Stocked Trout Fishing

Stocked Trout Fishing

Stocked Trout Fishing Best Baits and tackle for catching stocked trout.

by Johnny Wilkins – Chicago Fishing School Outdoors

In my area, cold water fishing means slower fishing. This is of course, unless you have stocked rainbow trout fishing by you! Spring cold water fishing is best when the waters are packed with stocked rainbow trout. These fish are literally dumped into ponds, reservoirs, lakes and rivers to provide us with great Spring fishing opportunities.

Oh, catching stocked rainbow trout can be a fun and rewarding experience! Here are a few tips to help you out.

The author Johnny Wilkins with a 19″ trophy stocked Palamino (white-gold rainbow) trout caught on a single spike (maggot) and float on 3 lb. leader. Trout over 18″ are a great catch!

Great Stocked Trout Fishing Tips

Below are some great tips for setting up and catching more stocked trout. Improving your bait as well as your trout-fishing tackle will result in you hooking way more fish. Along with these tips you can find the most sensitive trout fishing tackle at the LiveBaitFishingTackle online store. This is all field-tested and sells many of my favorite trout fishing hooks, floats and lines. This link brings you right to the trout section. Follow the tips below and have a ton of success with trout fishing.

Order Fresh Live Bait for Stocked Trout

1. The top tip to catching more fish – fresh bait. Order fresh bait: Call your local bait store a week prior to your trout fishing trip. Give them time so that they can have fresh spikes, bulk wax worms or crappie minnows in stock for you. 1,000 spikes is the ultimate trout bait, but you have to call ahead to make sure they have these ready for you!

Spikes are maggots and they are my best fishing bait for trout that I can recommend. Many bait stores do not stock these. They may be able to order them from their distributor and have them ready for you. Call on the Monday or Tuesday for Thursday or Friday pm pickup! Always carry a cooler with you so that you can keep your bait on ice. Never leave bait in the car – ever. Fresh bait catches the most fish. This is why I have a couple thousand fresh maggots ready to fish – chilled and fresh.

SUPREME BAIT
the SPIKE

The ultimate bait that fish can’t turn down. This bait lives underwater, takes fish from passive to active feeding and stores for long periods of time on ice. Keep chilled and enjoy a month’s storage! This bait lives undewater for :15 minutes of ultimate fish-catching action. Important to use light leader line and small, sharp, premium hook for better fish-catching! Fish go crazy over this ultimate bait. This is my go-to bait for stocked trout fishing and panfish in all US Waters. I have used this bait in competitions and even in my world record for shore fishing.

Order Live Bait Online – Shipped to You

A great option for ordering your stocked trout bait is Vados Bait Express. I order 2,000 spikes, 250 wax worms and 2 tubs of leaf worms from them and they ship it right to my door. This is the most fresh bait you can get and the highest quality.  This is because it is shipped direct and skips a step. Also, Vados has been selling live bait for over 60 years. Note- they ship Monday – Wednesday for the weekend. Bait stores- you can also order bulk bait to stock for your customers through Vados Bait.

The Right Baits for Catching Stocked Trout

2. Choose the right bait: Stocked trout are often accustomed to eating natural foods, so using live grubs (spikes, maggots), insects and small worms can be more effective than artificial baits. These live baits work better because movement on the hook will trigger more strikes from trout. Trout have fantastic eye sight so fresh bait really gets them eating. Make sure to use colors that resemble natural trout foods and fresh bait matters. These fish eat hundreds of insects every day. Trout can see the difference between fake bait and fresh, live bait. Better fresh bait such as spikes, wax worms, leaf worms, small leeches and crickets are superior trout-catching baits. Small crappie minnows are also another excellent choice for rainbow trout fishing. 

Stocked Trout Can Stack up in Balls or Schools

3. Location is key: Find out exactly where the trout are stocked in your area. You can find a list of stocked trout fishing lakes in your area. In some states this is very seasonal such as early spring and fall. Look for lakes, ponds, or rivers that have recently been stocked. Trout tend to stay close to where they were released initially. After that initial period, they will patrol the shores looking for food. If you are not catching during the first few days of fishing, the stocked trout could be balled up in one corner of the lake or pond. You might see people packed in tight – this is how you instantly know the trout are in the ball.

