
I love looking.....
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I love looking.....
I love looking at them bigguns almost as much as trying to catch them.....


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Ron Wilson
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- Chalk
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I think the life span of a trout is around seven years...Not sure how old that one would be...I heard the Texas trout and the Indian River/Mosquito Lagoon area trout have the same type genes....Good habitat and plenty of bait and you get trout like that....I want go try for one over there one dayRon Wilson wrote:Any guesses as to the age of this fish?
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Ron Wilson
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- Chalk
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I was wrong...I did a search and it said 12 yearsRon Wilson wrote:Seven years. Always wondered.
http://www.rodnreel.com/gulffish/gulffi ... &FishID=77Young spotted seatrout grow rapidly, reaching 8 inches by their first birthday and over 12 inches by age 2. Spotted seatrout can live to over 12 years of age. Male trout grow slower and don't live as long as females. Males don't reach 14 inches long until 3 or 4 years old. Few males live over 5, so virtually all spotted seatrout 5 pounds and larger are females.
- noleflyfisher
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I grew up fishing the Indian River and it is choked with big trout. I was never able to break the 10lb threshold but I caught quite a few like this:Ron Wilson wrote:I've missed fishing the Indian River; haven't since I joined the Marine Corps.....may be time for a trip back. What a great fishery, though. Took a lot of things for granted back then. Wished I would have taken the time to learn more when I was younger.

You probably have to break 10lbs in that fishery to qualify as a Gator. I saw a 12lb fish come out of Sebastian Inlet that was absolutely mind boggling
- noleflyfisher
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Those "gator" trout are out there waiting to be caught. I believe the problem seems to be we let our boats get between us and the fish.... I am getting some crazy idea of getting deep into the rock garden and then anchoring down, climbing out of the boat and fishing the skinnies > 2-3' on foot using a top-water plug or just a jig.... There's bound to be some biguns in the skinnies during the right time of year...
Time is the most precious commodity we have in life, stay focused.
"Type" genes, yeah, but not related to size. They don't mix & "can't" get selected for size traits.Chalk wrote:...I heard the Texas trout and the Indian River/Mosquito Lagoon area trout have the same type genes....Ron Wilson wrote:Any guesses as to the age of this fish?
That is the deal.Chalk wrote:...Good habitat and plenty of bait and you get trout like that...
Yes Yes YesChalk wrote:...I want go try for one over there one day
- Chalk
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Meaning they are one in the same, per Keith at Texas Tackle there was a hard freeze in the 70's or 80's in Texas, which is mainly miles and miles of shallow flats...This hard freeze killed alot of fish and part of their restocking program utilized strains of speckled trout from Mosquito Lagoon and various other areas noted for large trout.Littoral wrote:"Type" genes, yeah, but not related to size. They don't mix & "can't" get selected for size traits.
Restocking of speckled trout is very big in Texas, redfish as well...I wish Florida would do more
Thanks, I didn't know that. The habitat issue still can't be over emphasized.Chalk wrote:Meaning they are one in the same, per Keith at Texas Tackle there was a hard freeze in the 70's or 80's in Texas, which is mainly miles and miles of shallow flats...This hard freeze killed alot of fish and part of their restocking program utilized strains of speckled trout from Mosquito Lagoon and various other areas noted for large trout.
A question, how much difference would it make if we heavily stocked the Big Bend with Mosquito Lagoon trout?
