Thursday, June 30, 2011

Ed's Fly Fishing Report for Thursday June 30, 2011

Stop Aquatic Hitchhikers! Learn more at http://www.tu.org/science/aquatic-invasive-species-ais

There are numerous forest closures due to extreme fire danger. Please see our announcements page for a list of what's closed and what is open. There are places to fish this holiday weekend, just think outside the box and be willing to try something different. Lot's of stuff just into Colorado is fishing very well and is a short drive north. I've had great reports from the Conejos River Anglers on the Conejos and it's tribs. I just floated the upper Rio Grande from Creede to Del Norte over three days and had excellent fishing. It was tough to breathe with all of the stoneflies and caddis flying about! Get out to Abiquiu Lake at the crack of dawn and cast poppers for smallmouth bass. Carp are taking flies on the surface at El Vado. So don't dismay if your usual go to fishing can't happen. You might just be delighted you went someplace else!

For the most current fire information go to http://nmfireinfo.wordpress.com/

Click on Public Lands Information Center from our links page for a list of fire restrictions or closures.

San Juan River 504 cfs below Navajo Dam; Good
The high release is over. Fishing is good but fly choices have become smaller with the lower and clear water. Olive and grey bodied midge larvae and pupa are still working. For the beatis, try the ususal, chocolate foam wings in #22, chocolate johnny flash, wonder baetis, and small pheasant tails. Fish start eating midges once the baetis are done from then until dusk. The caddis hatch on the lower river is waning but, PMD's are starting to show up. From Rainbow Lodge on down all river access is private. If you can, a stay at Soaring Eagle or a float from one of the guide services can put you in the middle of the hatch. You can sometimes find bugs all the way up to the Gravel Pit take out. The Special Trout Water section is all catch and release and has a two fly only rule. If you see someone in violation, turn them into Game and Fish at 1-800-432-4263. Officers have been checking people for licenses, barbless flies, and the number of flies on your rig! File those barbs or go barbless, as the fines are steep!

Pecos River 30 cfs below Terrero; Fair to Good:
PECOS CANYON CAMPGROUNDS, DAY USE AREAS, HIKING TRAILS, AND FISHING ACCESSES ARE CLOSED.
The Department of Game and Fish imposed strict fire closures on State Game Commission properties in Pecos Canyon beginning Thursday, June 30th banning all camping and fishing. All forest lands surrounding the Pecos River are also closed. See our Announcements Page for more details. The Pecos National Historical Park is also closed to fishing. They will let anyone with a reservation on the river throught the 4th. Currently there is no walk on fishing at the park. Please see their website for the details at http://www.nps.gov/peco/index.htm and click on "2011 Fishing Program". Monastery Lake is also closed.

Rio Grande 531 cfs at Cerro; Slow: 679 cfs at Pilar; Slow for pike, Fair to Good for trout, Fair for smallmouth bass
The Rio Grande and it's tributaies like The Pueblo de Taos, Rio Hondo, and the lower Red River accessed through the Wild and Scenic Rivers area are open. The Red River Fish Hatchery campgrounds and parking area are closed, with no fishing access. The best fishing is on the lower Red or the Hondo. Not much for hatching bugs on the Rio right now. The flows have come up enough to the delight of the boaters, but the water is quite murky. I do best fishing the pockets when nothing is going on hatch wise. Fish big bugs like golden stonefly nymphs, cranefly larvae, or buggers. Remember to finish your drift off with a swing! Hold you rod tip over the lane of your drift and let you flies swing upwards as your line tightens. If you feel a take, coach yourself into waiting just a second before you set the hook otherwise you'll just pull it away from them. Try a slow retrieved streamer in some of the slower eddies for smallies. Pike hunt by feel. Large streamers that moves water will still get a pikes attention. Vary your retrieves and change up the color of your flies to see which ones trigger a bite.

The Rio Costilla within the Valle Vidal as well as the lower portion in the RCCLA Park is closed. Due to extreme fire danger the RCCLA and the Rio Costilla Park, including Latir Creek and Latir Lakes are closed until further notice. Please contact the office for more information at 575-586-0542.