Attract Trout With Trout Pellets or Attractant Mix

This can be a frustrating experience with the crowd, but get on the edge of the crowd as the ball will move around. Wait it out – or use trout-calling attractant to draw the ball to you. I developed Fish in a Barrel attractant for stocked trout. This pellet is designed to be tossed in very small amounts to draw in and hold the stocked trout in front of you. The pellet’s properties have scent, sight and sound that increases your trout catch. Another formula mix I use is BOOM Attractant Mix. While my primary attractant is the pellet over the top of my float setup attack, BOOM also works to draw and hold stocked trout. The Panfish mix I developed from competitions and is made with mix and one can of bread crumb. Mix BOOM up with 1/2 can of water and create dime-sized coins. Toss these small coins over the top of your float and turn on the fish! This is great for when the fishing is slow and is designed to literally – turn the bite on.

When using mix – stay STILL. Don’t drift, don’t walk around. Fish one spot hard and feed “little and often”. Small amounts often are the key to turning on fish – especially stocked trout. When you fish the above attractants, you will find the trout are there the NEXT DAY. They hold over the area when they smell this. Several times I fished for 4 hours before the trout showed up. Once they showed up, I caught my limit of trout. In both cases, I also attracted dozens of fishermen on the tough-bite days. When they saw I was catching, they all walked over and crowded my spot. (Check your state regulations and also local water regulations to make certain this is legal). Some states do not allow this such as California and Minnesota.

Timing for Stocked Trout Fishing

4. Timing matters: Trout tend to be most active during lower light times of the day, such as early morning or late afternoon. Plan your fishing trip accordingly to increase your chances of success. Light impacts trout activity. Their superior vision works in low-light situations when they have a great view of the natural foods such as hatching insects and small minnows.  The fishing might be dead say early morning as well as early afternoon. The fish might just turn on an hour before dark. They seemed to be on a timer and they are! Stocked trout are fed two times a day. The fish’s clocks are all tuned to two daily bursts in feeding. Early morning and late afternoon are logical choices for you to cash in on the best fishing. There have been times where twilight fishing scored my most and biggest trout. You can change this timing by using some of the feeding attractants. It is possible to take the fish from non-feeding to active feeding (almost a super-power).

Depth and Location is Critical

5. Cast strategically: Trout often gather outside structures like fallen trees, rocks, or deep pools. Cast your line near these areas, as they provide hiding spots and natural feeding grounds for the fish. Stocked trout do patrol and move around. Finding the correct depth is also critical. If fishing with a friend, have one friend set bait depth at 4 foot deep and another person set depth at 8 feet deep on a slip bobber (if your water is that deep). Altering your depths on separate lines will unlock a pattern. Once you catch at one depth – odds are you will find this depth is that of the active fish. If I had to error, I would error up in the water column. Trout are top-column feeders many of the time with hatching insects. The eyes of the trout are up for a reason. When in doubt, fish up. That said, this fish also will patrol the bottom for insects. There are times when that deep rig will also reward you. Float fishing is best, but a bottom weighted rig will score.

Stealth While Fishing & Patience

6. Patience and stealth: Approach the water quietly and avoid making sudden movements. Trout have keen senses and can easily be spooked. Take your time and wait for the fish to bite. Green and brown clothing will aid in hiding your movements. Stay low and still for more fish. Stocked fish are not as shy, but will avoid big movements and bright colors will turn them away. Let the fish focus on just the delicious live bait and put more rainbow trout on your line.  My teacher, Mick Thill, would always wear browns and dark green when fishing. Camouflage shirts and natural-colored pants will keep you hidden and were Mick’s favorite. White shirts, bright orange or yellow would really set off Thill and catching fish. Trade your bright clothing in for more natural clothing.

Mick Thill was a float fishing and live bait guru. My teacher and USA Fishing Coach, Mick often wore colors such as this brown shirt and camouflage clothes during competitions. This hat was for post-fishing pictures and would be too bright for him to fish. Brown, green and grey (for rock shores) were Mick’s go-to clothing to hide.

