Fishing Reports

Provo River Fishing Report

The snowpack in the Provo River Drainage is currently sitting between 74 and 94 percent of normal.

Dam releases below Jordanelle Reservoir are at 147 CFS. Flows in Charleston are at 164 CFS. Flows below Deer Creek Reservoir are at 107 CFS.

When fishing the Provo River during the winter months look for fish in the slower, deeper runs. The best time to fish is during the warmest part of the day (10 AM to 2:30 PM). Depending on the day you can see decent midge activity and may find some rising fish.

Think small. Have a decent selection of small midges in the 20-26 size range. When nymphing, I like bling midges, cardinal midges, blood midges, WD 40’s, etc. Gray, brown, and red have been my go to colors. Expect very light takes when nymphing. For dry flies, I’ll use small mother shuckers, Matt’s midge, or a cluster midge all in that size 20-24 range.

Don’t be afraid to try streamers. Try slow stripping a sculpzilla or woolly bugger in some of the deeper holes. You might be rewarded with a substantial fish.

Weber River Fishing Report

Current snowpack in the Weber Ogden drainage is sitting at 72 percent of normal.

Releases out of Rockport reservoir are currently at 24.4 CFS

Releases out of Echo reservoir are currently at .52 CFS.

River flows by Mountain Green are at approximately 55.6 CFS.

Small Stream Fishing Report

Generally speaking most of Utah’s small streams are inaccessible in the winter months due to snow.

We currently are sitting on a statewide snowpack that is between 59 and 94 percent of normal. Therefore some areas are more accessible for winter angling opportunities than usual.

I have not ventured out to any small streams recently, but I’d expect to see some midge or early baetis activity if you were to go searching for some solitude.

Green River Fishing Report

From the Bureau of Reclamation:

“As of February 8, 2021 Flaming Gorge Reservoir pool elevation is 6024.71 feet, which amounts to 84 percent of live storage capacity. Unregulated inflows for the month of January is approximately 31,500 acre-feet (af), which is 78% of the average January unregulated inflow volume.

The winter base flow period started on December 1. Winter average daily releases will meet moderately dry hydrologic condition lower targets in Reach 2 (1,100 cfs to 1,500 cfs, includes flows from the Yampa River). The daily average release of 1,000 cfs will be maintained through February, which is near +25% of the winter base flow.

The February final forecast for unregulated inflows into Flaming Gorge for the next three months projects below average conditions. February, March, and April forecasted unregulated inflow volumes amount to 33,000 af (74% of average), 75,000 af (73% of average), and 90,000 af (64% of average), respectively.

The February water supply forecast of the April through July unregulated inflow volume into Flaming Gorge Reservoir is 500,000 acre-feet (51% of average). Current snowpack is 88% of median for the Upper Green Basin.”

What this means:

Current daytime releases out of Flaming Gorge Reservoir are at 917 CFS. In the evening flows are increased to 2,100 CFS around 7 PM and drawn back down to 917 CFS around 10 PM. River temperatures are approximately 39.2 degrees Fahrenheit. Current snowpack in the Upper Green River Drainage is sitting at 75 percent of normal. Current snowpack in the Lower Green River Drainage is sitting at 79 percent of normal.

There is some midge and some mayfly activity, but winter on the Green is all about the streamer fishing. With the lower flows I have been using lighter sink tips or you can even get away with floating line. Black, gray, and ginger have been my go to colors lately. Winter streamer patterns that I like are the peanut envy, gonga, dungeons, and sculpzillas.