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  • Colorado Trout Fishing Guide: Gold Medal Rivers & Alpine Lakes

    Colorado has more designated Gold Medal trout water than any other state in the Rocky Mountain region — a designation reserved only for waters with exceptional trophy trout potential. The combination of quality tailwaters, high-altitude alpine lakes, and wild freestone rivers gives Colorado trout fishing a diversity few states can match.

    Gold Medal Waters

    • South Platte River — Deckers, Cheesman Canyon, and Spinney Mountain sections
    • Frying Pan River — tailwater below Ruedi Reservoir near Basalt
    • Arkansas River — Salida to Cañon City section
    • Blue River — below Dillon Reservoir near Silverthorne
    • Gunnison River — the Black Canyon section
    • Taylor River — Taylor Park tailwater

    Top Colorado Rivers

    South Platte River

    The most technically demanding and most rewarding trout fishing in Colorado. The Cheesman Canyon section — foot access only — holds some of the largest and most selective brown trout in the state. Tiny midges (sizes 18–24) and precise presentations required. Best fished October through May.

    Frying Pan River

    A 14-mile tailwater below Ruedi Reservoir producing exceptional rainbow and brown trout year-round. Consistent cold releases maintain stable temperatures. Best large dry fly fishing in Colorado during summer PMD and midge hatches.

    Arkansas River

    The Brown’s Canyon section is prime freestone fishing with wild brown and rainbow trout. Less technical than the South Platte and more forgiving for wading anglers. Best October–April.

    Alpine Lake Fishing

    Colorado’s high country above 10,000 feet contains hundreds of alpine lakes with Colorado River cutthroat, greenback cutthroat, and stocked rainbows. Accessible by hiking or horseback. Rocky Mountain National Park, the Weminuche Wilderness, and the Flat Tops Wilderness all contain excellent high lake fisheries.

    When to Fish Colorado

    April–May: Pre-runoff window on tailwaters — often the best fishing of the year.

    June–July: Alpine lakes open. Excellent dry fly fishing on freestone rivers.

    August–September: Late summer low water — best hopper fishing. Alpine lakes at peak.

    October–November: Brown trout spawning — most aggressive fish of the year. Tailwaters fish well through winter.

    Book a Guided Trip

    ➜ Browse Colorado Fly Fishing Guide Trips — Viator

    Where to Stay

    ➜ Browse Hotels Near Colorado Trout Water — Booking.com


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  • Yellowstone Fishing Guide: Cutthroat, Permits & Best Rivers

    Yellowstone National Park is the spiritual home of American fly fishing — cutthroat trout rising to dry flies in rivers surrounded by geysers, bison, and some of the most dramatic wilderness scenery in North America. Every fish you release here is part of a wild ecosystem that’s irreplaceable.

    Fishing Permits and Regulations

    • Age 16+: Park fishing permit required in addition to a state license
    • All cutthroat trout: Catch-and-release only throughout the park
    • Lake trout (Yellowstone Lake): Must be killed — invasive species threatening native cutthroat
    • Artificial lures and flies only on most park waters
    • Permits available at visitor centers and ranger stations

    Best Fishing Waters

    Yellowstone River — Hayden Valley

    One of the most iconic fly fishing reaches in the world. Large cutthroat rise to dry flies in a wide meadow river with near-guaranteed bison sightings and constant possibility of bears. The Fishing Bridge to Le Hardy Rapids section is exceptional. Best June through September.

    Slough Creek

    A backpacking destination for serious fly anglers. The first and second meadows — accessed by trail — hold some of the largest cutthroat in the park. A legitimate bucket-list destination combining remote beauty and quality fish.

    Firehole River

    Fed by thermal runoff — water temperatures are slightly warmer, creating different hatches and timing. Rainbow and brown trout supplement the cutthroat here. The Fountain Flats area is excellent dry fly water. Closes mid-September.

    Madison River (park section)

    Excellent rainbow and brown trout water from Madison Junction to the West Entrance. Fishes well throughout the season and is the headwaters of one of Montana’s most famous rivers.

    When to Fish

    Late June–July: Runoff subsides, rivers clear. Famous salmonfly hatch on some waters. Best dry fly fishing of the year.

    August: Peak season. All waters fishing well. Visit Slough Creek and hike-in waters to escape crowds.

    September: The best month for serious anglers — crowds drop, fish feed aggressively for winter, the landscape turns golden. Highly recommended.