Float Pop to Attract the Trout

7. Vary your retrieve: Experiment with different retrieval techniques to see what works best. Sometimes a slow and steady retrieve is effective, while other times short and quick jerks can entice a strike. With a float, you can present the bait at depth. This is very important for trout. Keeping the bait in their sight path will score. With a float you can do a trout-attracting retrieve. You can float pop a live bait with rod twitches to attract attention. After twitching your rod tip – do let your offering drop in the water column and lie still. Falling bait is the most attractive motion for trout next to rising bait. Literally all of the trout’s food rises from the bottom or falls from the top of the water. They will respond to your float pop twitch and wait fishing.

Leader Line & Sharp Hooks

8. Gear up: Get ready the week prior by tying fresh hook lengths, making sure you have supplies such as small, sharp hooks, quality leader lines in stock. These sharp, small hooks will make your live bait perform better (again fresh, moving bait is important).  During the days before I am going stocked trout fishing, I will tie up spare premium hook lengths. I tie on steel hooks which keep my bait moving longer. My favorite fishing hook is the Owner Mosquito Fishing Hook for trout. This hook is chemically sharpened and this results in livelier bait and more hook-ups. The sharp point lands home and hooks up more light-biting fish.

Stocked Trout Fishing is more productive if you use tiny, steel hooks with live bait. Pictured is an average trout caught on a size 14 Owner Mosquito Hook – link is down below.

I use these hooks on premium leader line that is 16″ long. This length keeps the fish from focusing on knots or swivels in the rig and also gives me a longer, slower drop with the hook bait. I also use a premium fluorocarbon fishing line. This line is more clear than water. With trout’s vision, you do not want them to spot your line. If they spot your line, they will swim right around it. All of my big trout are hooked on fluorocarbon leader line with a tiny hook. My absolute favorite hook is the size 14 Mosquito hook by Owner. For panfish, there is no other hook I would fish.

Last But Not Least – Trout Bobbers

I say bobbers, but really a proper bite indicator. Bobbers are just big chunks of material that don’t move. What you want is smaller, delicate floats (these are lighter and more stealth). Floats are only made of balsa wood. No plastic, foam and definitely never have a plastic tube in them. Floats move quickly and RESPOND to any touch by a fish. A properly balanced float will show you the instant the fish takes the hook bait. A float will also not be detected by the fish. This allows the fishermen (you) more time to set the hook.

The bobber people will have to depend on a fish hooking itself. Many fish will take the bait and few will hook themselves. If you use a produce like a plastic slip bobber, a rocket bobber, plastic bobber with air in the middle – these are all too slow and heavy. They will NOT react and you will be losing many fish that eject the bait. These all offer resistance. In nature, there is zero resistance on food fish eat.

The balsa float (especially small for trout), moves when the hook is touched when under a size. Even with the small float size and thin shape, the smallest balsa float will be occasionally ejected on light bite days with trout. The difference is that you SEE IT. On other bobber sizes you see nothing. When I see the float come back up after waiting and trying to count to three, this means a light bite. Trout will often circle back around and go at the bait again. The giant white trout above was caught when I saw my float go under two times and then come back up. This trout released my hook and ejected it twice before finally taking the bait. I could see every hit and release from up above.

Examples of great floats for catching trout are any of these pictured.

BAD – This is often viewed INCORRECTLY as a sensitive bobber. The plastic tube makes this bobber too stable and not a good choice for sensitive bite, light bite situations.
Stocked Trout Fishing - light floats such as these Gapen pencil floats show more takes and outfisb all plastic tube bobbers regularly.
These pencil floats are far superior for bite detection on light bites. Both floats by Gapen Fishing are 10x more sensitive than center tube floats at showing light takes. These are two of my favorite for fishing stocked trout.

Weather Important – Know Your Wind

9. Check the weather: When stocked trout fishing, and any time, check your weather. The app I like is called Fish Weather. You can also use the fish weather site instead of an app. If you have a smart phone, this is a killer outdoors tool for. It is free and will tell you the direction of the wind and the intensity. By viewing this and looking at the lake you are going to fish, you may decide to fish face into the wind. While it may be easier to cast with the wind at your back, the activity at the side of the pond with the wind is often greater. If the wind is intense, you may prepare by bringing longer rods and slightly larger floats. I have caught fish in white caps on a pond only several feet from shore. Conditions might be bad, but at least you will be prepared.

