle, South Forks), Bishop Creek (Intake II), Georges Creek, Goodale Creek, Independence Creek, Lone Pine Creek, Owens River (Laws Bridge downstream to Steward Lane and below Tinnemaha), Pleasant Valley Reservoir, Rock Creek Lake, Sheperds Creek, Symmes Creek, Taboose Creek, Tinnemaha Creek, Tuttle Creek.

This Post Sponsored by: trout-fishing-info.blogspot.com

Brook Trout Making Comeback in Smokies

Friday, June 9th, 2006

GATLINBURG, Tenn. (AP) — The cold, clear water of LeConte Creek cascades over moss-covered boulders, lingers momentarily in small pools skirted by dense rhododendron, then rushes on through the hemlock, poplar, birch and maple forest. It’s here and in a handful of other streams in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park that the brook trout - the only trout native to the eastern United States and more specifically to the southern Appalachians - is making a comeback.

Imperiled from Georgia to Maine by decades of pollution, poor land management and competition from nonnative brown and rainbow cousins, “brookies” are regaining a foothold in the country’s most visited national park on the Tennessee-North Carolina line.

Read More…