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Showing posts with label Vancouver island brown trout. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vancouver island brown trout. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 26, 2023

Vancouver Island brown trout

 Vancouver Island brown trout



The brown trout is closely related to the salmon with the same long, narrow, compressed body and long head. Torpedo shaped and meant for speed. A rounded snout and a pronounced hook develop on the lower jaw in mature males.



In-stream populations, the back, upper sides, and the top of the head are brown becoming silvery on the sides with pronounced black spots and rusty colored spots on the sides. In large lakes or the sea, the body is silver and most of the spots are concealed. The fins, except for the adipose fin which is a deep orange color, are smokey, opaque, and sometimes yellowish with some spots on the fins.



These trout are native to Europe and Western Asia. They were first introduced into Canadian waters in Quebec in 1890. Since then, they have established themselves in all provinces, except Prince Edward Island, Manitoba, and the Northwest Territories.



The brown trout is a cold water species that was introduced mainly into the stream and river habitats in Canada. The habitat of the brown trout is clear, cool, well-oxygenated streams and lakes.



Brown trout spawn in late fall to early winter, from mid-October to January depending on location. The usual spawning site is in shallow, gravelly headwaters of streams or gravelly shallows of lakes.



The Lake Cowichan River and lake system have a strong population of Brown Trout, some of these fish can reach up to 7 kilos in weight, the river is quite long with a great section on the lower end where drift fishing is the best way to fish these lunkers. There have been many of the top fishing shows that have done a story on this fishery.



Tuesday, April 25, 2023

Vancouver island brown trout

 Vancouver island brown trout



The best fly fishing can be found in the Cowichan River, which is home to rainbow trout, cutthroat trout, brown trout and steelhead. Trout are best from March through to June, and there’s a healthy steelhead run from December to March. The river is also famous for its trophy-sized browns that average in size from 16 to 18 inches. The best flies for most trout are caddis, mayfly and stonefly patterns. Brown trout are particularly fond of streamers and, if you’re going for steelhead, stick with marabou streamers. The Cowichan is a heavily regulated river, so be sure to check for in-season closures

























Fly Fishing for Steelhead on the Vedder River

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