    Book a Guided Trip

    ➜ Browse Yellowstone Fly Fishing Guide Trips — Viator

    Where to Stay

    ➜ Browse Hotels in West Yellowstone, MT — Booking.com

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Do I need a Wyoming fishing license to fish in Yellowstone?

    You need a Yellowstone Park fishing permit — not a state license — for most of the park. For waters crossing into Montana or Idaho at the park boundaries, the respective state license applies.


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  • Catch and Release Trout: Best Practices for Fish Survival

    Catch and release is standard practice on most quality trout fisheries — required by regulation on many premium waters and the ethical choice on all wild trout fisheries. Done correctly, catch-and-release has survival rates over 95%. Done incorrectly — keeping fish out of water too long, squeezing, mishandling — survival rates drop dramatically.

    The One Rule That Trumps Everything

    Keep the fish in the water as much as possible. A trout out of water is suffocating. Every second counts. If you need to photograph the fish, have your camera ready before landing, then limit air time to under 20 seconds.

    Gear for Better Catch and Release

    Barbless hooks: The most effective tool for reducing handling time. Crimp the barb with pliers — takes seconds and removes it without changing hook-holding ability. Many premium trout waters require barbless hooks.

    Owner barbless trout hooks

    ➜ Owner Barbless Trout Hooks — Buy on Amazon

    Rubber mesh net: Knotted nylon nets remove the slime coat that protects fish from disease. Rubber mesh nets allow safe landing without damaging the fish.

    Fishpond rubber mesh net

    ➜ Fishpond Nomad Rubber Net — Buy on Amazon

    Forceps/hemostats: For quick hook removal without prolonged handling.

    Dr. Slick forceps

    ➜ Dr. Slick Curved Forceps — Buy on Amazon

    Landing Trout for Release

    • Use the net — don’t beach the fish or drag it over rocks
    • Keep the fish in the water in the net while removing the hook
    • Never squeeze the fish or hold it vertically by the lower jaw
    • Wet your hands before touching the fish — dry hands remove slime
    • Support the fish horizontally — one hand under the belly, one at the tail

    Hook Removal

    With barbless hooks, most trout can be released without touching them — invert the net or use forceps to back the hook out. For barbed hooks, use forceps to back the hook out along the path it entered. If the hook is swallowed deeply, cut the leader close to the hook — it will dissolve faster than fighting to remove it.

    Reviving and Releasing

    Hold the fish gently upright in the current, facing upstream. Support loosely — don’t grip. The fish is ready to release when it actively tries to swim away. Don’t release until that point, even if it takes several minutes. Moving the fish back and forth to “pump water through the gills” is a debunked technique — hold still and let the fish breathe naturally.

    Water Temperature

    When water exceeds 68°F, trout stress increases dramatically. Above 72°F, consider stopping fishing entirely — warm-water catch and release has low survival rates even when done perfectly.

    Stream thermometer

    ➜ AcuRite Stream Thermometer — Buy on Amazon


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  • Reading Water: How to Find Trout in Any Stream or River

    The single skill that separates consistent trout anglers from occasional ones is the ability to read water — to look at a river and know where trout are likely holding before ever making a cast. Trout occupy specific lies that offer food, oxygen, and protection from predators. Understanding what creates those conditions lets you focus on the 20% of the water that holds 80% of the fish.

    What Trout Need

    • Current seam: The boundary between fast and slow water where food concentrates
    • Cover: Protection from above and from current
    • Depth: Enough water to feel secure from predators
    • Oxygen: Well-aerated water from riffles and oxygenated runs

    River Features and Where Trout Hold

    Riffles

    Shallow, fast, broken water over rocks. Riffles oxygenate the water and are insect factories. Trout rarely hold in the fastest part but the edges and tailout where riffle meets pool are productive feeding stations.

    Runs

    Moderate-depth, moderate-speed water between a riffle and a pool — often the most fish-holding section in a river. Look for seams along the edges, submerged rocks visible as surface pillows, and any structure breaking the current.

    Pools

    Deep, slow water formed where the current digs into the riverbed. Large fish hold in pools, particularly at the deepest point. The pool entry (where fast water dumps in), the pool edges, and the tailout are the most productive areas.

    Tailouts

    The shallow, slowing section at the downstream end of a pool before the next riffle. Prime feeding lies during hatches — fish can see insects clearly and intercept them with minimal energy. Wading through tailouts instead of fishing them is a common mistake.