Jemez Mountain Streams 8.5 cfs above Jemez Pueblo; Fair to Good
ALL FISHING ACCESS IN THE JEMEZ MOUNTAINS INCLUDING FENTON LAKE STATE PARK ARE CLOSED. New Mexico Highway 4 from Los Alamos to La Cueva and all forest roads are closed, even FR 376 along the Guadalupe and up to the San Antonio Hot Springs. For more details on fire restrictions and closures go to http://nmfireinfo.wordpress.com. The Valles Caldera has cancelled all fishing reservations until further notice. Please call the Valles Caldera or visit their website at www.vallescaldera.gov for more information.

Cimarron River 79 cfs below Eagle Nest Dam; Good: 65 cfs at Cimarron THE CIMARRON CANYON STATE PARK IS CLOSED. ALL SURROUNDING CARSON NATIONAL FOREST LANDS ARE ALSO CLOSED AS IS COYOTE CREEK STATE PARK. See the Carson NF website at www.fs.fed.us/r3/carson/ for more info. Nearby over Bobcat Pass, the upper Red River all the way to Questa is closed. Eagle Nest State Park is open to camping and fishing at this time under stage 2 fire restrictions.

The Chama River above the village of Chama; Slow: 201 cfs below the town of Tierrra Amarilla; Fair: 699 cfs below El Vado Dam; Slow: and 874 cfs below Abiquiu Dam; Slow
THE NEW MEXICO DEPARTMENT OF GAME AND FISH HAS ANNOUNCED SOME CLOSURES AFFECTING THE CHAMA RIVER. The Rio Chama Wildlife Area is closed to fishing, camping, hiking and horseback-riding. All accesses off of NM Highway 112 are closed to public entry. The Sargent Wildlife Area will be open to fishing, hiking and horseback-riding area near Chama beginning July 1 under Stage 2 fire restrictions. The other fire closures affecting the Chama is through the Chama Canyon Wilderness below El Vado Reservoir to Christ of the Desert Monastery. This affects the river rafters more than the fisherman. The upper Chama stretch flowing into El Vado is getting low and warmer every day. Don't delay fishing this especially while we are experiencing restrictions where we can fish around Santa Fe. The river below El Vado is open within Cooper's El Vado Ranch. The stretch below Abiquiu Dam within the Santa Fe NF is closed. Typically it won't really fish well until autumn when irrigators aren't calling for water. The Chama River above El Vado and below Abiquiu are Special Trout Waters with reduced bag limits. The density of fish is very low there and is not stocked. Please report anyone over harvesting here to New Mexico Game and Fish at 1-800-432-4263.

Be aware that the Rio de los Pinos Fishing Area northwest of Tres Piedras is closed to public entry as well as the Carson National Forest stretch.

In Southern Colorado:

Conejos River 618 cfs below Platoro Reservoir; Fair: 1590 cfs at Magote; Fair
June 28, 2011. "A couple of months ago everyone was lamenting the pitiful snowpack and what a short season it will be with no water. Tonight I had dinner with the guides and the conversation was the opposite. Where did all the water come from? We did get a chance to talk to someone from the water board here and they said we were at 95%. May was wet and cold and postponed the runoff so that seems to be what has made the flows higher than we guessed. I think it will make the Conejos have a normal season of water and if we can get some rain to keep the fire hazard down it should be a great year. Tomorrow morning I will be on a different stretch of water trying to figure it out all over again but I know that in my box will be some Drakes, Golden’s, Mahoganies, Caddis, and maybe a G-String or two! Hope you get a chance to make some casts soon! The preceeding report was provided by Jon Harp of the Conejos River Anglers.

Rio Grande 1210 cfs at Thirty Mile bridge in Creede; Good: 1940 cfs at Wagon Wheel Gap; Good
I had the good fortune of fishing the upper Rio for three days on guided floats. All business related of course! Tons of stoneflies on the water as well as lots of caddis. Green drakes are eminent and so are PMD's. The release out of Rio Grande Reservoir has been all over the place but never dropping below 1000 cfs. The water is fairly clear and fishing is good even though the wading is a little tough. Stoneflies and caddis are flying about and are the name of the game pretty much river wide.

