Utah Fish Report
Fall River Fish Report for 9-25-2013
Fall River Fish Report for 9-25-2013
Both Nymphs & Dry Flies have been effective on Fall River
Fall River
by The Fly Shop
9-25-2013
Website
Current River Conditions: Look for BWO hatches before 10:00 AM. There are almost always PMDs coming off between 10:00 and 1:00 daily. Look along the shallowest sections of the river for rising fish. Sometimes the rainbows are eating emerging midges. See the fly list at the right for midge patterns from dry to wet. Nymphing with #18 black zebra midges or #16 pheasant tail nymphs is productive. You can suspend nymphs under really small indicators or swing them at the end of an intermediate sinking leader.
Look for even flowing water between weed beds, smooth gradual transitions from shallow to deep. Fishing small nymphs like #18 black zebra midges, #16 brown micro mays and #18 red copper johns. Suspending these nymphs under a small indicator should help you find a few rainbows in the net.
The Fly Shop's?? Tips: Swinging #16-18 Pheasant Tail nymphs trailing #18-20 black Zebra midges or WD-40s is a basic fly rig and a perfect combo to start with any day on Fall River. A #18 red copper John is a great nymph to suspend under a small 3/4" indicator in white.
Look for mayfly hatches after 9:00 AM through 2:00 PM.
Fish the "swing" with fast sinking Poly Leaders. Sometimes, Normans Wiggle Tail PT swung on a long 40' swing will get you hooked up! Don't forget to fish olive and/or black leeches.
The "Fall River Twitch" has been a popular and effective technique on Fall River for decades. How to: Anchor your pram upstream of rising fish. Cast downstream and across, then feed line out to extend your drift a long ways downstream. The "Fall River Twitch" results in a presentation that lets the fish see your fly first, while you are positions upstream and out of the fished field of view. The Fall River Twitch is equally effective whether fishing dries, swinging nymphs or indicator nymphing. If you're casting to a pod of rising trout, work from the outside in and you can often pick them off one by one. 5-6 wt rods are what we recommend for Fall River, with some anglers using 6 wt. rods for casting heavier sinking lines. The Fly Shop?? recommended fly lines; RIO Gold floating line and an extra spool loaded with RIO CamoLux.
Suggested Fly Patterns:
Dry Flies:
• Harrop's CDC Emerging Midge
• Twilight X Spinners - PMD/Rusty
• Cutter's E/C Caddis #16 olive~tan
• Last Chance Baetis #20
• Tilt Wing Dun PMD #18
• Last Chance Cripple PMD #18
• Mayfly Cripple Limestone #18
• Mercer's Missing Link
• Norman's Loop Wing BWO #18
• Para Extended Body - BWO #20
• Parachute Adams #16-20
Nymphs/Wet Flies:
• Zebra Midge #16-20
• Red Copper John #18
• Zug Bug #14-16
• PT Nymph #14-20
• TB PT Nymph #18
• Norman's Wiggle Tail PT #16-18
• Mercer's Micro May Fly Brown #16-18
Streamers/Leeches:
• Zack's Damsel Leech Olive
• Damsel Nymph - Olive
• J. Fair's Translucent Wiggle Tails Olive
• Zack's Swimming Leech Olive
• Zack's Swimming Leech Black
Fly Fishing Gear:
• Fish Counter cause you're gonna slay'em!
• Buff?? High UV Angler Series Headwear
• Simms?? Solar Sombrero
• Oakley GASCAN Polarized Sunglasses
• Cliff's?? Super Days Worth Fly Box
• Vintage Red Trucker Hat
Look for even flowing water between weed beds, smooth gradual transitions from shallow to deep. Fishing small nymphs like #18 black zebra midges, #16 brown micro mays and #18 red copper johns. Suspending these nymphs under a small indicator should help you find a few rainbows in the net.
The Fly Shop's?? Tips: Swinging #16-18 Pheasant Tail nymphs trailing #18-20 black Zebra midges or WD-40s is a basic fly rig and a perfect combo to start with any day on Fall River. A #18 red copper John is a great nymph to suspend under a small 3/4" indicator in white.
Look for mayfly hatches after 9:00 AM through 2:00 PM.
Fish the "swing" with fast sinking Poly Leaders. Sometimes, Normans Wiggle Tail PT swung on a long 40' swing will get you hooked up! Don't forget to fish olive and/or black leeches.