    Pocket Water

    Fast, chaotic water over and around boulders creating small pockets of slower water behind each rock. Each pocket can hold a trout. Short-line nymphing and dry flies through pocket water is one of the most productive techniques.

    Undercut Banks

    Where the current cuts under the bank, creating a shaded, protected area. Large brown trout favor undercut banks — present flies or lures tight to the bank and as far under the overhang as possible.

    Seams

    The boundary between fast and slow current is the single most important feature in river trout fishing. Food accumulates on seams; trout intercept it without fighting the flow. Any visible seam in a river holds potential.

    Seasonal Location Shifts

    Spring high water: Fish the margins — slower water near banks and backwater areas, avoiding main current during runoff.

    Summer low water: Fish retreat to deep pools and undercut banks during midday. Best fishing at dawn and dusk.

    Fall: Cooling water activates trout throughout the river. Pre-spawn brown trout are aggressive and territorial.

    Winter: Trout hold in the deepest, slowest pools. Slow nymphs fished deep produce when little else does.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Where do trout hide during the day?

    In heavily pressured rivers, large trout retreat to deep pools, undercut banks, and shaded lies during midday. In wilderness or low-pressure settings, trout feed throughout the day.


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  • PowerBait for Stocked Trout: Rigs, Colors & Techniques

    PowerBait is the most effective bait for hatchery-raised trout — period. Stocked rainbow trout are raised on floating pellet food, and PowerBait mimics that food in both buoyancy and scent. The floating rig presents the bait exactly where hatchery fish expect to find food: suspended just off the bottom.

    Why PowerBait Works on Stocked Trout

    Hatchery trout are conditioned from birth to eat floating pellets. When released into a lake or pond, they continue looking for food at mid-water depth. PowerBait floats off the bottom on a sliding rig, positioning it exactly where stocked trout expect food to be. Wild trout are far less receptive — their diet is insect-based.

    The Basic PowerBait Rig

    1. Thread the main line through a small egg sinker (1/4–1/2 oz)
    2. Tie a small barrel swivel to stop the sinker
    3. Attach 12–18 inches of 4–6lb fluorocarbon leader to the swivel
    4. Tie a size 12–14 bait hook to the leader
    5. Pinch a marble-sized ball of PowerBait around the hook — cover the hook completely
    6. Cast to open water — sinker sits on bottom, PowerBait floats above it at leader length

    PowerBait colors: Chartreuse glitter and rainbow are the top-producing colors nationally.

    Berkley PowerBait chartreuse and rainbow

    ➜ Berkley PowerBait Chartreuse Glitter — Buy on Amazon

    ➜ Berkley PowerBait Rainbow — Buy on Amazon

    Hooks: Size 10–14 bait hooks or egg hooks — completely hidden by the PowerBait.

    ➜ Gamakatsu Baitholder Hooks Size 10 — Buy on Amazon

    Egg sinkers:

    ➜ Egg Sinker Assortment — Buy on Amazon

    Fluorocarbon leader: Less visible than mono in clear water.

    ➜ Seaguar Blue Label 6lb Fluorocarbon — Buy on Amazon

    Where to Cast

    Stocked trout hold near the stocking point for days after release, gradually dispersing. Best spots: near the stocking location, inlet/outlet areas where water is cooler, and along gradual drop-offs where shallow flats meet deeper water.

    Alternative Baits for Stocked Trout

    Salmon eggs:

    ➜ Berkley Gulp Salmon Eggs — Buy on Amazon

    Nightcrawlers: Thread on a size 8–10 hook leaving tails to wiggle.

    ➜ Berkley Gulp Nightcrawler — Buy on Amazon

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Does PowerBait work on wild trout?

    Rarely. Wild trout have a diet based on insects and invertebrates — they don’t recognize PowerBait as food. For wild trout, flies, spinners, and natural bait are far more effective.

    How long should my PowerBait leader be?

    12–24 inches. Longer leaders allow the bait to float higher off the bottom. Start with 18 inches and adjust based on results.


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  • Ice Fishing for Trout: Gear, Jigging Techniques & Best Lakes

    Ice fishing for trout rewards anglers willing to brave the cold with access to fish that are rarely caught any other way. Lake trout, brook trout, and splake suspend in predictable depth ranges under ice — find them with electronics, drill a hole, and present a jigging spoon or live bait. The technique is straightforward but the fish quality is excellent.