Animas River 3450 at Durango; Slow
Still big water on the Animas! The flows are on there way down, it's just taking awhile. If you can find a pocket that's not blown out; stoneflies and baetis. Watch out for the river runners.

Piedra River 359 cfs at Arboles; Fair to Good
The lower Piedra is finally more fishable. The upper river all the way into the forks is fishing very well. I've had great reports from Williams Creek below the reservoir. Lot's of options have just opened up around Pagosa.

San Juan River 750 cfs in Pagosa Springs; Fair to Good
The San Juan is another river taking it's sweet time in coming down. Tough fishing at these flows on the main stem San Juan. The South Fork of the Rio Grande over Wolf Creek Pass is down and fishing well. Check out Turkey, Four Mile, or the East Fork of the San Juan for easier wading. Just like everywhere in southern Colorado, else, the peak flows seemd to have occurred and flows are trending downward. It's all about stones and caddis at this time of year.

Arkansas River 2630 cfs at Granite; Slow: 3700 cfs at Salida; Slow
High water pretty much river wide from melting snowpack and an increased release from Twin Lakes. Blue winged olive hatches, some caddis and stonelies are the nymphs to choose. Much of the river is difficult to fish at these levels. Good fishing nearby is Antero Reservoir and the Dream Stream.

Please see our announcements page for more news and upcoming events!

Call us at the shop for conditions on waters not listed here. 888-988-7688 out of Santa Fe or 988-7688 in Santa Fe.

It's summer in New Mexico and water and fishing condtitions can change with the weather! Please CALL the fly shop for the latest in stream flows and water conditions.

For the most current stream flows, see our links page and click on New Mexico Stream Flows.

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Ed'd Fly Fishing Report for Sunday June 26, 2011

Stop Aquatic Hitchhikers! Learn more at http://www.tu.org/science/aquatic-invasive-species-ais

For the most current fire information go to http://nmfireinfo.wordpress.com/

Click on Public Lands Information Center from our links page for a list of fire restrictions or closures.

San Juan River 475 cfs below Navajo Dam; Good
The high release is over. Fishing is good but fly choices have become smaller with the lower and clear water. Olive and grey bodied midge larvae and pupa are still working. For the beatis, try the ususal, chocolate foam wings in #22, chocolate johnny flash, wonder baetis, and small pheasant tails. Fish start eating midges once the baetis are done from then until dusk. There are caddis on the lower river. From Rainbow Lodge on down all river access is private. If you can, a stay at Soaring Eagle or a float from one of the guide services can put you in the middle of the hatch. You can some time find bugs all the way up to the Gravel Pit take out. The Special Trout Water section is all catch and release and has a two fly only rule. If you see someone in violation, turn them into Game and Fish at 1-800-432-4263. Officers have been checking people for licenses, barbless flies, and the number of flies on your rig! File those barbs or go barbless, as the fines are steep!

Pecos River 30 cfs below Terrero; Fair to Good:
PECOS CANYON CAMPGROUNDS REMAIN OPEN WITH STRICT FIRE RESTRICTIONS
The Department of Game and Fish imposed strict fire restrictions on State Game Commission properties in Pecos Canyon beginning Friday, June 24, banning all fires but allowing camping and fishing. The Bert Clancy, Terrero, Jamie Koch and Mora camping and fishing areas will remain open, but with sever fire restriction. See our Announcements Page for more details. The water levels are low and the fishing is good. Small to medium stonefly nymphs, small pheasant tails, baetis nymphs, caddis nymphs, and zebra midges are some of the fly choices. The spring fishing program at Pecos National Historical Park will resume again June 23rd. Please see their website for the details at http://www.nps.gov/peco/index.htm and click on "2011 Fishing Program". Don't be a poacher! Please respect all of the landowners along the Pecos and stay out of all posted private waters. Please report anyone over harvesting fish or poaching to New Mexico Game and Fish at 1-800-432-4263.

