Stockings keep Belton Lake hot for fishing
January 29, 2026
More than 300,000 new fish have been introduced to Belton Lake waters this year, including 185,775 two-inch smallmouth bass and 123,850 Sunshine bass fingerlings, a Texas Parks & Wildlife official said last week.
“I’ve requested a full allotment of smallmouth and Sunshine bass,” said Michael Baird, district supervisor for the Waco Inland Fisheries District of Texas Parks & Wildlife. “The numbers equate to 10 and 15 two-inch fingerlings per acre respectively.”
Baird said no requests were made for Stillhouse Hollow Reservoir for this year.
In the past four years, millions of Sunshine and Palmetto bass were released into Belton Lake waters. In 2022, TP&W introduced 2.2 million Sunshine bass into the lake, and in 2023 400,812 Palmetto and 687,307 Sunshine bass were released. Millions more were released in 2024 and 2025, Baird said.
“Lone Star bass fingerlings are second-generation offspring of pure Florida strain ShareLunker largemouth bass that were at least 13 pounds,” Baird said. “They have taken the place of Florida largemouth in our hatcheries and are being stocked statewide.”
Sunshine and Palmetto bass are crosses of white and striped bass. Sunshine bass are a hybrid of female white bass and male stripers, and the Palmetto bass are the opposite — a hybrid cross between a male white bass and a female striper.
Baird added that smallmouth stockings also are common in Belton Lake.
“Belton Lake is a smallmouth bass brood fish source for our state hatcheries, and it consistently gets smallmouth stocked, mainly for that purpose,” he said. “But it is one of the best smallmouth reservoirs in Texas for angling.”
Fishing is a major draw for bringing visitors to Belton and Bell County. The area has long been known as home to massive medical and military communities, and both bring a large number of folks to the area every year. But one of the biggest attractions for visitors is world-class fishing at Belton and Stillhouse Hollow.
“The fishing here is excellent,” said local guide Bob Maindelle, owner of Holding the Line Guide Service. “I’ve been fishing Stillhouse and Belton lakes for more than 30 years. Occasionally I get a client who wants to fish Georgetown or one of the Austin-area lakes, but most of my trips are here in Bell County.”
“There’s really no reason to go anywhere else,” Maindelle said. “We focus on white bass on Stillhouse, and on whites and striped bass on Belton. The hybrids are a sterile fish and can’t reproduce, so they have to be restocked. Belton is one of the lakes Texas Parks & Wildlife uses to invest in their hybrid sources.”









