Big fish are unique since there aren’t many of them. When you actually hook into a very large trout fish, it is even more unusual because they are so uncommon. Even though catching a very enormous fish is never simple, there are a few strategies you may do to improve your chances.
Tip 1: Big Fish like Big Meals
It goes without saying that large trout prefer to consume the most food possible while using the least amount of energy, which necessitates larger meals. While you won’t catch as many fish, your chances of capturing larger fish will rise if you fish streamers more frequently.
Tip 2: Find what’s bringing the bite
Finding out what the smaller trout are biting is crucial to landing big trout. Until you start catching fish, try a variety of lures and flies in various colors and sizes. Play around with the leader’s size and weight.
Do not be afraid to cast your rod at the water you don’t think will produce, and experiment with different casting angles, speed reeling in or stripping line, and other techniques. A good spot is never known until it is discovered. There will be big trout where there are small trout.
Tip 3: Fish Where the Big Fish Hang Out
Large fish prefer to hang out in areas that offer shelter from current and other predators as well as adequate space to seek prey. Ideal currents are those that are slower and generated by river impediments like bump outs along the bank or big rocks. Seams are transition zones between rapid and slow currents. Pools of ample breath and moderate water depths (2 to 6 feet) offer suitable holding places and enough space for huge trout to hunt.
Tip 4: Fish in October
October is the best month if you love to capture large brown trout. Browns are fall spawners, with spawning activity reaching its climax in November. Brown fish start moving upriver or out of lakes into rivers a few weeks before the spawn starts. The best time to go after huge fish is right now. It can be profitable to swing large streamers through deeper holding water as the large fish also become more aggressive. Not more fish are produced in October, but there are more large fish.
Tip 5: Fish after dark
It is well known that big browns eat at night. Brown trout withstand high sunless to the extent that they are larger. Throughout significant portions of the season, they frequently go into the night. The dog days of July are the optimum time for night fish since larger fish have more incentive to forage at night due to greater everyday water temperatures. When night fishing, it pays to have a solid understanding of the water. Concentrate on a few “big fish runs” where you feel confident wading at night without a light. When fishing after dark, avoid using a headlamp. Even though nighttime mousing frequently appears on Instagram feeds, streamer fishing yields more fish. When night fishing, I prefer using large, heavy black streamers that create a strong silhouette and move a lot of water. Try using some huge wool or deer hair-clipped heads and some inverted soft hackle “fins” as rudders to propel water if you tie your own bugs.
Tip 6: Focus your efforts on big fish waters
Make careful to focus your time on waters that harbor large fish if you’re aiming for a particularly big trout. It’s unlikely that throwing 10-inch streamers into a little alpine stream will have the desired effect. Don’t discount the lower reaches of the largest fisheries in the region if you are fishing in your own seas. Frequently, when the waters downstream start to warm up, the number of trout decreases. Although the number of trout in lower parts of rivers may decline, their size may increase. Some waters are simply known for having large fish. We occasionally fish a small spring brook that contains a good number of smaller trout and a few enormous browns. The larger 10″ rainbows are really what the big browns live off of.
Tip 7: Focus on Tails of Pools during Heavy Hatches
A pool’s tailout, where the river bottom slopes upward, acts as a conveyor belt for food during a hatch and offers a superb vantage position for pool inspections. This is premium real estate, and the biggest trout in a pool will frequently occupy it during a hatch even if it lives elsewhere when the hatch is not active.
Tip 8: Wait
When a hatch begins, big trout will not be the first to strike; instead, they will let the smaller fish to strike first. After a hatch begins, wait a while to observe if any larger fish begin to feed.
Tip 9: Look for Subtle Rises and Large Shoulders
Big trout rise with minimal disturbance, but because of their size, they leave a larger wake. Look closely at the slight increases; occasionally, a large head or set of shoulders will protrude. You own that fish.
Tip 10: Persist
Although each fish is unique and has its own personality, all huge trout share the traits of not self-hooking and being challenging to catch. If you want that large trout, you must put in the time on the water and be prepared to take a few fewer fish.
Also Read- Proven Rigs Setup for Striped Bass Fishing
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