    Safety First

    Minimum recommended ice thickness:

    • 4 inches: Walking and ice fishing (single angler)
    • 5–6 inches: Snowmobile or ATV
    • 8–12 inches: Small car or light truck

    Always carry ice picks, check thickness multiple times crossing any new ice, and never fish alone on uncertain ice.

    Ice safety picks

    ➜ Ice Safety Picks — Buy on Amazon

    Essential Ice Fishing Gear

    Ice auger — hand auger for a few holes; power auger for drilling many holes efficiently

    Strikemaster hand ice auger

    ➜ Strikemaster Hand Ice Auger 6-inch — Buy on Amazon

    Ice rod — short (24–36 inch) rod with sensitive tip for detecting light strikes through a small hole

    13 Fishing ice rod

    ➜ 13 Fishing Widow Maker Ice Rod — Buy on Amazon

    Flasher/fish finder — shows fish depth in real time, telling you exactly where trout are holding

    Vexilar FL-18 flasher

    ➜ Vexilar FL-18 Ultra Pack Flasher — Buy on Amazon

    Tip-ups — mechanical devices that suspend bait at depth and signal when a fish takes

    HT Polar tip-up

    ➜ HT Polar Therm Tip-Up — Buy on Amazon

    Jigging Techniques

    Lower the lure to the bottom, crank up 6–12 inches, and work with a lift-drop cadence. Watch your flasher — when the fish mark moves toward your lure mark, slow down or stop. When the two marks merge, set the hook immediately.

    Swedish Pimple — classic lake trout ice jig

    Bay De Noc Swedish Pimple

    ➜ Bay De Noc Swedish Pimple — Buy on Amazon

    Kastmaster 1/2–1 oz — most versatile ice jigging spoon for lake trout

    ➜ Kastmaster 1/2oz Ice Jig — Buy on Amazon

    Tungsten jigs (size 6–8) tipped with waxworm — for brook trout and splake

    ➜ Tungsten Ice Jig Assortment — Buy on Amazon

    Cold Weather Clothing

    Ice fishing requires serious layering — base layer, mid layer (fleece), outer layer (waterproof insulated bibs and jacket). Hand warmers are essential.

    Frabill ice fishing suit

    ➜ Frabill I-Float Ice Fishing Suit — Buy on Amazon

    ➜ HeatMax Hand Warmers 40-pack — Buy on Amazon

    Best Lakes for Ice Fishing Trout

    • Lake Superior — lake trout near Michigan and Wisconsin shores
    • Quabbin Reservoir, Massachusetts — excellent lake trout
    • Moosehead Lake, Maine — lake trout and brook trout
    • Lake Champlain, Vermont/New York — lake trout
    • Upper Peninsula lakes, Michigan — splake and lake trout

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  • Trout Trolling Techniques: Lake and Reservoir Fishing Guide

    Trolling is the most efficient method for covering water and consistently producing trout in lakes and reservoirs. Where wading and casting are limited by access, trolling allows you to systematically work depth ranges, temperature breaks, and fish-holding structure across large bodies of water.

    Finding Trout Depth

    Trout follow the thermocline — the boundary between warm surface water and cold deep water. In summer, surface water can exceed 70°F while trout hold at 50–60 feet in 55°F water. A fish finder is essential — look for fish arcs on the display, note the depth, and present your lure at that exact depth.

    Depth Control Methods

    Downriggers — most precise method. A cannonball lowered to a specific depth on cable; the fishing line clips to the cannonball and releases when a fish strikes.

    Cannon downrigger

    ➜ Cannon Uni-Troll Manual Downrigger — Buy on Amazon

    Lead core line — sinks approximately 5 feet per 10-yard color segment. Less expensive than downriggers.

    ➜ Cortland 45lb Lead Core Trolling Line — Buy on Amazon

    Snap weights — clipped to the line at set intervals for simple depth control without special equipment.

    ➜ Off Shore Tackle Snap Weights — Buy on Amazon

    Best Trolling Lures

    Spoons — most universally effective trout trolling lure. Side-to-side wobble imitates a wounded baitfish.

    Sutton trolling spoon

    ➜ Sutton Silver Spoon — Buy on Amazon

    Rapala Jointed J11 — effective trolling plug for rainbow and brown trout. More action at slower speeds than straight-body plugs.