Rio Grande 596 cfs at Cerro; Slow: 759 cfs at Pilar; Slow for pike, Fair to Good for trout, Fair for smallmouth bass
Not much for hatching bugs on the Rio right now. The flows have come up enough to the delight of the boaters, but the water is quite murky. I do best fishing the pockets when nothing is going on hatch wise. Fish big bugs like golden stonefly nymphs, cranefly larvae, or buggers. Remember to finish your drift off with a swing! Hold you rod tip over the lane of your drift and let you flies swing upwards as your line tightens. If you feel a take, coach yourself into waiting just a second before you set the hook otherwise you'll just pull it away from them. Try a slow retrieved streamer in some of the slower eddies for smallies. Pike hunt by feel. Large streamers that moves water will still get a pikes attention. Vary your retrieves and change up the color of your flies to see which ones trigger a bite.

Jemez Mountain Streams 5.9 cfs above Jemez Pueblo; Fair to Good
There are some fishing opportunites in the Jemez, but they are on rather short stretches of stream along NM Highway 4. Any access deeper into the forest is absolutely restricted. All forest roads are closed, even FR 376 along the Guadalupe and up to the San Antonio Hot Springs. For more details on fire restrictions and closures go to http://nmfireinfo.wordpress.com. The Valles Caldera has cancelled fishing reservations on the San Antonio until further notice. I have been told by a customer that the East Fork will remain open, but I have not been able to verify that. Please call the Valles Caldera or visit their website at www.vallescaldera.gov.

Cimarron River 16 cfs below Eagle Nest Dam; Good: 15 cfs at Cimarron Cimarron Canyon State Park is open, but also with sever fire restriction. You have more access into the state park and the Carson Natioanl Forest. See their website at www.fs.fed.us/r3/carson/ for more info. The release out of the dam is a little high for optimum fishing. The upper reaches are brushy making casting difficault. Go below the Palisades and Clear Creek for easier fishing. PMD's are coming off as wellas golden and brown stoneflies. It seems that the browns here like a scud over the tiny offerings listed. Try that if all else fails.

The Chama River above the village of Chama; Slow: 260 cfs below the town of Tierrra Amarilla; Slow: 621 cfs below El Vado Dam; Slow: and 434 cfs below Abiquiu Dam; Slow
The upper Chama stretch flowing into El Vado is shall I say about perfect. The water is already warming quite a bit, so don't delay fishing this especially while we are experiencing restrictions where we can fish around Santa Fe. The river below El Vado is almost uncrossable. Strong waders maybe able to access the river below Cooper's. The stretch below Abiquiu is fishing tough. Varying dam releases has made fishing here tough. Typically it won't really fish well until autumn when irrigators aren't calling for water. The Chama River above El Vado and below Abiquiu are Special Trout Waters with reduced bag limits. The density of fish is very low there and is not stocked. Please report anyone over harvesting here to New Mexico Game and Fish at 1-800-432-4263. The nearby Brazos River is aslo running pretty high.

In Southern Colorado:

Conejos River 618 cfs below Platoro Reservoir; Fair: 1590 cfs at Magote; Fair
June 21, 2011. "A quick report tonight. Brain not coherent enough to get to creative but I have been guiding a lot lately and for the most part just incredible fishing up high, the La Jara, and some of the tribs. Today I caught the Meadow on a descending flow and that always seems to make things more tricky. Did a morning and afternoon guide and both caught nice fish but not the ridiculous fishing I was spoiled with earlier. It was hard this morning driving up the canyon to fish up high with the lower river looking so good. Tonight it dropped below 1000 cfs and should begin the start of some incredible fishing down lower on the river. Looking forward to see what she has to offer this week. Salmonfly adults should finally be tied to the end of your leader. Goldens should start soon and caddis are going crazy. Drakes today the lower La Jara and who knows what happened today on the Los Pinos but I know is was good! Wondered for a while if the Conejos would ever loose the full head of steam she had going for a while. Los Pinos hit 199 when I checked and so a lot of options and miles of river back on the option table. Seems only right to give the Meadow fish a break for a while! Hope to see you in the shop. For some more info and the scoop on some local stuff read the last couple of reports if you have time." The preceeding report was provided by Jon Harp of the Conejos River Anglers.


Rio Grande 1210 cfs at Thirty Mile bridge in Creede; Fair: 1940 cfs at Wagon Wheel Gap; Fair to Good

The release out of Rio Grande Reservoir has been all over the place but never dropping below 1000 cfs. The water is clear and fishing is good even though the wading is tough. Stoneflies and caddis are flying about and are the name of the game pretty much river wide.

