I don't know what the difference is between corn and bread when comes to trout but, there is a difference. At Taylor Creek Outfitters, in Basalt, Co. they feed the trout from the shop deck overlooking the Frying Pan River, and the trout get huge. The guys in the shop say they like garlic bagels the best.
Bill -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Tony Spezio Sent: Tuesday, February 04, 2003 2:32 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: [VFB] Fish oil Bread is no problem, it has food value. Down at Brainerds Bend below me is a C&R section. When some tourists would stop at the trout dock there Donnie would throw a hamburger roll in the water. There are big browns in that section. As soon as the roll would hit the water there would be a big boil and half of the roll would be floating till the next boil and the roll was gone. The biggest trout I have taken from that section is a 5 3/4 Rainbow on a 3 wt rod. Donny always has shore lunches at his place and all the left over bread is fed to the trout. No dead trout that I have seen from this. Tony [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > >> As hard as we have tried to ban corn, we have not >> succeeded. >> We did manage to get it banned for chumming in the C&R >> areas. The guides would chum with corn in the C&R areas >> and >> use a little yellow fuzz ball as the fly. Some still do >> it >> but the fine is real heavy if caught. > > Tony- The Yellow Breeches section near Boiling Springs > gets a lot of tourists who throw bread to the fish. The > trout look healthy and well fed but folks who fish that > section use yarn "flys" called honeybugs. Fortunately, > this is a section only 50 yards long and the fish below > are smaller but select flys resembling natural food. I > believe the state stocks older breeders in this section > just for the tourists. Now I wonder if the bread and > white fly hatch fame have any correlation? > > Murf