    Rapala Jointed J11

    ➜ Rapala Jointed J11 — Buy on Amazon

    Dodger and fly combo — a wide attractor that creates flash; a small fly or worm trails behind it. Highly effective on reservoir rainbows.

    ➜ Sep’s Pro Dodger Assortment — Buy on Amazon

    Trolling Speed

    Most trout trolling is done at 1.5–3 mph. Rainbows and browns often prefer faster speeds (2–3 mph); lake trout prefer slower (1.5–2 mph). A GPS or speedometer is helpful — estimating speed by feel is inaccurate.

    Trolling Gear

    Rod: 7–8.5 foot medium or medium-heavy trolling rod with moderate action

    ➜ Ugly Stik Tiger Lite Trolling Rod — Buy on Amazon

    Reel: Level wind or line counter reel for repeating productive presentations

    ➜ Penn Level Wind Reel — Buy on Amazon

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How deep should I troll for rainbow trout in summer?

    In most lakes during summer, rainbow trout are found at 30–60 feet following the thermocline. Use a fish finder to locate fish and troll your lures at or just above that depth.


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  • Spin Fishing for Trout: Best Lures, Rigs & Techniques

    Spin fishing is the most versatile and accessible method for trout — it works in rivers, streams, lakes, and reservoirs with the same basic gear. A light spinning rod and some good lures is enough to catch fish consistently in virtually any trout water.

    Spinning Gear

    Rod: 6–7 foot ultralight or light spinning rod rated for 2–6lb line

    Ugly Stik Elite ultralight spinning rod

    ➜ Ugly Stik Elite 6ft Ultralight — Buy on Amazon

    Reel: 1000–2500 size spinning reel with smooth drag

    Shimano Sienna spinning reel

    ➜ Shimano Sienna 1000 — Buy on Amazon

    Line: 4–6lb monofilament or 10lb braid with a 4–6lb fluorocarbon leader

    ➜ Berkley Trilene XL 4lb — Buy on Amazon

    Best Spinning Lures for Trout

    Inline Spinners — The #1 Trout Lure

    Cast upstream at a 45-degree angle, retrieve just fast enough to keep the blade spinning. The most productive cast lands just upstream of visible structure and drifts naturally through the holding area.

    Panther Martin in sizes 1/32–1/4 oz — yellow/black and silver/red are the go-to colors

    Panther Martin inline spinner

    ➜ Panther Martin Spinner Assortment — Buy on Amazon

    Mepps Aglia in sizes 0–2 — gold blade in murky water; silver in clear

    Mepps Aglia spinner

    ➜ Mepps Aglia #1 — Buy on Amazon

    Floating Minnow Plugs

    Cast upstream, let it drift, then twitch and retrieve. The Rapala Original Floating Minnow has been catching trout since the 1930s.

    Rapala Original Floating Minnow

    ➜ Rapala Original F05 — Buy on Amazon

    Spoons

    Kastmaster in 1/8–1/4 oz cast a long distance and cover water efficiently in rivers and lakes.

    Acme Kastmaster spoon

    ➜ Acme Kastmaster 1/8oz — Buy on Amazon

    Small Jigs

    Berkley Gulp Trout Worm on a 1/32–1/16 oz jig head is effective in cold water when fish are less responsive to fast-moving lures.

    ➜ Berkley Gulp Trout Worm — Buy on Amazon

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How fast should I retrieve a spinner for trout?

    Just fast enough to keep the blade spinning — you can feel the vibration through the rod. Vary your speed until you find what’s working. A slow retrieve with occasional pauses often triggers following fish to commit.


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  • Fly Fishing for Trout: Complete Beginner’s Guide

    Fly fishing for trout has a reputation for complexity that’s partly deserved and mostly exaggerated. Catching trout on a fly rod — consistently — is absolutely achievable for a beginner with a few hours of practice and a basic understanding of the fundamentals.

    How Fly Fishing Works

    In conventional fishing, the weight of the lure carries the line. In fly fishing, the line itself is the weight — the fly line is thick and heavy, designed to be cast. The nearly weightless fly is carried to the target by the momentum of the line.

    Essential Gear

    Fly rod: 9-foot, 5-weight — the all-around trout rod

    Orvis Clearwater fly rod

    ➜ Orvis Clearwater 9ft 5wt — Buy on Amazon

    Fly reel: Match to rod weight

    ➜ Redington Behemoth Fly Reel — Buy on Amazon

    Fly line: Weight-forward floating in 5-weight. Quality line matters more than a quality rod for casting ease.

