Indiana Tiger Trout Tips
The Tiger Trout (Salmo trutta and Salvelinus fontinalis).  These fish
fight like a brown and are easier to catch like a brookie.  They are a
cross between the female brown trout and the make brook trout and
have a reputation as a stud fighting machine.  They are extremely
aggressive, which makes them all the better.

These fish should grow to rather large sizes as they cannot reproduce.
 Hence, all of their energy goes towards growing and longer lives.  

Small spinners, spoons, worms, night crawlers, beemoth, and
grasshoppers are frequently used for  tiger trout. In the shallow-water
areas, tiger trout are also showing a fondness for slashing surface
attacks, something that neither the brook or brown trout particularly
favors. In summer and into early fall, large cicadas and grass hopper
fly patterns seem to be especially attractive to tiger trout, and smaller
mayfly patterns will also produce well for you.

You can also use wet flys like the woolly worm, woolly bugger, leeches,
and stone to catch these fierce fighters.  A worm pulled behind a
golden spinner blade is also quite effective.  I would use a smaller type
hook, like a snelled number six.  The trait of loving to eat worms is
something the tiger trout does get from their parents as both the
brook and the brown trout love to eat worms and nightcrawlers.