Fishing Report June 29, 2019
The river is dropping and clearing, but still has some color to it… the Gallatin is flowing fat and sassy with that nice green hue that so many anglers have learned to appreciate. The trout are treating anglers to some explosive dry fly eats and a reliable nymph bite.
If the fish aren’t responding to your dry-dropper rig (and you are fishing a dry-dropper rig, right?) move along to another stretch of river. At times the fish can become gorged on salmonflies to the point that the fishing will slow down noticeably on a particular stretch of river. One of the great things about the Gallatin is the ease with which anglers can move to various public access points along the river. Keep moving until you find fish that want to eat your fly, they’re out there… there’s no sense trying to force the issue with fish that already have full bellies.
If you’re interested in having one of our guides show you the best of what the Gallatin has to offer, drop us a line or give us a call at 406-995-2975 to book your dream trip and let us do what we do best… put people on fish!
Medium to Small Stone Fly Nymphs or dead-drifted streamers such as Black Woolly Bugger. You Can try the Bitch Creek, Yuk Bug, San Juan Worm, Flash Yellow Sally Nymph, or a Olive Caddis Pupa under a Salmon Fly Dry.
Pats’ Rubber Legs #8, Olive Caddis BH #16 & 14, CDC Pink Emerger #18 & #16. CDC Pheasant Tail #16-18, Pheasant Tail #16-18, Lightning Bug #16-18, Copper John #14-16, Beadhead Yellow Sally #14, CDC Emerger #14-18,Olive Shop Vac #16 & 14.
Woolwr Bugger Black #12-#6, Bow River Bugger #4-6, Morrish Sculpin#4, Kory”s Grinch #6. Be sure to have an array of colors represented in your streamer box including: white, yellow, olive, natural/tan, and black.
GB Salmonfly #6,Water Walker Salmon Fly#8, Water Walker Golden #12, Minion Salmon Fly #8, Rogue Stone Salmonfly #6-10, Chubby Chernobyl (Royal) #12 – 6, Stimulator (Yellow) #10-14, Elk Hair Caddis (Yellow/Tan/Olive) #14-16, X-Caddis (Olive) #14-16, Lime Trude #14-16, Sparkle Dun (PMD) #16-18, Purple Haze #14-18
The hatch is here. Madison River browns and rainbows have been crushing salmonflies for a few days now. The main hatch is progressing upriver and will likely be at Varney Bridge by this weekend.
While the big bugs deservedly take center stage, their smaller cousin – the golden stonefly – is not to be overlooked by anglers… the fish certainly take notice of them. Many anglers get tunnel vision during the salmonfly hatch, which is understandable – it’s easy to focus on the big bugs. But as any experienced guide will tell you, there’s more going on out there… PMD’s are emerging, Yellow Sallies are out, and drakes are setting sail. Just something to keep in mind when you spot a big riser in the shallows…
The upper Madison has really rounded into shape over the past week. Tributaries such as the West Fork have dropped and cleared significantly allowing the mainstem to follow suit. Visibility is in the 2-3 foot range throughout the river and it should only improve from here – there’s not enough snowpack remaining to provide another spike in flows even if we see warm temperatures over the next week or two.
Our guides are out on the river daily now and are reporting excellent nymph and streamer fishing on a variety of patterns. Smaller nymph patterns have been performing very well, with $3 Dips, Shop Vacs, Lightning Bugs, and various Yellow Sally nymphs being some of the best. Fish are certainly looking for stonefly nymphs, but don’t get fixated on trying to force feed them… switch it up and try smaller caddis and mayfly patterns if the fish seem to be passing up your stonefly nymphs.
It’s not too late to get in on the action. Call us today to talk shop and reserve your spot with one of our guides. ( 406-995-2975 ) There’s a beautiful stonefly-crushing rainbow or brown out there with your name on it!
