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Outdoors MissouriAlmost all of Missouri's fly fishing tradition in centered right here, at a spring creek in the Northern Ozarks called Bennett Spring Branch. This was the
first Trout Park in Missouri, and it is still, bar none, the most popular. The reason for this is an
equal mix of the world class trout fishing the park provides, and the deep
rooted tradition it embodies in the sport of fly-fishing.
The park is really quite similar
to the other Trout Parks in
the State. Its two mile long length is divided into several zones in
order to accommodate all types of fisherman. It is also stocked with rainbows,
and open to catch and keep fishing every day from March 1 through
October 31.
During the wintertime it is open to catch and
release fishing on the weekends with flies.
Zone 1 is a fly only area even during the catch and keep
season. This area allows spin fisherman to legally use single hooked rooster tail
spinners and marabou jigs, while allowing fly fisherman to pursue trout as well.
This section mostly is put and take, but there is a short catch and release
area that is known to produce fifty trout days, as well as the occasional
ten pound brown.
Zone 2 allows all artificial lures and flies, with single or
treble hooks, as long as no soft plastics are used. Spin fisherman do well
here on marabou jigs and small spinners, and fly fisherman do well on San Juan
Worms, egg patterns, and woolly buggers. There are a few big trout in this
section, but the vast majority are stocking size rainbows.
Zone 3 is quite
possibly the section of stream in Missouri that is managed in the oddest way. Natural baits, prepared baits, and
softplastics only are allowed. Artificial lures or flies are not legal.
Again, most of the fish present are stocking size rainbow trout, but the occasional
lunker brown trout will swim up from the Niangua River's trophy brown
trout area, and zone 3 also has an excellent population of smallmouth bass.
In all, Bennett Spring State Park is a place
that all true trout fishermen in the Ozarks should visit. Before the bottom drop dams
in the White River System created trout rich tailwaters, it
was the undisputed trout capital of the Ozark Mountains. It may not be
the best anymore, but it is a stream certainly worth visiting.
Always verify fishing regulations at the park and/or at the MDC website.