Ok – my favorite baits in order:

  • 1. Spikes (hands down, fresh maggots are #1) ask the trout
  • 2. Wax Worms
  • 3. Red Worms
  • 4. Nightcrawler Chunks
  • 5. Crappie Minnows
  • 6. Small Spinner (first lure)
  • 7. Crickets
  • 8. Jarred Fish Eggs
  • 9. Gapen Redball (artificial egg)
  • 10. Butter Worms
  • 11. Meal Worms
  • Worst Bait: (only in case none of the above available) Powerbait

Remember, fishing is all about enjoying the experience and being in nature. Even if you don’t catch anything right away, don’t get discouraged. Keep trying, and I’m sure you’ll have a great time catching those stocked trout!

  • This article was written by a human. Use of content, pictures or text using AI or any other collection method or publication method is strictly prohibited and will result in a fine, compensation up to $2,500 per instance. Use without permission of Johnny Wilkins, Chicago Fishing School or LiveBaitFishingTackle is prohibited. •

Illinois Fall Stocked Trout Fishing Guide

The Illinois Fall Stocked Trout Fishing Guide is out. Northern Illinois maps and locations to exact trout fishing spots is available. Johnny put together a linked map where you can even save to your phone (Apple iPhone Devices) and links for driving directions (all devices).

You can find these stocked locations at our new resource which will be update both Fall & Spring for Illinois Stocked Trout Fishing. Also available soon will be hot tips for catching more stocked trout even when the fishing bite is slow! The ultimate trout fishing rig works in all ponds and reservoirs well into the season.

Find great tips and locations near you or within a short drive around Chicago and Northern Illinois.

Stocked Trout Fishing Illinois - Northern Illinois
Stocked Trout Next to Gapen Pencil Floats. Johnny’s Trout Fishing Guide will help you to catch more trout all the time!

Johnny’ s Trout Fishing Guide:
26 Trout Fishing Places – Northern Illinois & Chicago Trout Fishing

I’ve made a guide to Northern Illinois – Chicago Area Trout Fishing. You can see all the links to trout fishing ponds, lakes and reservoirs including a few Illinois trout stream locations on my exclusive trout fishing tips map. Get set for rainbow trout! It’s here.

Fall Illinois Trout Fishing Season – October 16

Stocked Trout Fishing

Fall Illinois Trout Fishing is coming soon. It’s Time for trout! Go Fish. Thus, it’s time to prepare. Ready your trout fishing tackle. And, get bait. Because it is time for Our 2021 Fall Illinois Trout Fishing Season which opens Saturday, October 16th at more than 50 ponds, lakes, and streams throughout the state. Which means trout, trout, trout. Catch Rainbow trout.

For those looking to learn to fish – grab a fishing lesson or guided fishing session. I can teach you how to catch a lot of rainbow trout on these Illinois ponds.

Illinois Fall Trout Fishing
Grab a lesson and learn how to attract, detect trout bites and land more rainbow trout with a guided fishing lesson.

Careful. No trout may be taken from any of the stocked sites from October 1st until the fall trout season opens October 16. Don’t get busted.

Anyone attempting to take trout before the legal harvest season opening will be issued citations. Because, that would be a $125 fine. Per fish, your gear confiscated, so fish safe.

The Illinois catchable trout program is funded by those who use the program through the sale of Inland Trout Stamps and the Illinois Fish Management Fund.

Don’t be that guy. All anglers — including those who intend to release fish caught before October 16. Make sure to have a valid fishing license and an Inland Trout Stamp, unless they are under the age of 16, blind or disabled, or are an Illinois resident on leave from active duty in the Armed Forces. The daily catch limit for each angler is five (5) trout – after October 16.

Catch More Trout w/Trout Pellets or Trout Attractant Mix:

There are two products that have been tested on Illinois stocked trout and proven to attract them and get them feeding. Trout Pellets and Trout Attractant MixBOOM. The pellets work very well and the BOOM mix will also work. We recommend fishing wax worm or spikes on a #14 Owner Mosquito Hook.

Trout Fishing Tackle Tips

Use 3 lb. Flourocarbon leader and a 4 lb. main line unless you are fishing weedy waters. Use 4 lb. in weeds for your leader. For spinning shore gear and float fishing (our preferred trout fishing method) – use a longer rod like the Gapen 10 10′ Shore and Float Fishing Rod with a large spinning reel like the 4K 4000 series reel. For fishing floats GO SMALL! The Gapen Pencil Float is our favorite and the Bobber Anne a close second. These detect smallest of trout bites and will catch you more fish.