Pats’ Rubber Legs #8, PMD emerger #16, Pheasant Tail #16& #18, Soft-Hackle Lightning Bug #16-18, Lightning Bug #18, RS-2 #18-20, WD-40 #18, Shop Vac #16, $3 Dip #16-18, San Juan Worm #12
GB salmonfly #6, Watter Walker (salmonfly and golden stonefly) #6-10, Chubby Chernobyl (Golden) #8-10, Stimulator (Yellow) #10-14, Elk Hair Caddis (Yellow/Tan/Olive) #14-16, X-Caddis (Olive) #14-16, Lime Trude #14-16, Sparkle Dun (PMD) #16-18, Purple Haze #14-18
Kory”s Grinch #6, Circus Peanut #4, Sparkle Minnow #4-6, Bow River Bugger #4-6, Home Invader #2-6, Morrish Sculpin#6. Be sure to have an array of colors represented in your streamer box including: white, yellow, olive, natural/tan, and black.
The Yellowstone is likely not going to be a great option for the next couple of weeks as river levels have risen substantially and there’s enough snow remaining in the high country to sustain high flows for a while yet. Check back in a couple of weeks… you don’t want to miss that sweet post-runoff window on this river. As the ‘stone drops and clears it offers up some of the best fishing of the year on big dries and streamers fished tight to the banks.
Hebgen
16-18, Purple Haze #14-18
San Juan Worm (Red) #12, Pheasant Tail #16, Lightning Bug #16, Copper John #14-16, Shop Vac #16
Black Bugger #6-10.
Midges
May to July -Hebgen Lake is a Chironomid factory. The best way to take advantage of this I’ve found to drop your favorite midge pattern down under a indicator in 9 to 14 feet of water. Then you simply wait until you see a twitch, or on some days your indicator will plunge.
Some days the trout will go crazy for top water action. And feed on the midge hatch. By the time the Callibaetis and Trico hatch arrives trout are accustomed to feeding on midge spinner flies. This creates some of the finest dry fly fishing you can ask for.
Callibaetis
By mid June through August you will start seeing Callibaetis. The June emergers are a size 14. You will have Hebgen lake mostly to yourself except for those in the know. The best way to go about it is to find the weed beds near the shoreline with Callibaetis emerging. The best way to fish the emergence is over the littoral zone weed beds. It’s as easy as that. The emergence time depend’s on weather conditions, the first emergence of the year will begin around 10:30 am and last to about 1:00 pm. In the deeper shoreline weed beds you will have Callibaetis emerging in the early afternoon around 1:30 pm and last to about 3:00 pm.
July and August
August is the best time to fish Callibaetis on Hebgen Lake traditionally. Callibaetis are multi-brooded and produce multi-batches of offspring during June and July, most anglers will not experience it if they are not over the Callibaetis weed beds. The Callibaetis can migrate throughout June, July, and August so they can be prolific in one location and emerging a couple weeks later at another location. During July, the Callibaetis typically like to emerge around 11 am. Depending on water temperature and cloud cover this could continue until mid afternoon. During early July, Emergers adults and nymphs are far more effective than late July and August. The Northwest shorelines of every arm can have good numbers of cruising fish. Plan on arriving by 10:00 (earlier if you want to fish Tricos) . Use a stalk and wade method. Shoreline fish are easier to stalk than the open lake fish in that they generally cruise left or right and you have a better chance to intercept them.
Usually by mid-July, along with Callibaetis, the first of the Trico hatch will appear. These two hatches continue through September. Along with spring midges, the Tricos train Hebgen Lake fish how to become gulpers. The Tricos give the early bird anglers a reason to arrive early on the lake. When fishing the Trico hatch, the fish tend to be very selective. Tippet is not the problem (5x will work fine), as long as the fish see the fly first. Your casting has to be “spot on” and your fly pattern has to be a precise. Remember when fish are rising around you is to make a good cast ahead of the fish and leave it. Don’t cast add arising fish past in the direction that you think they are traveling .Be stealthy when false casting and on your delivery. Watch your line spray over potential feeding fish . Selecting the perfect Trico pattern is more important than a Midge or Callibaetis patterns. Trico patterns are smaller size 18 and 20, so you have to get your fly closer to your target fish. This in itself is difficult without spooking your target fish. Overall this type of fishing is difficult at best and very rewarding when you finally figure it out.