I have a bunch of spinners and a few spoons, all in the 1/4 - 1/2 oz range. I use them mostly for pickerel, but have caught a couple of smaller LM's on them, too.
That size range might be a little too big for trout, I guess.
I'll try to pick up a couple of smaller ones and use the technique you just described. Thanks for the tip, by the way.
Straw Point can be a little tricky. Most of the people I've talked to have told me that they don't have much luck with trout there, either. Maybe it's the time of year or the time of day, maybe it's the bait/lure they're using. I don't know.
All I know is that I've caught quite a few of them - and lost a few also - from the same area where most people say they get skunked. And I've seen it happen a couple of times. I would catch my limit while the guy fishing 10 feet away from me wouldn't even get a bite.
I don't do anything special, really. I use the same rig most people use, an egg sinker (1/2 oz to 3/4 oz), a small snap swivel at the end of my main line (4#), a leader made from the same 4# line (between 12" and 16" long) and Power Eggs.
All of the trout I've caught this year, about 3 dozen of them from different ponds and lakes, were caught using this very same rig.
The only thing I've noticed about my limited experience with trout fishing is that I have a substantially lower bite rate when I cast into submerged weeds. Maybe the trout don't like the weeds or maybe they just can't see the bait because the weeds are too tall. If that's the case, then you will have to increase the length of your leader by a couple of inches or find a spot where there are no weeds.
I would like to note that all the trout I caught out of Spot Pond where caught within 2 or 3 weeks of it being stocked.
I guess they got acclimated to their new environment and decided to explore other parts of the pond and I didn't catch anything else after that.
Posted Fri Sep 26, 2014 8:47 am