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Midtown Trout Bonanza: Big Rainbows, Hatching Bugs, and Provo River Glory
Published 11 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
Howdy anglers, this is Artificial Lure with your Wednesday morning fishing report for the Salt Lake City area on May 7, 2025.
The weather is shaping up for another ideal spring day, with highs expected in the mid-70s and mostly clear skies. Sunrise was at 6:22 AM, giving us a bright start, and sunset will be at 8:23 PM, so there’s plenty of daylight to wet a line[3]. Water temps in most city ponds and nearby rivers are holding in the mid-50s, which means fish are active and hungry[3].
Let’s start with the Sandy Community Fishery, which has seen excellent action thanks to fresh DWR stocking runs through March and April, capped by a load of trophy rainbows mid-April – some stretching to 17 inches and weighing over a pound each[1][3]. These big rainbows are still being hooked, with gold and silver Mepps spinners pulling in several, along with anglers having luck drifting chartreuse or rainbow PowerBait just above the bottom[3]. Standard worms under a bobber have also produced catches, especially with the bigger fish cruising shallow in the early morning.
Fairmont Park pond is another local spot worth checking out, especially for families and beginners. This pond’s been loaded with rainbows averaging 9 to 10 inches. A small Panther Martin spinner, preferably in yellow or silver, is a good choice, or you can stick with basics like nightcrawlers under a float for steady action[3].
If you’re heading to moving water, the Middle and Lower Provo Rivers are both in prime shape. The famous midge and Blue Winged Olive hatches are out in force right now. Nymphing midges in black and olive has been consistent through the morning; switch to dry flies like Comparaduns when you spot rising fish around lunchtime. Anglers working these hatches have found steady action for both rainbows and browns, with the occasional larger holdover fish grabbing a streamer swung through riffles in the afternoon[5].
Recent reports in the area include rainbow trout catches nearly every day at city ponds, with some browns coming from the Provo River. Best baits are PowerBait, nightcrawlers, and salmon eggs in the ponds, while small streamers and midge patterns rule the rivers[1][3][5].
Your hot spots today are the Sandy Community Fishery for numbers and size of rainbows, and the Middle Provo River for fly anglers hunting both browns and ‘bows[1][3][5]. Fairmont Park pond is perfect for a kid-friendly outing.
No tidal influence to worry about in these inland waters, so just focus on timing your trip for the early morning or late evening bites when fish are most active.
Good luck out there, set those drags, and we’ll see you next time with another Utah fishing update.
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
This episode includes AI-generated content.
The weather is shaping up for another ideal spring day, with highs expected in the mid-70s and mostly clear skies. Sunrise was at 6:22 AM, giving us a bright start, and sunset will be at 8:23 PM, so there’s plenty of daylight to wet a line[3]. Water temps in most city ponds and nearby rivers are holding in the mid-50s, which means fish are active and hungry[3].
Let’s start with the Sandy Community Fishery, which has seen excellent action thanks to fresh DWR stocking runs through March and April, capped by a load of trophy rainbows mid-April – some stretching to 17 inches and weighing over a pound each[1][3]. These big rainbows are still being hooked, with gold and silver Mepps spinners pulling in several, along with anglers having luck drifting chartreuse or rainbow PowerBait just above the bottom[3]. Standard worms under a bobber have also produced catches, especially with the bigger fish cruising shallow in the early morning.
Fairmont Park pond is another local spot worth checking out, especially for families and beginners. This pond’s been loaded with rainbows averaging 9 to 10 inches. A small Panther Martin spinner, preferably in yellow or silver, is a good choice, or you can stick with basics like nightcrawlers under a float for steady action[3].
If you’re heading to moving water, the Middle and Lower Provo Rivers are both in prime shape. The famous midge and Blue Winged Olive hatches are out in force right now. Nymphing midges in black and olive has been consistent through the morning; switch to dry flies like Comparaduns when you spot rising fish around lunchtime. Anglers working these hatches have found steady action for both rainbows and browns, with the occasional larger holdover fish grabbing a streamer swung through riffles in the afternoon[5].
Recent reports in the area include rainbow trout catches nearly every day at city ponds, with some browns coming from the Provo River. Best baits are PowerBait, nightcrawlers, and salmon eggs in the ponds, while small streamers and midge patterns rule the rivers[1][3][5].
Your hot spots today are the Sandy Community Fishery for numbers and size of rainbows, and the Middle Provo River for fly anglers hunting both browns and ‘bows[1][3][5]. Fairmont Park pond is perfect for a kid-friendly outing.
No tidal influence to worry about in these inland waters, so just focus on timing your trip for the early morning or late evening bites when fish are most active.
Good luck out there, set those drags, and we’ll see you next time with another Utah fishing update.
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
This episode includes AI-generated content.