Get a Fishing Stamp and Have a License

You will need an Illinois fishing license. Fishing licenses and Inland Trout Stamps are available at DNR Direct license and permit locations, including many bait shops, sporting goods stores and other retail outlets. Check the IDNR website at: https://www2.illinois.gov/dnr/LPR/Pages/LicensePermitVendors.aspx

Grab your trout stamp or fishing license online. Also can be purchased by using a credit card through DNR Direct online via the IDNR website at https://www2.illinois.gov/dnr

Not all of the fall trout sites listed below open at 5:00 a.m. on opening day. Anglers are reminded to check the opening time of their favorite trout fishing location prior to the season. For more information about all site regulations, anglers should contact individual sites that will be stocked with catchable-size trout.

Participants in Fall Illinois Trout Fishing Season are reminded to follow current public health directives, including maintaining social distancing guidelines, bringing with them masks in case social distancing cannot be maintained and hand sanitizer containing at least 60 percent alcohol.

The Forest Preserves of Cook County can stock a bit differently with the Cook County Trout Stocking. Please check the FPCC website for updates closer to October 16, 2021. This is a fluid situation.

If you need great tackle for catching light-biting Fall Illinois Trout – visit LiveBaitFishingTackle.com to pick from their trout fishing floats.

2021 Illinois Fall Trout Locations

(* Denotes Sites Open for Catch-and-Release Fly Fishing Early Season)

North Illinois Trout Fishing Locations

  1. Bureau County: Hennepin Canal Parkway 
  2. Cook County: Wolf Lake, William W. Powers State Recreation Area, Chicago 
  3. Jo Daviess County: Apple River, Apple River State Park *
  4. Kankakee County: Bird Park Quarry in Kankakee 
  5. Kankakee County: Rock Creek at Kankakee River State Park *
  6. Kendall County: Big Lake at Silver Springs State Fish and Wildlife Area 
  7. Lake County: Sand Lake at Illinois Beach State Park 
  8. LaSalle County: Illinois and Michigan Canal at Lock 14 Pool, LaSalle-Peru 
  9. McHenry County: Spring Grove Hatchery Pond
  10. Ogle County: Pine Creek, White Pines Forest State Park *
  11. Rock Island County: Prospect Park, Moline 
  12. Warren County: Citizen’s Lake, Monmouth
  13. Whiteside County: Centennial Park Pond, Rock Falls
  14. Will County: Lake Strini, Romeoville
  15. Will County: Van Horn Woods, Plainfield
  16. Winnebago County: Bauman Lake, Cherry Valley 

Central Illinois Fishing Locations

  1. Adams County: Siloam Springs State Park Lake *
  2. Cass County: Gridley Lake at Jim Edgar Panther Creek SFWA *
  3. Champaign County: Kaufman Lake, Champaign Park District
  4. Christian County: Manners Park Pond, Taylorville Park District
  5. Clark County: Casey Park Pond, Casey Park District 
  6. Coles County: Eastern Illinois University Campus Pond, Charleston
  7. DeWitt County: Weldon Springs State Park Lake 
  8. Douglas County: Villa Grove West Lake
  9. Hancock County: Horton Lake, Nauvoo State Park *
  10. Macon County: Rock Springs Pond, Macon County Conservation District 
  11. Macoupin County: Beaver Dam Lake, Beaver Dam State Park
  12. McDonough County: Argyle Lake, Argyle Lake State Park 
  13. Morgan County: Morgan Lake at Nichols Park, Jacksonville * 
  14. Sangamon County: IDOT Lake, Springfield *
  15. Sangamon County: Southwind Park Pond, Springfield 
  16. Sangamon County: Washington Park Pond, Springfield 
  17. Shelby County: Forest Park Lagoon, Shelbyville 
  18. Tazewell County: Mineral Springs Park Lagoon 
  19. Vermilion County: Clear Lake, Kickapoo State Recreation Area 

