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Yellowstone River, Montana Daily Fishing Report

Yellowstone River, Montana Daily Fishing Report

著者: Quiet. Please
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"Yellowstone River, Montana Daily Fishing Report" offers expert insights, tips, and live updates on fishing conditions along the Yellowstone River. Tune in for the latest fly fishing techniques, water levels, and weather forecasts, all tailored to help anglers maximize their success. Stay informed and make every fishing trip unforgettable!

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  • Yellowstone River Fishing Report: Trout, Walleye, and Surprise Salmon Heating Up
    2025/06/22
    Yellowstone River anglers woke up to an early summer sunrise at 5:35 AM and can expect a sunset around 9:17 PM. The weather in Paradise Valley is holding steady after last week’s heavy rain; flows are dropping fast, clarity is slowly improving, but the river is still running high and slightly off-color. Water temperature is running between 56 and 61 degrees, prime for active fish if you know where to look.

    This week, the bite’s been mixed but promising—persistent anglers are pulling in quality trout. Reports from Montana Outdoor say walleye are hitting steady in the 50s, smallmouth bass are stacking up deep, pike are slowing down but still out there, and surprise salmon have been showing up here and there. According to the Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks Management Plan, you’ve also got a shot at sauger, sturgeon, channel cats, drum, and, if you’re up near Livingston, browns, rainbows, and the ever-present whitefish. Some extra surprise carp and yellow perch, too, if you’re fishing slower water near the confluences.

    Visibility at Carter’s Bridge is about 8 inches—so get ready for “hero or zero” conditions according to the Yellowstone Angler. This is when big fish get bold, so don’t let the color spook you. Boaters are having the best luck—wade-fishing is tough thanks to fast, high water, but possible for the nimble and cautious.

    Dry fly action has been heating up in the back eddies and foam lines, especially during the thick caddis and March brown hatches in the late morning through early afternoon. Hi-vis elk hair caddis, Butch Caddis, March Brown Parachutes, and good old Purple Haze are top picks. Run a size 12–14 elk hair caddis solo, or toss a Royal Wulff with a three-foot dropper tied to a weighted caddis pupa or a soft hackle pheasant tail.

    Nymphing is by far the most reliable. Go to rubberlegs, jig princes, perdigons, caddis emergers, or the stand-by squirmy worm. Streamer junkies are also in luck—dark articulated patterns like black Dungeons, Sparkle Minnows, and McCune Sculpins are moving big browns along the banks and in slower seams.

    Hot spots worth a visit today: Pine Creek Bridge is holding fish in the side channels and soft water, and the town stretch through Livingston has been productive in the backwaters and foam pockets. Don’t overlook the spring creek mouths, either—especially if you want to tangle with some whitefish or an opportunistic trout.

    No tides to report—this is big Montana freestone fishing through and through.

    Thanks for tuning in to your Yellowstone River fishing report! Don’t forget to subscribe for daily updates and on-the-water tips from Artificial Lure.

    This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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    3 分
  • Yellowstone River Report: Summer Hatch Explosion, Ideal Conditions for Weekend Anglers
    2025/06/21
    Yellowstone River anglers, it’s Artificial Lure on June 21st with your on-the-water report. We’re rolling into prime summer action here on the Yellowstone, and conditions are shaping up just in time for the weekend.

    Flows at Carter’s Bridge are right around 8,400 CFS, with water temps running 56 to 61 degrees. The river’s finally dropping after a wet spell, though visibility is still a mixed bag—about 8 inches in spots, so “hero or zero” conditions rule the day. If you’re willing to pay your dues, you might tangle with a fish of a lifetime. With a bit more clarity, you’ll see those cutthroat and chunky browns come out of hiding. Wade anglers, take it slow—flows are still pushy, but boat anglers are faring well fishing tight to the banks and in the back eddies.

    Weather’s classic Montana early summer: highs in the mid-70s, occasional clouds, and a light westerly breeze. Sunrise this morning was at 5:34 a.m., and sunset won’t hit until 9:14 p.m., so you’ve got a long window to work the water. No tidal swings in this mountain stretch—just keep your eye on that runoff and cloud cover.