Animas River 3450 at Durango; Slow
Big water on the Animas! The good news is that the peak seemed to have hit three days ago. If you can find a pocket that's not blown out; stoneflies and baetis. Watch out for the river runners.

Piedra River 520 cfs at Arboles; Slow
The lower Piedra is finally more fishable. The upper river all the way into the forks is fishing very well. I've had great reports from Williams Creek below the reservoir. Lot's of options have just opened up around Pagosa.

San Juan River 915 cfs in Pagosa Springs; Slow to Fair
Tough fishing at these flows on the main stem San Juan. The South Fork of the Rio Grande over Wolf Creek Pass is down and fishing well. Check out Turkey, Four Mile, or the East Fork of the San Juan for easier wading. Just like everywhere in southern Colorado, else, the peak flows seemd to have occurred 3 days ago. It's all about stones and caddis at this time of year.

Arkansas River 2630 cfs at Granite; Fair: 3700 cfs at Salida; Fair
High water pretty much river wide from melting snowpack and an increased release from Twin Lakes. Blue winged olive hatches, some caddis and stonelies are the nymphs to choose. Much of the river is difficult to fish at these levels. If natural flows come down, Hayden Meadows is about the only place to fish the Ark. Other good fishing nearby is Antero Reservoir and the Dream Stream.

Please see our announcements page for more news and upcoming events!

Call us at the shop for conditions on waters not listed here. 888-988-7688 out of Santa Fe or 988-7688 in Santa Fe.

It's summer in New Mexico and water and fishing condtitions can change with the weather! Please CALL the fly shop for the latest in stream flows and water conditions.

For the most current stream flows, see our links page and click on New Mexico Stream Flows.

Friday, June 10, 2011

Ed's Fly Fishing Report for Friday June 10, 2011

Stop Aquatic Hitchhikers! Learn more at http://www.tu.org/science/aquatic-invasive-species-ais


San Juan River 5360 cfs below Navajo Dam; Good
No reports since the Bureau of Rec increased the release out of Navajo Dam. I would bet not much has changed, but I expect there to more suspended moss in the current and the fish may be keying in on annelids that become dislodged out of the vegetation being kicked up. Midge hatches continue to come off late mornings and some decent baetis hatches follow it up till about 3:00 pm. Olive and grey bodied midge larvae and pupa are still working. For the beatis, try the ususal, chocolate foam wings in #22, chocolate johnny flash, wonder baetis, and small pheasant tails. Fish start eating midges once the baetis are done from then until dusk. The Special Trout Water section is all catch and release and has a two fly only rule. If you see someone in violation, turn them into Game and Fish at 1-800-432-4263. Officers have been checking people for licenses, barbless flies, and the number of flies on your rig! File those barbs or go barbless, as the fines are steep!

Pecos River 64 cfs below Terrero; Fair to Good:
Stoneflies!!! They're out just above town all the way to Terrero. The fish still want the nymph over the dry fly but that could change as the hatch progresses. Move that dry fly! Skate it, hop it, smack it a couple of times before you let it drift. The fish want that big bug in motion. The water levels are low and the fishing is good. Small to medium stonefly nymphs, small pheasant tails, baetis nymphs, caddis nymphs, and zebra midges are some of the fly choices. The spring fishing program at Pecos National Historical Park will resume again June 23rd. Please see their website for the details at http://www.nps.gov/peco/index.htm and click on "2011 Fishing Program". Don't be a poacher! Please respect all of the landowners along the Pecos and stay out of all posted private waters. Please report anyone over harvesting fish or poaching to New Mexico Game and Fish at 1-800-432-4263.

