Thursday, July 9, 2026

Thursday 7/9/26 Farmington River Report: Looking good for the weekend


Store Hours
:

 
8am-6pm Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday. Wednesday 10am-3pm, Saturday & Sunday 8am-5pm


We are still looking for one more part-time employee, someone who knows the river well, is experienced and knowledgeable about flyfishing, and has a flexible schedule.


Pictured up top is customer Thomas G. with a recent beauty on a dry fly in the evening. If you can read riseforms, you can pick out bigger trout and target them with dries.

 

We will match most advertised deals and sales from other stores local or on the internet. We want your business, and as your friends and local fly shop please come to us first if we can help. Our business only survives because of your support.


The new 2026 Thomas & Thomas Contact III+ Euro rods are now available. We are happy to accept various trade ins toward the III+ to make them more affordable, and you can also trade in your Contact II. They have two different tips, including a solid one that if more flexible and enables you to more easily cast lighter flies, cushion lighter tippet, fish thin Micro Leaders, and it also makes it harder for smaller fish to throw the hook. The Contact III+ is made of a new material that’s twice as strong and recovers noticeably faster/crisper. This will translate into greater accuracy. With the included second tip, it's like getting two rods in one. Lengths remain the same at 10' & 10'9" with the exception of the new 11’ 5“ 3wt (3" longer, a great rod for fishing at distance). If you break a rod tip on these, T&T has an expedited repair program for the Contact III+ series that should have you back on the water with a new tip in a week, instead of the usual 6-8 weeks. Between the improved damping/recovery, new low profile single foot guides, and the added snake guide below the tip-top, you also get dramatically less tip wrapping with micro leaders.


We are now a Guideline dealer, They are a Scandanavian company that makes some great rods & reels and more. Zach & Derrrick are both BIG fans of their products. We have Euro, dry fly, and streamers rods from them. We also have Guideline Euro leader butt material in 3x to 5x for making micro leaders, plus a cool mini chest pack that you can attach 5 different ways. 

 

Hours
Wednesday 10am-3pm. Monday, Tuesday, Thursday & Friday 8am-6pm. Weekends remain at 8am-5pm. We will stay on this schedule through the end of the summer. 


River Report:

We’ve taken in 4 different book collections over the past 2 weeks, we literally have so many used books there is not room on our bookshelves! We have many of those books on the red tables in the book room. There are many excellent titles in the recent batches. FYI we also have quite a few autographed books.


We finally received legit rainfall between Saturday 7/4 and Tuesday about 2.5” total locally. Not the 3.5-4” originally forecasted, but still a very welcome and much needed rain (we are in a drought). Ironically, summertime rain temporarily boosts water temps on the Farmington. It doesn’t affect the temp of the water released from the bottom of the reservoir, but it does pump water into the tributaries that all all run warmer than the dam water this time of year, especially the Still River. Usually the Still runs about 10-50cfs in the summer, it is 135cfs as I write this. Ironically, the river will get cooler as the flow drops. Riverton is 119cfs at the USGS gauge by the Rt 20 bridge (Hitchcock/Riverton Self Storage), so the Still is contributing more than 50% of the flow. The total flow below the Still River and in the Permanent TMA/C&R is 254cfs (a medium flow) and dropping daily as the Still recedes from the rain. The water is coming out of the dam in the mid 40’s, which is great for the second week of July. I don’t see any rain in the 10 Day Forecast, so the Still will drop and the river will get cooler. But, because DEEP is being conservative with the dam release (due to drought concerns), we will have low water after the Still River drops. And when the water is lower, it warms up faster as you move away from the dam, so pay attention to water temps, especially in the afternoons & evenings on sunny days. Ideally you want be 65 degrees or less, with 50-65 being optimal. I’d use 68 degrees as an upper limit, and definitely do not fish in 70 degree plus water, it’s highly stressful for trout to catch & play them in warm water, it can kill them. Use your thermometer, and if the water is over 68, go upriver until you find cooler water. The demarcation line varies during the day, and also depends upon the daily weather. Coolest water temps are at first light, and the highest is typically in late afternoon/early evening. Sunny days will see much bigger temp increases than cloudy days. This is the time of year to own a thermometer, and use it frequently to take water temps. This will keep the trout safer and put you in the best water that will give you better fishing. If you want to fish in New Hartford & Canton, start early in the morning and take water temps so you can move upstream if necessary by late morning. I would not fish below that until things cool off in late summer/early fall.

