To say Zach St. Amand is dialed in would be an understatement. Beautiful 20" wild brown by him yesterday on a nymph, he managed to land to some quality browns & holdover rainbows.
This Easter Sunday 4/1, we will close at 1pm or 2pm (depending on business)- call if you are coming after 1pm to make sure we are open. Back to our "In Season" hours starting Monday 4/2:
8am-6pm Monday through Friday, and 6am-5pm on weekends.  
Looking very mild for today through this weekend, with highs in the 50s every day. Water 
temps have been rising into the low 40s most afternoons, and with the warming trend 
they should easily hit the mid 40s on warmer, sunny days. This will raise get both the trout and bugs more active. It 
will improve the nymphing, as well as the 
dry fly action. Mornings will see the lowest water temps, and mid/late afternoons will see the highest.
Anglers are catching a mix of recent stockers, and 
medium to large holdovers & wilds. If you want quality fish and are 
willing to work for them, hit the permanent TMA/Catch & Release 
(C&R). If you want easier fishing and better numbers, hit the 
stocked sections mentioned in the paragraph below. Remember that 
recently stocked trout often pod up, so move around the pools until you 
locate them. Most trout are still holding in moderate speed water- they 
want some current, but generally not a lot in cold water. The exception to this is warm 
afternoons with good bug activity- this will often suck fish up into medium to medium-fast
speed riffles & runs to feed subsurface on nymphs/larva/pupa.
The river has been stocked over the past several weeks (except the permanent 
C&R, which currently has plenty of sizeable holdovers & wilds) 
from Goodwin/Hogback Dam down to Rt 177 in Unionville/Farmington, and 
that entire contiguous 21 mile section is all open to catch & 
release fishing only. Below Rt 177 it's closed to fishing until Opening Day on Saturday 4/14 at 6am.
Bugs should start ramping up with the warming trend here now. Winter 
& Early Black Stoneflies tend to hatch best as 
temps rise, and this 
should kick the early spring Baetis Tricauditis (Blue Wing Olives) hatch
 into gear soon- the nymphs are already active subsurface and trout are 
feeding on them, so don't hesitate to try some #16-18 olive colored 
nymphs. Woolly Buggers & gaudy nymphs work very well on 
freshly stocked trout, especially the first few weeks before they get 
dialed in to eating real bugs. For the holdovers/wilds, flies that more 
closely resemble real food tend to work better, with some noteable 
exceptions at moments. See further down in this report for specific fly 
suggestions.
CT Trout Stamp: 
The new $5 Trout Stamp is now available for purchase at our store and necessary
 if you are fishing the Farmington River, and on most other streams/lakes/ponds that have trout throughout Connecticut. All
 CT fishing license holders who are fishing waters containing trout will
 need to purchase the stamp. The last budget cut $200,000 from the 
hatcheries, so this is 
some much-needed funding that is expected to generate about $300,000 for
 the DEEP fisheries.
Flows:
8am flow is 214cfs below the dam in Riverton, 436cfs total in
 the permanent
 Catch 
& Release section in Barkhamsted (Still River is 222cfs). The upper 2 miles in Riverton (below 
the dam) are currently medium/normal. The permanent 
C&R is clear and in nice shape, with an upper-end medium flow, very fishable for sure (normal historical median USGS total flow for today would be 
518cfs). 
Currently hatching are Winter Caddis (mornings, especially after cold nights), Midges 
(afternoons), Tiny Winter (Capnia) & Early Black Stoneflies 
(afternoons), and we should start seeing some #16-18 Baetis Tricauditus 
(Blue Winged Olives). When fishing this time of year, pick your spot 
carefully if the water is up, and remember that water temps are still on the cold side, which effects where the fish hold & lay. Trout will seek out refuge from the current, 
especially in cold water. 
Typically this means they move closer to the bank, out of the heavier 
flows. Look for wider pools, and also spots where
 the river goes from narrow to wider (it make current breaks on both 
sides of the main flow). Inside turns provide nice soft water for the 
trout to hold in, 
and are relatively easy to fish and figure out where the trout are. 
Streamers are very good for targeting better 
fish when the water is up, and nymphs are also an excellent choice. 
Don't be 
afraid to fish "Junk Flies"- Mops, San Juan/Squirmy Worms, Green 
Weenies, Eggs/Eggstasy flies, Cased Caddis, big Stoneflies, etc.
Other than 
the Winter Caddis hatch which sometimes start up just after first light,
 there isn't a 
big reason to start at daybreak- the exception would be after mild 
nights, then it can make sense to wake up early. Mild overnight air 
temps, above 
freezing, will get bug and fish activity going earlier than on cold 
mornings. Sunny days will see the biggest water temps increases. I 
normally focus on 
the late morning to late afternoon time 
slot, with my biggest trout often coming in the last two hours of 
daylight.
 Rising trout have been chowing on Midges, Early Stones and Winter 
Caddis in the major
 pools at moments, and look for Baetis (Blue Winged Olives) to join the 
fray over the next few weeks. The most consistent fishing, 
unsurprisingly, has been with nymphs. Streamers have also been working 
well at moments, particularly 
in medium 
paced water around structure such as rocks and logs. The freshly stocked
 trout are still aggressive to basic streamers like #6-12 Woolly 
Buggers, especially in black, but it's worth trying olive, brown, and 
white too.
