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Sea Trout vs Brown Trout on the River Dart
The River Dart is home to both resident brown trout and migratory sea trout, and understanding the difference can add a whole new dimension to your fishing.
Brown Trout (Resident Fish)
- Spend their entire lives in freshwater
- Typically smaller (though fish up to ~3lb are possible)
- Found throughout the river year-round
- More predictable in behaviour
Sea Trout (Migratory Fish)
- Start life in the river, then migrate to sea (smolting)
- Return later, often larger, stronger, and more powerful
- More elusive and often active in low light or at night
How to Tell Them Apart
Sea trout tend to be more silver in appearance
- Brown trout have more pronounced spotting and darker colouring
- Sea trout often feel noticeably stronger when hooked
Brown Trout Fishing
- Daytime sport
- Dry flies, nymphs, and small wets
- Technical and visual fishing
Sea Trout Fishing
- Often best at dusk or after dark
- Larger wet flies or traditional sea trout patterns
- More about timing and watercraft than constant casting
Why It Matters on the Dart
The Dart has a unique mix of both:
- Some trout you catch may have never left the river
- Others may have travelled to sea and returned stronger
This adds an element of mystery—any fish could be something special.
Top Tip
If you hook a trout that suddenly bolts downstream with real power, you may well have connected with a sea trout rather than a resident brown.
