

Also, fish tend to congregate around rocks, sunken objects, or structures (like docks for example). Never caught one myself, but if you were lucky and crazy enough to bring one in you would earn yourself some bragging rights easily and a place in the local paper.Īnd just two general tips that should hopefully apply to this game- as you can see with the camera, you're not getting down deep enough to where the fish are so you may want to apply some lead sinkers to your line (when the sun is out, they'll go down deeper where it's cooler- that's why it's easier to catch fish at night and when it's raining). those things can be monstrous and live in the deepest water. Wonder if there's any Lake Trout to be had though in this game. Used to always complain that he could never catch Walleye, which what he was actually out there for. I had a neighbor who would go to the next lake over and bring back a little basket full of them all the time. Also never heard of Cutthroat in my life, so that's interesting.īy the way, Brook Trout or Brookies as we would call them are inherently smaller. Bull as far as I remember is unique to the American West, just like Steelhead. Strange that there's Bull Trout mixed in with Rainbows and the other trout.

Jon has never fished for anything in his life has he? In fact, it wasn't unusual to be woken up by fishermen trolling past our house in search of Rainbow Trout. I have a few fond childhood memories of fishing at a summer home up in Vermont, and actually the area right around our home was called Rainbow Alley. In real life if you hold one up so its scales catch the sun, they reflect many colors of the rainbow. If you're wondering why it's called a Rainbow Trout, its silver scales are iridescent.
