Carl Drescher with a very pretty Farmingtion brown trout from Sunday. Saturday was very good for many anglers, Sunday, a little slower due to the melting snow lowering the water temps. Although the Winter Caddis is typically an early to mid morning hatch, cold days combined with extra-cold nights can create slushy conditions early, so you may want to wait until mid-morning to venture out on those days. FYI you can always run up to Riverton and get above the Still River, water temps run slightly warmer in that two mile section and never slush up. Fishing has continued to be good to excellent most days, especially for the skilled nymphers, but trout are
also eating dries & streamers at moments. The
Farmington is 147cfs from the Goodwin Dam in Riverton,
downstream to the confluence of the Still River, 98cfs from the Still
River, giving us a total flow in the permanent Catch &
Release area of 245cfs. This level is a normal February water flow,
leaving the river wadeable in all areas. The Winter Caddis #20-24 hatch
is providing some decent dry fly
fishing for a few hours in the morning. Typically the hatch is an early
to mid morning deal,
but that can vary depending upon the day, with winged adults often on
the water after the hatch in late morning/early afternoon. On warmer
afternoons
we are seeing Midges #22-32 with some trout feeding on the surface in
the larger pools. Our hardcore nymphing crew has been doing very well
with
Zebra Midges #16-20 (black, red), Green/Olive Caddis Larva #14-16, Cased
Caddis #12-14, Quasimodo
Pheasant
Tails #14-18, small Egg Flies, Squirmy Worms, Rainbow Warriors #16-18,
Hot Spot Nymphs #14-16 & Stoneflies #8-14 (brown, black,
golden/yellow).
Most of our Farmington trout are in winter
lies
(slow to medium speed water with some depth). Skip the
faster water and focus on pools, deeper pockets, moderate riffles, and
deeper
runs. Look
for fish around current edges, drop-offs & structure; anywhere
there is a break from the faster current combined with some
depth. Trout are cold blooded so in the winter they don't have to eat as
much and conserve energy by moving out of the faster water and holding
in slow to moderate water. Having said that, when nymphing we are still
hitting a lot of fish in medium speed water, especially where moderate
riffles start to drop into deeper water. While you may still hit fish in
knee-deep water, spots with 3-5 feet of depth seem to be holding the
lion's share. Trout
will often pod up this time of year, so where you find one,
there may be a
bunch more. Nymph slow &
deep and expect strikes to be subtle. Get your streamers well down into
the water column using weight or sinking lines and don't fast strip
them, but rather
swing, twitch, and slow retrieve them. Winter trout like their
streamers slow, deep & easy to catch.
Aaron Jasper is doing a tying class on Saturday March 5th on "Tying
Weighted Euro Anchor Flies", see "Events/Classes" page for more info.