
Absolutely beautiful, fat 19 1/2" brown caught by Rich Strolis this month. He was doing dry/dropper, trailing a #16 beadhead nymph about 18-24" off the back of a dry fly. It's a great way to prospect shallower water & during hatches when trout are looking up. He did well targeting choppy riffle water. Tons of trout set up in calf to mid-thigh deep riffles/broken water in the summertime. The cool thing about dry/dropper is that you combine dry fly style fishing with the deadliness of nymphing, and while most days the nymph catches the majority, the indicator dry will usually pick some up. Just make sure to use a buoyant dry (Stimulater, big Isonhychia, foam-bodied patterns, etc.) and a nymph that isn't overly heavy. Cover lots of water, this is generally a prospecting technique.
 
 
River is in great shape, with a medium 
(low 300cfs in C&R section), cool to cold flow averaging in the 
50's. Needhami's have been
 hatching in the mornings for about a week now- think of them as a small
 Blue Winged 
Olive, but instead of olive they are chocolate brown, averaging a #22-26
 on this river. They normally hatch from about 7am to 1pm'ish, give or 
take. First you typically see the spinners, then the duns as the morning
 progresses. There are still good Winter/Summer Caddis #22-24 in 
early/mid mornings in the TMA (C&R section), with some small Tan 
Caddis in #18-20 hatching 
sporadically from mid/late morning through the day, and they are back on
 the water egg-laying in the evening. Isonychia are a major hatch in 
late afternoon thru early/mid evening (peak has generally been 5-7pm, 
but we've seen them both much earlier & later), they are running 
about #10-12 and
 hatch in the faster, choppy water (pool heads, riffles, faster runs, 
pocket water). Sulfurs averaging a #18 are on the water in the evening 
with spinners at dusk- they are getting lighter in Catch & Release 
section and are hatching best upriver (I've seen them hatching well into
 August close to the dam). Blue Wing Olives #20 & #24 are hatching 
in 
the late afternoon as well with matching #20 rusty spinners at dusk. I 
believe the #20's are Attenuata, and I've been seeing them at dusk. Ants
 & beetles are fooling fish in the daytime.
The river is 331cfs through the Catch & Release area, with 304cfs 
from the dam up in Riverton- this
 is an excellent flow. Water temps have been cool (it reached 
low 60's in Catch & Release area Thursday, and in the late 
evening it was 51 degrees in Riverton), enabling you
 to fish from the dam all the way down to Unionville right now. 
Streamers are 
effective during low-light conditions (early & late or cloudy/rainy 
days), play with 
color, size & presentation for best results. You can also try 
pounding shady banks with them in the daytime- look for structure where 
big trout hideout in the daytime, features such as cut banks, 
downed trees, overhanging limbs, big rocks, etc. 
 Isonychia are my all-time favorite 
hatch, it is a big bug (#10-12) that fishes great with dries, nymphs 
& wets, and it gets big 
fish feeding on top in the daylight, often in fast, shallow water. Just 
like with other hatches, warmer days will push things later, and 
mild/cloudy ones will make things happen earlier. Beacause it's on the 
water for months, because it's big, and because it hatches in faster, 
broken water, big trout love this bug, and it's one hatch where you can 
actually blind fish the dry and bring fish up to the surface. On average
 lately, heaviest hatching in Catch & Release section has been about
 5-7pm, but it can vary from day to day, and other sections can see it 
earlier or later.
Currently effective
 nymphs include: Hot Spot Nymphs #14-18, Wade's Clinger Nymph #14-16, 
Olive nymphs #16-20, Yellow Sparkle Prince #14-18, Sulfur Nymph #16,
Caddis Pupa & Larva in both tan & olive/green #12-18, Jig nymphs
 #10-16, Pheasant 
Tails #16-20, Isonychia Nymphs #10-12, Fox Squirrel Nymph #10-14, Prince
 
Nymph #10-18, and Golden/Brown/Black Stoneflies #6-12 are all working 
well. Streamers are 
working well in the early morning and again 
toward dark- look for either low light or murky water for best results 
during this time of the year on the Farmington. Mice, Rats and giant 
Streamers are working after dusk.  -Torrey