Rio Grande 849 cfs at Cerro; Slow: 1220 cfs at Pilar; Slow for pike, Fair to Good for trout, Fair for smallmouth bass
Not much for hatching bugs on the Rio right now. The flows have doubled over the past week. The influx of cool water should be good for trout. I do best fishing the pockets when nothing is going on hatch wise. Fish big bugs like golden stonefly nymphs, cranefly larvae, or buggers. Remember to finish your drift off with a swing! Hold you rod tip over the lane of your drift and let you flies swing upwards as your line tightens. If you feel a take, coach yourself into waiting just a second before you set the hook otherwise you'll just pull it away from them. Try a slow retrieved streamer in some of the slower eddies for smallies. Pike hunt by feel. Large streamers that moves water will still get a pikes attention. Vary your retrieves and change up the color of your flies to see which ones trigger a bite.

Jemez Mountain Streams 17 cfs above Jemez Pueblo; Fair to Good
The de las Vacas/Guadalupe drainage still has a little more water than the other streams, but everything else is at a low mid-summer level. Stoneflies are off on the Guadalupe, the Jemez River, and are all the way up into the de las Vacas. Good reports on the East Fork and San Antonio. The water on both streams is low and clear, perfect for dry fly fishing. Some of the more open water slows mid-day. Consider fishing the shaded ares during the afternoon. The Valles Caldera is also fishing very well. See their website at www.vallescaldera.gov to make a reservation.

Cimarron River 16 cfs below Eagle Nest Dam; Good: 15 cfs at Cimarron Good steady flows out of the dam has made for good consistent fishing. The flows have come down making fishing easier in the upper reaches around Tolby campground. There is a little more room the further downstream you go. Dark midges and baetis nymphs like tungsten WD40's, black psycho mays, chocolate johnny flashes, and black zebra midges on a nymph rig or dry dropper would be my choices. It seems that the browns here like a scud over the tiny offerings listed. Try that if all else fails.

The Chama River above the village of Chama; Slow: 834 cfs below the town of Tierrra Amarilla; Slow: 797 cfs below El Vado Dam; Slow: and 1280 cfs below Abiquiu Dam; Slow
The upper Chama including the stretch flowing into El Vado is still quite high. Flows are near normal for this time of year. The river below El Vado is almost unwadable. The stretch below Abiquiu is fishing tough. High dam release has made wading here tough. The release out of the dams on the Chama make the fishing very tough until the fall when irrigators aren't calling for water. The Chama River above El Vado and below Abiquiu are Special Trout Waters with reduced bag limits. The density of fish is very low there and is not stocked. Please report anyone over harvesting here to New Mexico Game and Fish at 1-800-432-4263. The nearby Brazos River is aslo running pretty high.

In Southern Colorado:

Conejos River 618 cfs below Platoro Reservoir; Fair: 1590 cfs at Magote; Fair

The Conejos and most of the San Juan Mountain rivers and streams are high with snowmelt. The peak seems to have hit 3 days ago and the flows are trending downward. I've had reports of stoneflies on the river around Conejos River Anglers fly shop. The lower river is pretty blown out with high water but there is some fishing in the meadows below Platoro. The water is high there as well but you can catch them on red worms and annelids. Lkae Fork seems to be one of the more fishable tributaries.

Rio Grande 1170 cfs at Thirty Mile bridge in Creede; Fair: 2610 cfs at Wagon Wheel Gap; Fair to Good

The release out of Rio Grande Reservoir has been ramped up and fishing is tough at the higher flows. Best bet would be a float on the lower river from South Fork to Del Norte. Stoneflies and baetis are the name of the game pretty much river wide.

Animas River 4710 at Durango; Slow
Big water on the Animas! The good news is that the peak seemed to have hit three days ago. If you can find a pocket that's not blown out; stoneflies and baetis. Watch out for the river runners.

Piedra River 1480 cfs at Arboles; Slow
The lower Piedra muddies rather easliy and is huge right now. Ther might be some fishable water in the upper river(s) above the forks. I did get some reports of stoneflies coming off on the Piedra below Williams Creek. Williams below the reservoir was reportedly fishing well and offers the easiest wading. Stoneflies and baetis. Maybe some San Juan worms.

San Juan River 1770 cfs in Pagosa Springs; Slow to Fair
Tough fishing at these flows on the main stem San Juan. The South Fork of the Rio Grande over Wolf Creek Pass is also high but maybe more fishable than Turkey, Four Mile, or the East Fork of the San Juan. Locally the upper forks of the Piedra or Williams Creek beloa the reservoir is your best bets. Just like everywhere in southern Colorado, else, the peak flows seemd to have occurred 3 days ago. It's all about stones and baetis at this time of year.