South Illinois Trout Fishing Locations

  1. Bond County: Greenville Old City Lake
  2. Crawford County: Crawford County Conservation Area Pond #6 
  3. Jefferson County: Mount Vernon Game Farm Pond 
  4. Johnson County: Ferne Clyffe State Park Lake
  5. Madison County: Belk Park Pond, Wood River, Edwardsville Park District 
  6. Madison County: Highland Old City Lake 
  7. Marion County: Boston Pond, Stephen A. Forbes State Recreation Area
  8. Massac County: Fairgrounds Pond, Fort Massac State Park, Metropolis 
  9. Randolph County: Derby Lake, World Shooting and Recreational Complex, Sparta 
  10. Randolph County: Randolph County Lake 
  11. Saline County: Jones State Lake Pond 
  12. St. Clair County: Frank Holten State Recreation Area Main Lake 
  13. St. Clair County: Jones Park Lake, East St. Louis
  14. St. Clair County: Willow Lake, Peabody River King State Fish and Wildlife Area* (NOTE: Due to water temperature, stocking will be delayed) 
  15. Wabash County: Beall Woods Lake, Beall Woods State Park 
  16. Wayne County: Sam Dale State Fish and Wildlife Area Trout Pond 
  17. Williamson County: Devil’s Kitchen Lake 

Please Make Note: If your favorite spot in Lake, or Cook County is not on this list, please refer to their websites for information. Also note: DuPage County has Cancelled it’s Fall Trout Stocking Program. While their regular fishing is still open – they decided not to stock trout because of larger crowds – who will now crowd together at other sites.

An early opportunity at select trout sites — the Fall Catch-and-Release Fishing Season — will open October 3 at locations marked with an asterisk (*) in the list below.

No trout can be kept during the catch-and-release fishing period, but anglers can keep trout after the opening of the regular season beginning October 16th. Fall Illinois Trout Fishing Season Begins with Early Catch-and-Release Opportunity Opens October 3 at select sites*

2020 Trout Fishing Illinois & Chicago Area Rainbows!

Stocked Trout Fishing

2020 Trout Fishing Season is Just Around the Corner -Illinois’ Spring Trout Stocking

2020 Illinois Spring Trout Fishing Season Opens April 4

Early Spring Catch-and-Release Opportunity Opens March 21 at select sites

2020 Trout Fishing is approaching – get your tackle and bait ready!

SPRINGFIELD, IL —The 2020 Illinois Spring Trout Fishing Season will open Saturday, April 4 at 56 ponds, lakes and streams throughout the state. 

An early opportunity at select trout sites – the Spring Catch-and-Release Fishing Season – will open March 21.  No trout may be kept during the catch-and-release fishing period, but anglers can keep trout after the opening of the regular season beginning April 4. 

Learn to Fish Chicago
2020 Trout fishing is coming. Find the best trout bait & trout fishing floats here at LiveBaitFishingTackle.com – you can even find a trout pellet that attracts trout to your fishing spot!

Two traditional spring 2020 trout fishing locations are closed this year. The Waddams Creek site at Lake Le-Aqua-Na State Recreational Area and Manners Park Pond in Taylorville will be temporarily removed from stocking for site maintenance purposes. 
  
The Illinois Catchable Trout Program is funded by those who use the program through the sale of Inland Trout Stamps. The Illinois Department of Natural Resources (IDNR) stocks more than 80,000 rainbow trout in bodies of water where trout fishing is permitted during the spring season. An additional 80,000 trout will be stocked for the Fall Trout Fishing Season, which begins in October.

For the 2020 spring trout fishing, no trout may be taken from any of the stocked sites from March 15 until the season opens at 5:00 a.m. April 4. Anyone attempting to harvest trout before the legal harvest season opening will be issued citations.  

All anglers – including those who intend to release fish caught before April 4 – must have a fishing license and an Inland Trout Stamp, unless they are under the age of 16, blind or disabled, or are an Illinois resident on leave from active duty in the Armed Forces. The daily catch limit for each angler is five trout. 

Illinois 2020 fishing licenses and Inland Trout Stamps are available now at DNR Direct license and permit locations, including many bait shops, sporting goods stores and other retail outlets. For a list of locations, check the IDNR website at this link:  https://dnr2.illinois.gov/dnrdirectmonitor/VendorListing.aspx

Fishing licenses and trout stamps also can be purchased by using a credit card through DNR Direct online via the IDNR website at https://www2.illinois.gov/dnr/LPR/Pages/default.aspx, or by calling DNR Direct toll-free at 1-888-6PERMIT (1-888-673-7648).

