The Freshwater Fishing Blog of New England
Welcome to The Freshwater Fishing Blog of New England.
http://freshwaterfishingblog.blogspot.com/
The main focus is Freshwater Fishing in the New England area. Great photographs, diagrams and analysis of fish caught in New England. Catches, spots, techniques and lures. All fish are caught and identified while stream, river, pond or lake fishing in and around New England.
I am a Fisherman in the Massachusetts area. I post pictures of the fish I catch along with helpful anatomical diagrams. I also discuss related material and other information available on species identification.
Feel free to email me pictures of catches, especially the fish you're not familiar with. - Keel33@gmail.com - I identify species, post diagrams and discuss characteristics. Recent Fish include Largemouth Bass, Smallmouth Bass, Sunfish, Pumpkinseed, Pike, Pickerel, Brown Trout, Rainbow Trout, Fallfish.
Posts begin below this message starting with the most recent and get older as you scroll down.
http://freshwaterfishingblog.blogspot.com/
The main focus is Freshwater Fishing in the New England area. Great photographs, diagrams and analysis of fish caught in New England. Catches, spots, techniques and lures. All fish are caught and identified while stream, river, pond or lake fishing in and around New England.
I am a Fisherman in the Massachusetts area. I post pictures of the fish I catch along with helpful anatomical diagrams. I also discuss related material and other information available on species identification.
Feel free to email me pictures of catches, especially the fish you're not familiar with. - Keel33@gmail.com - I identify species, post diagrams and discuss characteristics. Recent Fish include Largemouth Bass, Smallmouth Bass, Sunfish, Pumpkinseed, Pike, Pickerel, Brown Trout, Rainbow Trout, Fallfish.
Posts begin below this message starting with the most recent and get older as you scroll down.
Tuesday, October 27, 2009
Brown Trout (older)
My friend Nate caught these nice brown trout, much bigger than the last. Although the spots in the lower picture are much more developed, they are consistent with the redish spots on a lighter background typical of brown trout. This differs from species of brook trout, lake trout, and char which have light spots on a darker backfround.
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