
By the numbers, trout are the West Coast’s most popular species of gamefish. In addition to their beauty, trout enjoy a broad distribution that few other West Coast gamefish can match. Trout are at home in pristine high country streams, foothill reservoirs, urban ponds and just about everywhere in between.
Undoubtedly, one of the most important factors driving the popularity of trout among anglers is the fact that they are willing strikers that can be caught using a variety of different techniques. I like to call trout equal opportunity gamefish because both bank and boat anglers achieve a high level of success while targeting them with a long list of offerings including spoons, spinners, plugs, flies and a smorgasbord of natural and manmade baits.
Certainly we all love catching trout on lures, but day in day out it's bait that yields the most consistent results. When the going gets tough or even when it’s not, break out the bait and you’ll be well on your way to filling up your stringer with tasty rainbows.
With spring trout fishing breaking loose in lakes and the stream season slated to get underway on April 23, this is a perfect time to ponder the core baits that no Golden State trouter will want to be without.
Lake And Reservoir Baits
Three decades ago, worms, salmon eggs and soft cheese were the kings as far as trout baits were concerned, and then it happened. Floating dough baits arrived on the scene and things haven’t been the same since. PowerBait is the most popular and certainly one of the most effective of these convenient putty-like concoctions.
When PowerBait first came out, my buddy Red and I each picked up a bottle of orange dough. We didn’t give the bait a try for quite a while. Finally we were fishing at an urban lake on one of those days when nothing seemed to be working. I put a small ball of the bait on a slip sinker rig and pitched it out not expecting to get a bite. Well,