Brown Trout Fishing, A Real Challenge
Brown trout fishing can prove very challenging. This is due in
part to the fact that brown trout are smart fish. They tend to
feed at dusk or at night. They do put up a fight though and that
can be a great challenge to the fisherman. But, because of the
difficultly to catch the brown trout, this fish has not been a
big time game fish. But, there is much to know about it anyway.
The brown trout, or Salmo Trutta, is also known by other names
including German brown trout, German trout, English brown trout,
European brown trout or Brownies. The brown trout is generally a
small fish. It ranges in length from 16 inches to about two
feet. It weighs up to eight pounds. The coloring on this fish
tends to be light brown on the backs and silvery on the sides
and bottom.
The brown trout is natively a European fish. In the waters of
the Atlantic and even into western Asia is where they were
originally found. They were introduced in the United States and
Canada in 1883. They can now be found in most of the Canadian
waters and the Great Lakes. The fish themselves seem to have had
trouble being successful in the Canadian waters, but have been
successful in Lake Michigan. When introduced there, they proved
to be able to withstand intense degraded habitats that other
trout could not survive in.
The survival of the brown trout is due in part to the fact that
they like to feed at night and therefore the adult has very few
predators. In fact, its main predator is the human fisherman.
The brown trout has been stocked in the Michigan Lake for years
and has become an important part of the lake's ecosystem. Brown
trout fishing is very popular here. In many places, surf casting
brown trout has become a popular sport.