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Where to find bait fish for pond

Posted on 3/11/26 at 1:44 pm
Posted by Tiger328
Member since Mar 2017
960 posts
Posted on 3/11/26 at 1:44 pm
I have a half acre pond where I have caught and released maybe 10 bass since I moved in last August. I see fish hit the water but I don’t ever notice bait swimming around the bank. I want to restock but also believe I need bait. Where near Ascension Parish could
I find some and type to get. I have caught Bass and Brim and want to keep it that way
Posted by lowhound
Effie
Member since Aug 2014
10102 posts
Posted on 3/11/26 at 2:05 pm to
There are fish hatcheries around that will bring you baitfish by the truck load. Flathead minnows, etc. Maybe try a place like this: Southern States Pond Stocking
Posted by shiphascomein
Member since May 2015
147 posts
Posted on 3/11/26 at 2:45 pm to
Posted by Out da box
Member since Feb 2018
889 posts
Posted on 3/11/26 at 3:28 pm to
Olle Time farm supply has a truck deliver every few months from hatchery…go ask them..you’ve gotta place order..
Posted by bengalman
In da Country
Member since Feb 2007
4105 posts
Posted on 3/11/26 at 3:39 pm to
Not sure of your location but I have used both Slades out of Miss and Dunns Fish Farm out of Oklahoma that delivers in all over the state. With Dunns you meet them after ordering usually locally. You can also get some small crawfish to throw in there as well.

Slade's

Dunn's
Posted by snapper26
Member since Nov 2015
559 posts
Posted on 3/11/26 at 6:40 pm to
Buy minnows in bulk.

But if you live near a bayou or pond I have caught lots in a perch bait trap.
Posted by TheDrunkenTigah
Baton Rouge
Member since Aug 2011
18223 posts
Posted on 3/11/26 at 7:16 pm to
Odds are high that it’s crowded with small bass, especially if you’re not seeing bait around the edges. Fathead minnows are perfectly fine to add but you’re throwing money after something you can improve for next to nothing with some fishing. Cull any bass you catch under 12” and you’re likely to see more life around the banks, any minnows you stock won’t make it long enough to reproduce without removing the reason bait isn’t already abundant. A pond magic buzz with the skirt removed and a speedcraw threaded on is deadly on prefrontal pond bass, post front switch to a weightless Texas rigged senko or brush hog and fish slow.
Posted by Tiger328
Member since Mar 2017
960 posts
Posted on 3/12/26 at 7:39 am to
Would it be good to get an automatic feeder for my pond as well?
Posted by TimeOutdoors
LA
Member since Sep 2014
13338 posts
Posted on 3/12/26 at 7:40 am to
I would check out Dunns. I would also check out their bream and bass stocking.
Posted by bbvdd
Memphis, TN
Member since Jun 2009
28530 posts
Posted on 3/12/26 at 9:33 am to
quote:

dds are high that it’s crowded with small bass, especially if you’re not seeing bait around the edges. Fathead minnows are perfectly fine to add but you’re throwing money after something you can improve for next to nothing with some fishing. Cull any bass you catch under 12” and you’re likely to see more life around the banks


This is my problem in my lake. It's close to 10 acres and very deep (North Central MS). I have some big fish but most are right around 1lbs.

I think I read that you are supposed to take out 10-20% yearly to get the population to grow to good sizes. I have to do a much better job of that in my lake.
Posted by TheDrunkenTigah
Baton Rouge
Member since Aug 2011
18223 posts
Posted on 3/12/26 at 9:54 am to
quote:

Would it be good to get an automatic feeder for my pond as well?


Eventually yes, you want to feed the forage base, but you can end up with other issues (vegatation, algae die-offs leading to no oxygen, etc) if you jump right in to feeding before getting the population balanced out. Any pond in the south left to its own devices is going to be full of 8-9” bass, with a handful of larger bass, and mostly large bream because the small bass eat most of the bream spawn but can’t eat one over 2-3” long. You need to add cover around banks like laydowns to allow bream (and minnows) to get past the fry stage and aggressively remove bass small bass.

All this assumes your goal is to catch larger bass. If you just want a good bream pond, the steps would be different. You do prettymuch have to pick one, unfortunately.
Posted by lowhound
Effie
Member since Aug 2014
10102 posts
Posted on 3/12/26 at 11:57 am to
quote:

This is my problem in my lake. It's close to 10 acres and very deep (North Central MS). I have some big fish but most are right around 1lbs.

I think I read that you are supposed to take out 10-20% yearly to get the population to grow to good sizes. I have to do a much better job of that in my lake.


Hell, let me and my kid come fill up an ice chest one weekend.
Posted by bbvdd
Memphis, TN
Member since Jun 2009
28530 posts
Posted on 3/12/26 at 1:00 pm to
quote:

Hell, let me and my kid come fill up an ice chest one weekend.


If it isn't too cold, I'm going to try and catch a mess this weekend and clean them.

A couple of weeks ago, I caught so many but didn't think about it at the time and just threw them back in. Was stupid to do that.
Posted by baldona
Florida
Member since Feb 2016
24013 posts
Posted on 3/12/26 at 1:21 pm to
I'm ignorant, but everyone always talks about buying baitfish. Is there not programs where you can grow them also? Seems like making a small area to grow and shelter baitfish would make a lot of sense. Like a fenced off protected area that you feed and shelter, or something along those lines
Posted by deeprig9
Unincorporated Ozora
Member since Sep 2012
74863 posts
Posted on 3/12/26 at 1:48 pm to
I've read about people sinking shipping pallets in their ponds to give cover to fathead minnows to spawn and create a reproducing population.

Regarding the feeding program, there is no downside unless you really really overdo it. You want really small pellets so all the bluegill, even the little ones, can eat it. Also a combination of floating and sinking pellets, to minimize what the waterfowl and turtles will consume on the surface. For a pond your size, it shouldn't cost too much money, other than the initial investment for the feeder. Or do it old school and just walk around every afternoon with a 5 gallon bucket and sling out a few stadium souvenier cups worth of food and watch the fish feed while you relax, sip beer, and appreciate God's creation in a moment of blissful peace and quiet.

Edit to add- you only need to feed in spring summer and fall. You get no benefit from feeding during the cold months because bluegill simply don't grow when it's cold.
This post was edited on 3/12/26 at 1:52 pm
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