For more information about all site regulations, anglers should contact individual sites that will be stocked with catchable-size trout. Not all sites open at 5am on opening day. Anglers are reminded to check the opening time of their favorite sites prior to the opening date. The 58 locations that will be open for spring trout season are listed below. 

2020 Illinois Spring Trout Locations 

(** Denotes sites open for Catch-and-Release Early Spring Season fishing)

North

  • Boone County: Mill Race Ponds, Belvidere 
  • Bureau County: Hennepin Canal Parkway 
  • Cook County: Axehead Lake, Cook County Forest Preserve District
  • Cook County: Belleau, Cook County Forest Preserve District
  • Cook County: Green Lake, Cook County Forest Preserve District
  • Cook County: Horsetail Lake, Cook County Forest Preserve District
  • Cook County: Wolf Lake, William W. Powers State Recreation Area, Chicago 
  • DuPage County: Grove Lake, DuPage County Forest Preserve District 
  • DuPage County: Pickerel Lake, DuPage County Forest Preserve District 
  • DuPage County: Silver Lake, DuPage County Forest Preserve District 
  • Jo Daviess County: Apple River, Apple River State Park **
  • Kankakee County: Bird Park Quarry in Kankakee 
  • Kankakee County: Rock Creek at Kankakee River State Park **
  • Kendall County: Big Lake at Silver Springs State Fish and Wildlife Area
  • Lake County: Banana Lake, Lake County Forest Preserve District 
  • Lake County: Sand Lake at Illinois Beach State Park 
  • LaSalle County: Illinois and Michigan Canal at LaSalle 
  • LaSalle County: Lake Mendota, Village of Mendota 
  • McHenry County: Lake Atwood, McHenry County Conservation District 
  • McHenry County: Piscasaw Creek, McHenry County Conservation District 
  • Ogle County: Pine Creek in White Pines Forest State Park **
  • Rock Island County: Prospect Park, Moline 
  • Stephenson County: Yellow Creek in Krape Park, Freeport 
  • Whiteside County: Centennial Park Pond in Rock Falls
  • Will County: Lake Milliken at Des Plaines Conservation Area
  • Winnebago County: Baumann Lake, Cherry Valley 
  • Winnebago County: Four Lakes, Winnebago County Forest Preserve District 

Central

  • Adams County: Siloam Springs State Park Lake **
  • Cass County: Gridley Lake at Jim Edgar Panther Creek SFWA **
  • Champaign County: Lake of the Woods, CCFPD, Mahomet
  • Champaign County: Kaufman Lake, Champaign Park District
  • Clark County: Casey Park Pond, Casey 
  • Coles County: Eastern Illinois University Campus Pond in Charleston
  • DeWitt County: Weldon Springs Lake, Weldon Springs State Park 
  • Hancock County: Horton Lake, Nauvoo State Park **
  • Macon County: Sportsman’s Club Pond, Decatur Park District
  • McLean County: Miller Park Lake, Bloomington Park District
  • Morgan County: Morgan Lake at Nichols Park, Jacksonville **
  • Moultrie County: Wyman Lake, Sullivan
  • Pike County: King Park Pond, Pittsfield
  • Sangamon County: IDOT Lake, Springfield **
  • Sangamon County: Southwind Park Pond in Springfield 
  • Sangamon County: Washington Park Pond in Springfield 
  • Shelby County: Forest Park Lagoon in Shelbyville 
  • Vermilion County: Clear Lake at Kickapoo State Recreation Area 

South

  • Jefferson County: Mount Vernon Game Farm Pond 
  • Johnson County: Ferne Clyffe State Park Lake
  • Madison County: Belk Park Pond, Wood River 
  • Marion County: Boston Pond at Stephen A. Forbes State Park 
  • Massac County: Fairgrounds Pond in Fort Massac State Park, Metropolis 
  • Randolph County: Derby Lake at World Shooting and Recreational Complex, Sparta 
  • St. Clair County: Frank Holten State Park Main Lake 
  • St. Clair County: Jones Park Lake, East St. Louis
  • St. Clair County: Willow Lake at Peabody River King State Fish and Wildlife Area **
  • Wabash County: Beall Woods Lake, Beall Woods State Park 
  • Wayne County: Sam Dale State Fish and Wildlife Area Trout Pond 

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