4.5lb Largemouth in the Patomic |
As a kid growing up in an Army family, we moved around frequently. My father
Kyle and his son Kaeden with some "Slabs" |
Considering my love of jumping from one fish to the other, the best compliment I can give trout is that out of all those species, the speckled trout is one of my favorites, if not my favorite. (Making me choose a favorite is a cruel thing) They encompass multiple aspects of some of our most highly sought after species. Many times they position themselves like a largemouth, sometimes schooling, maybe over a shell bed or underneath a pod of pogies. Sometimes they are thick in cover, maybe under a dock or deep within a grass bed. Of course everyone knows about the trout’s legendary head shake, gills flared, yellow mouth open, so similar to a bass as they both do everything possible to come unbuttoned. When it happens, although painful, all you can do is tip your hat and search for that next bite.
Yet, just like the crappie or “other specks”, they are known for that unmistakable “tap”, “tick”, or “bump”. It’s the only thing that can make the knees buckle, and elicit a lightning fast wrist snap at the same time. Fishermen throughout the south live for that bite. Also, trout migrate similar to the northeast’s popular striped bass, moving from ocean fronts during the summer into the bays, sounds, marsh, rivers and creeks in the fall. The poor soul chasing them is forever a step behind, and the “Shoulda’ been here yesterday….” mentality rears its ugly head. However, to avoid this, I'd like to offer encouragement.
For those just starting out in the trout game, fear not, as mentioned, your learning curve is probably not as steep as you think. If that background is bass or crappie fishing, you’re in luck. Odds are you already have the tackle, and many of the lures.
Personal best trout...5.65lbs Biloxi, MS |
the main concepts that successful rapid water fisherman key on is how fish relate to current. Speckled trout are no different, they posture on points or structure based on the tidal flow. Sound familiar?
Maybe that’s why if I had to choose my favorite species to target, trout would win everytime. It not only taps into my childhood and the memories I've spent chasing a bent rod, but they offer up a little aspect of all the fish I’ve spent years chasing. In closing, if your new to trout fishing but have developed freshwater concepts over the years, let that give you confidence instead of feeding the fear of the unknown. I assure you once you have your first successful outing, you'll be hooked by the silver wonder bug.
Hurry home Chris...these trout aren't going to catch themself.