Three Small Stream/Wild Trout Best Practices for Fall 2023

As the weather turns cooler, small stream anglers begin dreaming about their favorite thin blue lines. It should be a great fall season — we had a very wet summer and the natives and other wild fish are in great shape. But along with fishing for wild trout and char comes great responsibility, to both the fish and the resource. Here are three things you can do preserve and protect wild fish.

Minimize fish photos. Anglers with cameras have needlessly killed more small stream wild trout — intentionally or not — in the last 10 years than in the previous 100. You can blame it on the convenience and portability of digital devices. You can blame it on social media. Or angler narcissism. Or all of the above. One solutions is: take no photos, or Take The Wild Trout One Photo Challenge.

Accordingly, do you really think we need a photo of every wild fish you caught on your last outing? Dr. Rick gives the same answer: no.

Be on the lookout for redds. Fall is spawning time for wild brookies and brown trout. Learn how to identify a redd, the nesting area for spawning fish. And please, stay out of the water. The eggs you don’t crush will be the trout you’re catching in a couple years.

Keep Fish Wet. Catch-and-release is useless if you’re ignoring its fundamental best practices. Learn to do it right, and you’ll have more wild fish to catch on your next outing.

Thank you and tightest of lines.

6 comments on “Three Small Stream/Wild Trout Best Practices for Fall 2023

  1. Bill's avatar Bill says:

    Sound advise . Bill

  2. […] Finally, it’s fall, which is a great time to be fishing wild brook trout streams. If you’re going to partake, please read this quick article from the archives, Three Small Stream/Wild Trout Best Practices. […]

  3. David Bennett's avatar David Bennett says:

    Thanks for a repeat post because I was sick most of the last year and didn’t read it. I do observe the ego factor as I have watched a large majority of men photographing almost every netted fish. I understand a unique size or type or unusual circumstance is a reason to photo ones catch but imbedding this article in a person’s subconscious would surely help reduce the problem.

  4. Steve Culton's avatar Steve Culton says:

    David, you know where to find me. 🙂

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