    Rio Gold fly line

    ➜ Rio InTouch Gold WF5F — Buy on Amazon

    Tippet: 5X (4.75lb) for most dry fly and nymph fishing

    ➜ Rio Powerflex Tippet 5X — Buy on Amazon

    Waders: Breathable for wet wading

    ➜ Simms Tributary Waders — Buy on Amazon

    Net: Rubber mesh to protect fish

    Fishpond rubber mesh net

    ➜ Fishpond Nomad Net — Buy on Amazon

    The Three Methods

    Dry Fly

    A fly floating on the surface — the most exciting method. Most effective during hatches when trout are actively rising. Cast upstream of rising fish, let the fly drift naturally without drag.

    Nymphing

    Fly imitations of larval insects drifted near the bottom under a strike indicator. The most consistently productive method when fish aren’t rising. Drift through runs and riffles where trout are holding.

    Streamers

    Large wet flies imitating small fish, stripped through the water. Targets the largest trout in the river. Most effective at low light for brown trout specifically.

    Essential Flies

    Elk Hair Caddis (14–18), Parachute Adams (14–18), Pheasant Tail Nymph (14–18), Woolly Bugger (6–10) cover the vast majority of trout fishing situations.

    ➜ Dry Fly Assortment — Buy on Amazon

    ➜ Nymph Assortment — Buy on Amazon

    ➜ Woolly Bugger Streamer Assortment — Buy on Amazon

    Book a Fly Fishing Lesson

    One good lesson is worth weeks of solo practice.

    ➜ Browse Fly Fishing Lessons and Guide Trips — Viator


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  • Steelhead Fishing Guide: Techniques, Rivers & Gear

    The steelhead is a sea-run rainbow trout — one of the most physically impressive and psychologically challenging fish an angler can pursue. After years feeding in the Pacific Ocean, they return to rivers at 8–15+ pounds and fight with a power that resident rainbows simply cannot match. They’re also notoriously difficult to catch, which is why steelhead anglers are among the most obsessed in all of fishing.

    Summer vs Winter Runs

    Winter steelhead enter rivers November through March — typically smaller but in larger numbers. High, cold, often off-color water means gear fishing (beads, roe, spinners) dominates.

    Summer steelhead enter May through September, holding in rivers for months. Chrome-bright and at peak fighting condition. The primary target of spey anglers on the Deschutes and North Umpqua.

    Swinging Flies — The Classic Method

    Swinging a wet fly across the current on a two-hand or spey rod is the traditional method. The fly swings from upstream to directly below, covering holding water systematically. A steelhead taking a swinging fly is the signature moment of Pacific Northwest fishing.

    Intruder-style articulated patterns — large flies that push water

    ➜ Intruder Steelhead Fly Assortment — Buy on Amazon

    Drift Fishing — Beads and Roe

    Drift fishing with beads or roe under a float is the most productive technique on winter steelhead in high, colored water. Pegged beads imitating salmon eggs dominate on most rivers.

    Steelhead beads assortment

    ➜ Pro-Cure Steelhead Beads Assortment — Buy on Amazon

    Spinners

    Blue Fox Vibrax in size 4–5 are highly effective on summer steelhead. Bright colors in turbid water; natural colors in clear.

    Blue Fox Vibrax spinner

    ➜ Blue Fox Vibrax Size 4 — Buy on Amazon

    Steelhead Gear

    Two-hand (spey) rod: 13–14 foot, 7–8 weight for swinging flies

    ➜ Redington Dually Two-Hand Rod — Buy on Amazon

    Waders: Neoprene 3–5mm for winter; breathable for summer

    Simms G3 breathable waders

    ➜ Simms G3 Guide Waders — Buy on Amazon

    Best Steelhead Rivers

    • Deschutes River, Oregon — best dry-line summer steelhead in the US
    • North Umpqua, Oregon — legendary summer run
    • Clearwater River, Idaho — exceptional summer and fall steelhead
    • Skagit River, Washington — iconic winter steelhead
    • Hoh River, Washington — Olympic Peninsula wild steelhead
    • Salmon River, New York — Great Lakes steelhead, massive fall runs
    • Situk River, Alaska — among the most productive in the world

    Book a Guided Steelhead Trip

    ➜ Browse Guided Steelhead Fishing Trips — Viator


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