  

A word about taking water temps. I see people doing it wrong all the time, and this can give you an artificially high reading. You need to do two things: 1) take the temperature in moving water, and 2) make sure your thermometer is in the shade when you take a reading. If you don’t do this and you take the temp in the slack water along the shoreline that is exposed to the sun all day, you can easily get a reading 5+ degrees above what the water temp is in the current. Some people will tell you taking the surface temp of the water in the river is no good, but that is not true. The max difference you may see in the slowest, deepest pools is maybe 1 degree between the surface and the bottom. And to the folks who dispute this and say the bottom layer of pool water is significantly cooler than the surface, I would point out that even if this was true (it’s not), you still have to play your fish in the middle and upper layers of the water column. 


I fished Wednesday from late morning until dark, as far down as New Hartford, and as far up as Riverton near the dam. I was surprised to see a fairly good Isonychia (“Iso”) hatch until about 12:30. Had good results in the first spot, and lost a big brown, close to 20” I’d guess. After a late lunch, I decided to take the water temp near the 219 bridge in New Hartford, and at 3:30pm it was 69 degrees! So I went upstream about 4 miles and hit a shady spot and had good luck there, water temp was surprisingly only 1 degree cooler at 68. So I decided to hit Riverton where the water is the coldest, I got 49.5 degrees for a water temp, the water literally hurt my hands when I would release a fish. Ended up being a good day and a fairly obscene number of fish landed, including some nice ones, but no truly big ones (other than the one I lost). Water was still off-color below the Still River, but not muddy. Mops were good, but overall I did best on smaller nymphs in the #18-22 range. That is typical in July & August. Bugs I saw included Isonychia, Sulfurs, and Attenuatta. There have been a lot of Blue Winged Olives (BWO’s) around lately, from about #18-24, with the smaller sizes being overall more prevalent.


CT DEEP is being conservative with water released from the dam due to drought concerns- we are below normal precipitation so far for 2026, and we finished 2025 6-8” shy of normal. They are attempting to maintain a bank of cold water in the reservoir system so that they don’t run out of cold water when we really need it in August & September. If they were to steadily release 200cfs+ and this drought continues, we could end up at 50cfs by the end of the summer, so this reduced release is necessary.


Don’t forget about Terrestrials, especially Ants & Beetles, they are very active in the summer. If they are not rising (often the case), go subsurface with nymph & wet flies/soft hackles, blind fish an Attractor dry fly, or do a Dry/Dropper rig with a nymph 18-24” under a buoyant/visible dry. Don’t go too heavy if you are nymphing during low water conditions (often the case this time of year), or you will hang bottom constantly and not catch fish. Plus you don’t need to dredge bottom this time of year. Streamers are at their best during first and last light, and at their worst in the middle of a bright, sunny day. Mousing at night is a good option for big brown trout, keep your leader very short and heavy. 


Sulfurs are a mix of #16 Invaria and #18 Dorothea- make sure you have BOTH sizes, trout can be picky on that. Sulfur hatches are trending more toward #18’s now. Typically an evening hatch, but the further upriver you are the more the chances you may see an early to mid afternoon hatch of them. Assorted Caddis going from #16-24 (tan, olive/green, black, gray) are major players. Most Caddis hatching occurs from about mid morning to early afternoon, and then the adults come out in the evening to egg-lay in riffly water. July is the peak Isonychia (“Iso”) month. Isonychia are a big #8-12 fast water bug that typically emerge between late afternoon and dark. You can even blind fish them over likely looking fast water. This is one of my absolute favorite hatches. Iso’s will continue right into the mid fall time period, but they get smaller as the season progresses, and the color changes from brownish to more of an olive color. #10 is about average for them currently, but some are bigger, some are smaller. Other bugs in the mix include #14 Light Cahills in the evenings, and #18-24 and smaller Blue Winged Olives (evenings, cloudy afternoons). Look also for #18-20 Attenuata in the eves, and Needhami #22-26 spinners & duns in the mornings, along with the Winter/Summer Caddis #18-24.

 

Dry/Dropper with a Caddis dry and a trailing weighted pupa 1-2’ below can be an effective combo during a Caddis emergence- they usually take the pupa, and the dry acts as a suspender/indicator, but sometimes they eat the dry. Frequently the better dry fly action for Caddis is when they come back later in the day to egg-lay, usually in the low light of evenings. And sometimes swinging wet flies/soft hackles is the way to go when Caddis are hatching and/or egg-laying. On average, they are much better/faster swimmers than Mayflies, which is why the takes to them are often violent and trout will sometimes jump out of the water. They also tend to be most active in faster, broken water like riffles, pool heads, pocket water, etc. When fishing Caddis dries, sometimes the fish want them dead-drift, but frequently they won’t eat it unless you twitch/move it, the naturals are very active, not passive like a Mayflies.