Arkansas River 2160 cfs at Granite; Fair: 30400 cfs at Salida; Fair
High water pretty much river wide from melting snowpack and an increased release from Twin Lakes. Blue winged olive hatches, some caddis and stonelies are the nymphs to choose. Much of the river is difficult to fish at these levels. If natural flows come down, Hayden Meadows is about the only place to fish the Ark. Other good fishing nearby is Antero Reservoir and the Dream Stream.

Please see our announcements page for more news and upcoming events!

Call us at the shop for conditions on waters not listed here. 888-988-7688 out of Santa Fe or 988-7688 in Santa Fe.

It's spring in New Mexico and water and fishing condtitions can change with the weather! Please CALL the fly shop for the latest in stream flows and water conditions.

For the most current stream flows, see our links page and click on New Mexico Stream Flows.

For the most current fire information go to http://nmfireinfo.wordpress.com/

Click on Public Lands Information Center from our links page for a list of fire restrictions or closures.

Thursday, June 02, 2011

Ed's Fly Fishing Report for Friday June 3, 2011

Stop Aquatic Hitchhikers! Learn more at http://www.tu.org/science/aquatic-invasive-species-ais


San Juan River 504 cfs below Navajo Dam; Good
Good midge hatches continue to come off late mornings and some decent baetis hatches follow it up till about 3:00 pm. Olive and grey bodied midge larvae and pupa are still working. Try the ususal, chocolate foam wings in #22, chocolate johnny flash, wonder baetis, and small pheasant tails to mimic your baetis. Fish start keying back in on midges once the baetis are done from then until dusk. The dates of the High Spring Peak Release for the San Juan has been revised. Please check our announcements page for the details. .The Special Trout Water section is all catch and release and has a two fly only rule. If you see someone in violation, turn them into Game and Fish at 1-800-432-4263. Officers have been checking people for licenses, barbless flies, and the number of flies on your rig! File those barbs or go barbless, as the fines are steep!

Pecos River 89 cfs below Terrero; Fair to Good:
Stoneflies!!! They're out just above town and are around Dalton. The fish still want the nymph over the dry fly but that could change as the hatch progresses. The water levels are low and the fishing is good. Small to medium stonefly nymphs, small pheasant tails, baetis nymphs, caddis nymphs, and zebra midges are some of the fly choices. The spring fishing program at Pecos National Historical Park will resume again in late June. Please see their website for the details at http://www.nps.gov/peco/index.htm and click on "2011 Fishing Program". Don't be a poacher! Please respect all of the landowners along the Pecos and stay out of all posted private waters. Please report anyone over harvesting fish or poaching to New Mexico Game and Fish at 1-800-432-4263.

Rio Grande 275 cfs at Cerro; Slow: 522 cfs at Pilar; Slow for pike, Fair to Good for trout, Fair for smallmouth bass
The caddis hatch is pretty well done except for some small black caddis inhabiting the willows. Without the hatching adults or egglayers, dry fly fishing has slowed, but nymph fishing is still good depending on clarity. Currently the visibility is about a foot and fishing has slowed but should resume with clearing flows. Best chance at dry fly fishing is in the evenings provided the wind isn't howling. Skate your dry fly for some of the pickier fish. If you're nymphing, always finish your drift off with a swing! Hold you rod tip over the lane of your drift and let you flies swing upwards as your line tightens. If you feel a take, coach yourself into waiting just a second before you set the hook otherwise you'll just pull it away from them. For trout, I like a big attractor under an indicator like a crane fly or golden stone and then trail your caddis larva/pupa off of that. Baetis have also been coming off so show them a trailing flashback pheasant tail or bat wing emerger. Try a slow retrieved streamer in some of the slower eddies for smallies. Pike hunt by feel. Large streamers that moves water will still get a pikes attention. Vary your retrieves and change up the color of your flies to see which ones trigger a bite.