Hatches: 
We
 are seeing more & more Stoneflies, both the Tiny Winter Black 
(#18-24) & Early Black (#14-16). Midges
 are still hatching, mostly dark colored 
(black/gray)- if you are fishing Midges subsurface use flies in the 
#16-22 range (red, black, olive, brown), on top more like #22-28 (gray 
to black). They normally pop during the mildest part of the day, 
typically 
in the afternoons, but will sometimes start in late morning when it's 
mild. The Winter Caddis #18-24 is normally an 
early to late morning deal in February, frequently providing some surface activity.
 We just started seeing a few of the early season Baetis (Blue Wing 
Olives/BWOs) that average about a #18, sometimes even a #16. Not enough 
to call it a legit hatch yet, but the nymphs are moving around,
 so try a #16-18 olive colored mayfly style nymph in the afternoons. 
Dries: 
Winter
 Caddis: Winter Caddis Pupa #18-24, Winter Caddis Adult #20-22, Winter 
Caddis CDC #22, Parachute Winter Caddis #18-22, Midges: Griffiths Gnat 
#20-26, Fowler's Midge #20-22, Hi-Vis Griffith's Gnat #22, Stoneflies: 
B-MAR Black Winter Stone #22, Grey Stonefly Double Wing #16, Black/Brown Cadddis patterns in #14-18 
(for Winter & Early Stones) Baetis/Blue Winged Olives (BWOs): #16-18 olive parachutes, CDC, emergers, Sprouts
Nymphs: 
Black Stoneflies #14-18, Midges / Zebra Midges #16-24, Skinny Nelson #18, Olive Nymphs #16-18, Egg Flies 
(yellow/pink/orange) #10-18,
 Squirmy Worms / San Juan Worms (pink, red, worm tan),  Caddis Larva 
(olive to green) #14-16, Cased Caddis #8-16, Mop Flies (various colors, especially cream/tan)
#8-12 , big Stoneflies #6-12, Pat's Rubber Legs #6-10, Quasimodo Pheasant Tails 
#12-18, Antoine's Perdigons (various colors) #16, and Attractor / Hot-Spot nymphs 
#14-20 such as the Pineapple Express, Frenchie, Triple Threat, Egan's Red
 Dart, Rainbow Warrior, etc.
5x
 fluorocarbon tippet should be about for most nymphs, depending upon fly
 size, with 4x for bigger flies like Mops & bigger Stoneflies in 
higher 
flows, and 6x for the smallest ones. Think mostly 6-7X for  smaller 
dries (prob 5x for bigger #14-16 Stones), and 0-3x for streamers. If you
 haven't yet 
tried it, the Cortland Ultra Premium Fluorocarbon 
tippet is amazing, by far the strongest out there with the most 
abrasion
 resistance, stretch, flexibility & clarity. Total game-changer, and
 an extra-good choice if you like to nymph with lighter tippets- here's a
 link to purchase it off our site: http://www.farmingtonriver.com/cortland-top-secret-ultra-premium-fluorocarbon/
Streamers: 
Fish
 patterns with lots of built-in motion from materials like marabou &
 rabbit strips. #2-12 flies, especially in colors like white, black or 
olive- other colors are good too, and it pays to experiment. Think SLOW 
& DEEP, either swing them or strip in slowly with longer pauses.  
Try faster retrieves too, but expect slower/deeper presentations to work better most of the time- let the trout tell you what they want. If you listen, they will tell you. Think Zonkers, Woolly Buggers, Bruce's Yellow Matuka, Dude Friendly, Ice
 Picks, Mini Picks, Mop Heads, Slump Busters, Sculpin Helmet patterns 
(for a weighted sculpin imitation), etc.
If you have some equipment gathering dust in your closet, our shop is "hungry" for trade-ins. We
 give fair market value toward new equipment in the store..... no 
waiting for your item to sell, just bring your used fly rods, reels, and
 fly tying equipment  to us and we will turn it into something shiny and
 new for the upcoming season. Please call ahead for an appointment.
New Stuff:
The new Thomas & Thomas Contact 10' 2" #2 rods
 arrived recently, and we have a loaner/demo version of it you can 
borrow and try out on the water. My initial impression is: these rods 
are fantastic! They 
retained the fighting butt, and they built 
some real power into the lower half of the rod so you still have plenty 
of big fish fighting capability, even though it's only a 2 weight rod. 
The softer tip will nicely protect 6x-7x tippet for those of you who 
like to fish lighter line (it sinks your nymphs faster and with less 
weight). Despite the 
more flexible/softer tip section, the rod recovers quickly and dampens 
nicely. 
Joe Goodspeed, the rod designer, told me he is using some special 
material in this rod that makes it incredibly durable. Follow the link to check out this awesome new rod: Thomas & Thomas Contact 2wt
Simms new 2018 version of the G3 wader is 190% more breatheable (!), 30%
 more puncture resistant, has fleece-lined handwarmer pockets with side 
zips, a velcro docking station for a fly patch, and a G4-style 
reinforced seat/butt area. And the best part: NO price increase! They are now better than
 the G4 Pro Wader, but at a much lower price. We also have their new 
redesigned versions of 
