dpitt Posted June 24 Posted June 24 14 hours ago, Quillback said: Trout in Florida? No way! Sea Trout might count Johnsfolly and grizwilson 2
tjm Posted June 24 Posted June 24 Sure they have speckled trout and gray trout, both drum, btw. But apparently there is a doctor in the Tallahassee area that stocks his pond each winter with rainbow, there are a couple of YouTube videos of it that I stumbled on. The hand made sign in the vid said fly fishing only, may keep one fish, 25$ per person. No contact info was given but I imagine it's out there if one wanted to find it.
Quillback Posted June 24 Posted June 24 8 hours ago, dpitt said: Sea Trout might count That would be a good alternative! dpitt and grizwilson 2
FishnDave Posted June 24 Posted June 24 I was surprised to learn that Rainbow Trout have been stocked on at least 4 of the Hawaiian islands! I caught a couple Peacock Bass on Kaui. Quillback and dpitt 2
kjackson Posted June 24 Posted June 24 I'd like to make a correction to your list. For Washington State--there is a Deschutes River, but it is probably not the one you are thinking of--that one is in Oregon and is a fantastic fishery. Washington's Deschutes is a little, low-country river that probably does have searun cutts, but it is not an easy or fun river to fish. Practically every stream on the west side of the state has searun, and some of them are not only fisherman friendly but a beautiful place to fish. I'd look to the Olympic Peninsula streams, or heck, just put on your waders and fish in the salt. Quillback, BilletHead, dpitt and 1 other 4
BilletHead Posted June 24 Posted June 24 40 minutes ago, kjackson said: I'd like to make a correction to your list. For Washington State--there is a Deschutes River, but it is probably not the one you are thinking of--that one is in Oregon and is a fantastic fishery. Washington's Deschutes is a little, low-country river that probably does have searun cutts, but it is not an easy or fun river to fish. Practically every stream on the west side of the state has searun, and some of them are not only fisherman friendly but a beautiful place to fish. I'd look to the Olympic Peninsula streams, or heck, just put on your waders and fish in the salt. Yep about any stream on the west side of the Cascades. It was awesome and beautiful place. We caught our coastal a ways from the salt but next time we will try along the coast. Quillback, Johnsfolly, grizwilson and 1 other 4 "We have met the enemy and it is us", Pogo If you compete with your fellow anglers, you become their competitor, If you help them you become their friend" Lefty Kreh " Never display your knowledge, you only share it" Lefty Kreh "Eat more bass and there will be more room for walleye to grow!" BilletHead " One thing in life is for sure. If you are careful you can straddle the barbed wire fence but make one mistake and you will be hurting" BilletHead P.S. "May your fences be short or hope you have long legs" BilletHead
Johnsfolly Posted June 24 Posted June 24 4 hours ago, Quillback said: That would be a good alternative! That's what I have been doing so far. dpitt and Quillback 2
Devan S. Posted June 24 Author Posted June 24 Definitely fished the Deschutes in Washington. Your description of it is spot on....small, brushy river/creek. Fish were likely small resident fish vs. true sea run. Not a destination and as you said many much better places to fish. kjackson and dpitt 2
Members BLUEWATER Posted June 24 Members Posted June 24 8 hours ago, FishnDave said: I was surprised to learn that Rainbow Trout have been stocked on at least 4 of the Hawaiian islands! I caught a couple Peacock Bass on Kaui. Peacock Bass were fun on Oahu. FishnDave and Johnsfolly 2
kjackson Posted June 24 Posted June 24 8 hours ago, BilletHead said: Yep about any stream on the west side of the Cascades. It was awesome and beautiful place. We caught our coastal a ways from the salt but next time we will try along the coast. I'm open for intel when you decide to make the trip. No. 2 Son currently lives out there about as far west as you can go in the lower 48. 8 hours ago, Devan S. said: Definitely fished the Deschutes in Washington. Your description of it is spot on....small, brushy river/creek. Fish were likely small resident fish vs. true sea run. Not a destination and as you said many much better places to fish. While I disparage Washington's Deschutes, I did catch a trout there on the first fly I tied, a "muddler". It wasn't much of a fly-- pheasant quill for wings and some peacock herl trailing as a tail and red chenille wrapped around the head of the fly. I was 10 at the time, so that's the reason for the non-standard pattern. It did catch a trout, and that was important to me. BilletHead and Quillback 2
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