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Dries:

-Isonychia #8-12: Fast water bug, usually about 4pm to dark. Can also be on the water in the late mornigs/early afternoons

-Sulfur #16 (Invaria) and #18 (Dorothea): we are seeing more 18’s than 16’s now, hatch is moving upriver, not sure of the downstream boundary. Still plenty haching in Mathie’s Grove, Campground, and all the way up to the dam in Riverton.

-Attenuatta #18-20: evenings

-Assorted Caddis (tan, olive/green #16-18, black, gray #18-22) 

 

-Beetles & Ants #12-20: great option when bugs are not hatching

 

-Blue Winged Olives/BWO’s #18-24: afternoon hatch on cloudy days, also on the water in the last hour of daylight in flat pool water. Don’t sleep on #18-22 rusty spinners at dusk.

-Needhami #22-26: mornings, spinners & duns

 

-Light Cahill #14: evenings

 

-Summer/Winter Caddis #18-24: hatch is typically early to mid morning. Trout focus on the pupa first, and then as the morning progresses they normally switch to the winged adults when they return to egg-lay. Try both twitching & dead-drifting your fly, trout often key on movement with this bug. 

-Midges #20-28


Nymphs

-Caddis Pupa #14-18 (tan, olive/green)

 

-Sulfur Nymphs #16-18: you can use specific imitations, or go generic with Pheasant Tails/Frenchies

 

-Pheasant Tails/Frenchies #12-22: imitates a wide range of Mayflies including Sulfurs, Vitreus, Baetis/Blue Winged Olives, Isonychia, small Stoneflies, Hendricksons, and more

 

-Small Nymphs #18-22: try Pheasant Tail’s, Hare’s Ears, Walt’s Worms, etc. Size is often more important than the exact pattern, and the bugs get smaller (mostly) in the Summer


-Isonychia Nymph #10-12: dead-drift, swing, twitch, and even strip them in. They are great swimmers, and some days trout prefer different presentations- you won't know until you experiment. 

 

-Baetis/BWO Nymphs #16-22

 

-Caddis Larva (olive to green) #14-16: tons of these in the river, good all year

 

-”Junk Flies” (Eggs, Mops, Squirmy/San Juan Worms, Green Weenies): Often work when standard nymphs fail, especially when there aren’t many hatches.

 

-Stonefly Nymphs #8-10: golden/yellow, brown, black, Stoneflies are a mouthful that can be hard for trout to pass up, and there are a surprising amount of them in the river. Good choice when flows are up. Some days when trout won’t move for a small nymph, it takes a bigger bite of food to get an eat. Often catches larger than average fish. Best in early morning during summer

 

-Midges #18-22 (black, olive, red): Zebra Midge, Flash Midge, Red Iris Midge, etc.

-Attractor Nymphs #14-20: such as Sexy Waltz, Rainbow Warriors.

-Winter/Summer Caddis Larva #18 (yellow)


Streamers:

Streamers are a great “clean-up” fly to fish after you have thoroughly nymphed a run, and often will produce a bigger fish than the nymphs did. Also, anytime flows are higher or off-color is a great time to use a streamer.

 

Top colors currently are olive, tan. A little yellow paired with another color (olive, tan, etc.) in a streamer can trigger brown trout. Black can be good on recently stocked trout (especially rainbows), during low light (dawn/dusk), and high and/or dirty water.

 

-Jig Streamers #8-12: various patterns/colors, deadly fished on a tight-line/Euro rig, often sorts out bigger fish. Can also be fished under an indicator, or stripped/swung like a regular streamer. Great to use as a clean-up fly after you nymph a run. 



-Woolly Bugger #4-12: assorted colors, try also Don's Peach Bugger

-Zonker #4-6: a classic fish catcher! In white, natural

-BMAR Yellow Matuka #6: deadly fly! Also standard Matuka in olive, brown

-Zuddler #4-8: one of our favorites, in olive, white, brown, black, yellow

-Complex & Mini Twist Bugger #2-6: assorted colors, very good fly

-Muddler Minnow #6-10: a classic, underfished & still deadly!