Love the rainbow. Looks more like a California golden troutYou guys got me looking for a few more. Love all of the pics so far. Here's a few more:
these were quite unique to me. The brown is wild but had virtually no red spots, halos,or blue cheeks. The Tiger was caught on the WB near Norbord.
The large size of that tiger makes me skeptical of it being wild. Is the WB stocked at any point, or are there tribs that feed into it that are stocked? Does the WB have natives, or do it's tribs have them?... I remember you sharing the tiger before. I almost believe it to be wild given the location. It’s also very well proportioned compared to a hatchery trout.
After I caught that Tiger I reached out to a biologist with NY DEC. He told me that NY had never stocked tigers into the WB. He also went onto say that wild tigers are very rare. PA stocks many streams and rivers that feed into the WB & main. The Lackawaxen, the Dyberry which empties into the Lacky in Honedale. Eqinock Creek may be stocked and at one time that little creek at the Shehawken access was stocked. We all know that not only rainbows move a lot and it is not beyond the realm of possibility that a tiger trout stocked into any one of the PA streams that feed the Delaware may have gone on a long swim & eventually ate my streamer in the Norbord pool.That’s an amazing brown and I remember you sharing the tiger before. I almost believe it to be wild given the location. It’s also very well proportioned compared to a hatchery trout.
is that a blue trout? the State generally removes them from stocking, but occasionally some get thru.So there has been lots of conversation recently about trout color and pattern variation. It certainly got me thinking about some of the rare ones I’ve caught myself and so I started combing through the photos. Here is what I came up with. Feel free to post your odd looking trout.
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That's what I thought it was.is that a blue trout? the State generally removes them from stocking, but occasionally some get thru.
is that a blue trout? the State generally removes them from stocking, but occasionally some get thru.
That's monster brookie! It's a wild fish?-Spring Creek Brown taken on an early black stonefly dry fly below Benner Springs (2010). I love the sparse spot pattern.
-Savage River Brown taken on a stimulator (2008). I still have not found a stream that has prettier browns than the Savage.
-Savage River Cutthroat taken on a green weenie (2013). Not the prettiest specimen, but certainly unique for the east coast.
-Back-to-Back Savage River Browns caught on two consecutive cases behind the fly shop (2012ish). I used to chat it up with the former owner during my weekday trips when I used to work shift work and before I had kids. That wall across from his shop holds some big fish that love the sip midges and tiny BWOs on top.
-Big Spring sculpin eater (2015). I loved how the pink extended down to the belly of that trout.
-Big Spring sculpin eater (2014). One of the darkest brookies that I have ever caught.
I miss the days on Big Spring, when you could catch several of those big wild rainbows and brookies in a given trip. I think the amount of fish has increased since the stream improvements but the quality has diminished greatly with the added pressure. I know there are still a few of them in there though.
Yes. I took some bigger wild brookies from there back then. All the credit goes to the artist formerly known as Fishidiot. He taught me how to approach those fish. I think that one was 13.5. The biggest I caught was a 16.5 in male with a huge hump back. I’m sure there are still couple of them hanging around in there, but the entire dynamic of that fishery seemed to change with the improvements.That's monster brookie! It's a wild fish?