Jemez Mountain Streams 30 cfs above Jemez Pueblo; Fair to Good
Runoff is pretty much done over the Jemez as a whole. The de las Vacas/Guadalupe drainage still has a little more water than the other streams, but is at a wadeable level and fishing is good. Stoneflies are off on the Guadalupe, the Jemez River, and are all the way up into the de las Vacas. Good reports on the East Fork and San Antonio. The water on both streams ias low and clear, perfect for dry fly fishing. The Valles Caldera is also fishing very well. See their website at www.vallescaldera.gov to make a reservation.

Cimarron River 32 cfs below Eagle Nest Dam; Good: 31 cfs at Cimarron Good steady flows out of the dam has made for good consistent fishing. The flows have come down making fishing easier in the upper reaches around Tolby campground. There is a little more room the further downstream you go. Dark midges and baetis nymphs like tungsten WD40's, black psycho mays, chocolate johnny flashes, and black zebra midges on a nymph rig or dry dropper would be my choices.

The Chama River above the village of Chama; Slow: 1320 cfs below the town of Tierrra Amarilla; Slow: 1470 cfs below El Vado Dam; Slow: and 1270 cfs below Abiquiu Dam; Slow
The upper Chama including the stretch flowing into El Vado is way blown out. Flows are near normal and the river is in runoff. The river below El Vado is totally unwadable and quite stirred up. The stretch below Abiquiu is fishing tough. High dam release has made wading here tough. The release out of the dams on the Chama make the fishing very tough until the fall when irrigators aren't calling for water. The Chama River above El Vado and below Abiquiu are Special Trout Waters with reduced bag limits. The density of fish is very low there and is not stocked. Please report anyone over harvesting here to New Mexico Game and Fish at 1-800-432-4263. The nearby Brazos River is aslo running pretty high.

In Southern Colorado:

Conejos River 389 cfs below Platoro Reservoir; Fair: 1160 cfs at Magote; Fair

The Conejos and the Rio Grande drainages in Colorado are in almost the same shape snowpack wise as we are in New Mexico. We'll see some runoff here later, but it won't be big or last long like year's past. Right now the fishing is good. The release out of Platoro is low enough to be able to fish the Pinnacles and there should be some good water in the meadows now that the release is up. Up high, use worms along with your stonefly of choice or trail your favorite baetis pattern behind that.

Rio Grande 1170 cfs at Thirty Mile bridge in Creede; Fair: 2290 cfs at Wagon Wheel Gap; Fair to Good

The release out of Rio Grande Reservoir has been ramped up and fishing is tough until the river clears. There seems to be a general increase in flows region wide and I'm sure that the tribs are starting to swell with snowmelt. Best bet would be a float on the lower river from South Fork to Del Norte. Stoneflies and baetis are the name of the game pretty much river wide. The lower river is floatable.

Animas River 3430 at Durango; Slow
Holy Shiz! The Animas has come way up in two days and is definitely in spring runoff. I don't think we'll see a decline in flows for a few more weeks. if you can find a pocket that's not blown out; stoneflies and baetis. Nymphs.

Piedra River 1480 cfs at Arboles; Slow
The lower Piedra muddies rather easliy and is huge right now. Ther might be some fishable water in the upper river(s) above the forks. Williams Creek below the reservoir was reportedly fishing well before this weekend but I don't have any new reports. Stoneflies and baetis. Maybe some San Juan worms.

San Juan River 1710 cfs in Pagosa Springs; Slow to Fair
Tough fishing at these flows on the main stem San Juan. The South Fork of the Rio Grande over Wolf Creek Pass was fishing fair prior to this weekend. Just like everywhere else, especially southern Colorado, it's all about stones and baetis. If the main stems like the Piedra and the San Juan are flowing high, the tribs are probably blown out as well.

Arkansas River 942 cfs at Granite; Fair: 1270 cfs at Salida; Fair
Higher water from increased release from Twin Lakes. Good blue winged olive hatches all the way up into Brown's Canyon. The road to Hecla is open. The better fishing is from Salida downstream through Bighorn Sheep Canyon. The caddis stalled near Salida but resume with some warmer weather. Good dry fly action on blue winged olives. Other than that a caddis larva imitation or baetis trailed behind a stonefly nymphs should work.

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