The "Fall River Twitch" has been a popular and effective technique on Fall River for decades. How to: Anchor your pram upstream of rising fish. Cast downstream and across, then feed line out to extend your drift a long ways downstream. The "Fall River Twitch" results in a presentation that lets the fish see your fly first, while you are positions upstream and out of the fished field of view. The Fall River Twitch is equally effective whether fishing dries, swinging nymphs or indicator nymphing. If you're casting to a pod of rising trout, work from the outside in and you can often pick them off one by one. 5-6 wt rods are what we recommend for Fall River, with some anglers using 6 wt. rods for casting heavier sinking lines. The Fly Shop?? recommended fly lines; RIO Gold floating line and an extra spool loaded with RIO CamoLux.
Suggested Fly Patterns:
Dry Flies:
• Harrop's CDC Emerging Midge
• Twilight X Spinners - PMD/Rusty
• Cutter's E/C Caddis #16 olive~tan
• Last Chance Baetis #20
• Tilt Wing Dun PMD #18
• Last Chance Cripple PMD #18
• Mayfly Cripple Limestone #18
• Mercer's Missing Link
• Norman's Loop Wing BWO #18
• Para Extended Body - BWO #20
• Parachute Adams #16-20
Nymphs/Wet Flies:
• Zebra Midge #16-20
• Red Copper John #18
• Zug Bug #14-16
• PT Nymph #14-20
• TB PT Nymph #18
• Norman's Wiggle Tail PT #16-18
• Mercer's Micro May Fly Brown #16-18
Streamers/Leeches:
• Zack's Damsel Leech Olive
• Damsel Nymph - Olive
• J. Fair's Translucent Wiggle Tails Olive
• Zack's Swimming Leech Olive
• Zack's Swimming Leech Black
Fly Fishing Gear:
• Fish Counter cause you're gonna slay'em!
• Buff?? High UV Angler Series Headwear
• Simms?? Solar Sombrero
• Oakley GASCAN Polarized Sunglasses
• Cliff's?? Super Days Worth Fly Box
• Vintage Red Trucker Hat
More Reports
The Fly Shop Reports
for Thursday, September 12th, 2013Fall River: Fall River is fishing well right now but you need to know where to fish
Hat Creek: Fish Hat Creek at sunset, but pay attention to fishing regulations and the evening cut off time
Klamath River - Upper - CA: Fishing is poor on the Klamath right now, look for conditions to improve in October
Sacramento River: Lower Sac fishing has been great one day, slow the next, then good again
McCloud River: Whether you like to fish dry flies or nymphs you'll find good fishing on the McCloud
Pit River: One of the best times of the year to fish the Pit River is right now!
Trinity River: Hey the fishing on the Trinity River is on fire!
Sacramento River: The best fishing on the Upper Sac are in the morning, the afternoon brings on some tough fishing
Baum Lake: Fishing at Baum Lake is okay based on a few reports.
The Fly Shop Reports
for Friday, August 23rd, 2013Fall River: Some of the very best fly fishing of the season happens in August on Fall River!
Hat Creek: Fishing conditions are good and we expect steady reports out of Hat Creek through August.
Klamath River - Upper - CA: The water is warm on the Klamath, which means that the fishing is difficult. Think Autumn!
Sacramento River: The Lower Sac bite gets going in the late morning, lasting through the afternoon
McCloud River: The McCloud is fishing great! Look for dry fly fishing to happen in the AM hours
Pit River: Fly fishing on the Pit has been great. Daytime temps are perfect for fly fishing the Pit in August
Trinity River: The planned water releases for the Trinity River have been put on hold
Sacramento River: Fishing on the Upper Sac has been best in the early AM hours, tapereing off mid day
Baum Lake: The Callibaetis hatch at Baum Lake is sporadic & the weeds are making fishing difficult
Iron Canyon Reservoir: Stripping leeches or retrieving buggers on full sinking type VII lines can work well at Iron Canyon
Keswick Reservoir: Fished at Keswick Reservior the other eveing & found great fishing late in the swirls near the dam
McCumber Reservoir: Fishing has been tough at McCumber Reservoir due to long warm summer days
Lewiston Lake: Good fishing is still happening at Lewiston Lake, and it will continue through August!
Manzanita Lake: Best fishing at Manzanita Lake happens for those who are on the water early in the day
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