Saturday, August 10, 2013

Ed's Fly Fishing Report for Saturday August

Stop Aquatic Hitchhikers! Learn more at http://www.100thmeridian.org/emersion.asp

San Juan River 504 cfs below Navajo Dam; Good
Not much change here. Midges have been hatching late morning with some lingering baetis hatches from noon or so, then back to midges late afternoons. For the morning, try drifting a pupa in the middle of the water column, This has been good pretty much from Texas Hole up to the cable. Gray, olive, and cream larvae in size #22-24, and #22 black zebra or gray pupa have been the best producers. Baetis start becoming more active from noon on especially below Texas Hole. Some dry fly action, especially on cloudy days from 1:00 to 5:00 in the afternoons. Size #20-22 gray, olive, or chocolate baetis emergers and dries in the afternoons will pick up fish. The hatches are better below Texas Hole. Midges will again, become more relevant in late afternoons into the evening. From Baetis Bend downstream, fish are also taking #16-18 hares ears and #20-22 pheasant tails as well. Make sure to clean off any moss that accumulates on your rig. 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   33 cfs near Pecos; Good 
The upper Pecos River above Terrero is open from Willow Creek Day Use upstream. Please be aware of trail closures leading into areas burned by the Jaroso Fire. They include trails leading to Panchuela Creek, Jack's Creek, and Pecos Baldy Lake. Heavy rainfall over the past month has completely devastated the Pecos River below Terrrero. A lot of ash and sediment have made it into the river, and there has been widespread fish kills. Our fishing leases on the Pecos aren't in the best shape and we are having to fish elsewhere. Please consider keeping your bookings as we do have other places to fish.  Dry dropper rigs are the top producers. For dries, use #10-12 grasshoppers, #14-16 caddis and little yellow sallies. For the nymphs, use #16-18 HDA Favorites, anato mays, cased caddis larva, #16 tungsten salvations, and microstones.  To check for dates and availability for the fall fishing season see the Park's website at http://www.nps.gov/peco/planyourvisit/fishing.htm for more info.

Rio Grande 171 cfs at Cerro; Good: 328 cfs at Pilar; Slow for pike, Fair to Good for trout, Good for smallmouth bass
Central southern Colorado has had a lot of rain over the past few days increasing the flows on the Rio Grande. The river is murky but fishable especially in the Wild and Scenic Area. The extra water is helping to flush the Rio of sediment from a landslide on the Red River a week ago. It's clearing and fishable, but use darker or flahier nymphs and streamers. Trout fishing is better earlier or later in the day. Dry flies like a caddis drifted along the banks in the last hour of daylight will also pick up fish. The smallmouth will still eat during the brightest part of the day. They take nymphs like trout, but are most reliably caught on streamers and crayfish patterns. Pike fishing is slow. Large streamers that move water will still get a pike's attention. Vary your retrieves and change up the color of your flies to see which ones trigger a bite.

Jemez Mountain Streams 14 cfs above Jemez Pueblo;  Good
Most of the streams of the Jemez were reopened to fishing except the East Fork of the Jemez. It will remain closed  due to concerns over flooding from the areas burned by the Thompson Ridge Fire. The closure affects the East Fork from it's boundary with the Valles Caldera all the way down to Battleship Rock where it joins the San Antonio. As far as the other streams go, small attractor dries and terrestrials are getting the fish's attention. Try suspending a small beadhead nymph under your dry to counter the mid-day slump that is typicall this time of year. The fishing program on the Valles Caldera has resumed as of Thursday July 11th. Please see their website for details or to make a reservation at  http://www.vallescaldera.gov/comevisit/fish/index.aspx

Cimarron River  5.2 cfs below Eagle Nest Dam; Fair to Good
The release out of Eagle Nest Dam is way down. This makes the fishing tougher as the fish get spooky with very little water going over their backs. The water is fairly clear. There is a little more water below Clear Creek on down.  Scuds are always a good choice in gray or olive as are red midge larva. PMD's and yellow sallies are the most abundant and small golden stone nymphs are all producing. Nearby Red River over Bobcat Pass is also fishing better with more water in the stream.

Chama River  above the village of Chama; Good: 97 cfs below the town of Tierrra Amarilla; Slow: 256 cfs below El Vado Dam; Slow: and 84 cfs below Abiquiu Dam;  Poor
The Chama in the Sargent Wildlife Area is offering the best fishing on the Chama right now. It is high and murky due to the abundance of rainfall up there over the past several days. Dry dropper rigs, or single caddis or a hopper up top is the way to go. The Chama flowing into El Vado Reservoir is up and may fish better with more, cooler water in this section. The water clarity below Abiquiu isn't great but it is fishable with about a foot of visibilty. The release is up from 200 cfs a week ago so use more caution wading the river. Bigger flashier nymphs or streamers would be the way to go. The release below El Vado will go up on Friday afternoons to accommodate river rafters and will drop back down to 300 cfs during the week. Same flies and tactics as below Abiquiu. The Chama River above El Vado and below Abiquiu are Special Trout Waters with reduced bag limits. Please report anyone over harvesting there to New Mexico Game and Fish at 1-800-432-4263.

In Southern Colorado:

Animas River 563 cfs at Durango; Fair to Good
The Animas is fishing fair especially from Durango upstream once the river clears up a bit. Currently the river is high and murky from a ton of rain that fell here over the last few days. Fishing the deeper runs and pools with big stonefly nymphs and streamers are getting some fish. PMD's are waning, but caddis are always abundant this time of year.    

Arkansas River 525 cfs at Granite; Good: 649 cfs at Salida; Good
The fishing is good on the upper river at Hayden Meadows, fishing mostly PMD's, caddis and terrestrials. expect periods of murky water from some stream work taking place above Hayden Meadows. The middle river from Buena Vista on down to Salida is also fishing well on the same flies , but there is some rafting traffic on this section. Less rafting below Salida. PMD's mid-day or caddis in the evening along with terrestrials are the fly choices here as well.

Conejos River  49  cfs below Platoro Reservoir; Good: 239 cfs at Mogote; Good
The Conejos has had alot of rainfall like alot of southern Colorado. The lower river has been murky, but you can find clearer water on the tribs or upriver towards Platoro. On the river as a whole,  it's pretty much terrestrials and caddis.  The current release out of Platoro makes fishing the meadows tougher to fish but makes the Pinnacles accessible. Red worms and midges, and dark bodied midges and baetis nymphs are the better producers in the meadow section. Some short lived localized hatches of blue winged olives are bring some fish to the surface in the faster water. Fishing with golden stone nymphs and caddis pupa are the best producers down low.

Rio Grande 88 cfs at Thirty Mile Bridge above Creede; Fair to Good: 649 cfs below Wagon Wheel Gap; Fair to Good
The Rio is murky from Thirty Mile Bridge downstean though Creede.  There are some local road and trail closures. Check with the Rio Grande National Forest for any closures. The tribs up above Creede are fishing very well with the influx of cooler water thanks to the rain.

San Juan River  259 at Pagosa Springs; Slow: the Piedra River 425 cfs at Arboles; Slow
The Pagosa area streams are up in flow from recent heavy rains. Some of the tribs like the East Fork, Turkey Creek or the upper forks of the Piedra may be more fishable until the flows subside. There are some local road and trail closures due to the fires. Check with the San Juan National Forest for the closures. Like every other stream locally, hoppers, PMD's, and caddis are all over the place.

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.

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.

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