    The hatch menu is loaded: caddis and March browns are heavy, so a healthy supply of hi-vis elk hair caddis, stimulators, and parachute Adams in sizes 12-16 will get you into fish. Purple hazes and skwala chubbies also deserve a spot in the box. Nymphers should toss rubberlegs, jig princes, perdigons, and CDC caddis. The squirmy wormie still pulls numbers in this stained water. If you’re throwing meat, streamer anglers are finding success with black leadeye stingers, sparkle minnows, and white home invaders—think big, dark, and articulated. Strip through seams and backwater foam.

    Recent catch reports out of Paradise Valley include healthy cutthroat, hybrid rainbow-cutts, and browns—plus a few surprise whitefish. Up near Livingston, folks are boating respectable numbers with mixed nymph and streamer combos. Montana Outdoor just reported walleye stacking up in the 50s and smallmouth gathering deep, so don’t be shocked if you tangle into some bonus species while working the main river.

    Hot spots this week include the back eddies and foam lines between Mayor’s Landing and Pine Creek—especially where side channels re-enter the main stem. Yankee Jim Canyon is fishing strong for those willing to brave the whitewater, and the long glides near Emigrant have been producing consistently during afternoon caddis flights.

    For bait—if you’re swinging flies, caddis pupae, and worms are prime. Gear anglers, try jigs tipped with soft plastics or a nightcrawler drifted deep for a shot at those bigger browns.

    That’s the Yellowstone wrap for today. Thanks for tuning in—be sure to subscribe for fresh reports from the river each week. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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    3 分
  • Yellowstone River Fishing Heats Up as Summer Arrives - June 21, 2025 Report
    2025/06/21
    Artificial Lure here with your Yellowstone River fishing roundup for June 21st, 2025. We’re rolling into summer, runoff’s on the tail end, and the fishing buzz is picking up from Livingston to inside the park.

    The river’s finally on a steady drop, running at about 8,400 CFS near Livingston and water temperatures holding between 56–61°F according to Yellowstone Angler. Visibility is coming back—still not gin-clear, but a foot or two in most spots, which is all you need for some strong action on both dries and streamers. Wade fishing will test your legs with these flows, but the drift boat crowd is getting into ‘em.

    Sunrise hit at 5:36 AM and sunset’s about 9:14 PM, so you’ve got plenty of daylight to work your favorite runs and seams. There’s no tidal influence here, just watch those afternoon winds and the lingering color from upstream storms.

    Caddis and March brown mayflies are all over, making the back eddies and foam lines your best friends, especially with the river a bit off-color. Fish are rising strong midday, with the best hatches and surface activity from late morning through afternoon, and streamer tossers are banging up quality bows and browns along the bank edges. If we get another burst of rain, expect a short shutdown, but when clarity returns, get ready for lights-out dry fly fishing.

    On the menu this week:
    - Dries like hi-vis elk hair caddis, X caddis, stimulators, Purple Haze, and parachute Adams in sizes 12–16.
    - Nymphs such as rubberlegs, perdigons, jig baetis, caddis emergers, and squirmy wormies have been producing, especially off the dropper behind a larger dry.
    - Streamers—think dark and articulated—are still drawing chases, notably Sparkle Minnows, black dungeons, and sculpin patterns.

    Recent catches have been solid, with rainbows and browns in the 14–20 inch range reported near Carter’s Bridge and Paradise Valley. There’s also the occasional big fish making headlines, like Chad Lillie’s “fish of a lifetime” last weekend, as posted by Yellowstone Angler.

    Hot spots right now include:
    - Carter’s Bridge down through Paradise Valley for a mix of float and wade action with consistent bug activity.
    - Town stretches around Livingston for accessible, productive water and hungry post-runoff trout.

    For bait anglers downstream from the park boundary, worms and cutbait can pull in smallmouth bass, goldeye, and catfish. Note from the MT DEQ: there’s a consumption advisory on shorthead redhorse suckers from Reed Point to Columbus, but that’s not a target species for most anglers.

    So, grab your caddis box, something meaty to swing along the bank, and a solid leader—the Yellowstone’s shaping up fast for a classic early summer session.

    Thanks for tuning in to your local Yellowstone River update. Don’t forget to subscribe for more reports and tips! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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    3 分

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