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Bighorn Fishing Report: Cool Mornings, Trophy Trout, Terrestrial Action on Area Lakes
Published 8 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
Morning anglers, Artificial Lure here with your up-to-the-minute fishing report for Big Horn, Montana and surrounding waters, Friday, August 8th, 2025.
Starting with the weather: today we've got mostly sunny skies, high temps topping out near 80°F, and a northwest wind around 9 to 15 mph, gusting as high as 21. Expect isolated showers or a rogue thunderstorm after 9 AM. If you're out early, it's a cool, clear start—sunrise was right about 5:59 AM and you can expect the sun to dip just after 8:30 PM. No tides to worry about this far inland, just pure river and lake action according to the National Weather Service and local forecasts.
On the Bighorn River, cooler evenings have perked up the bite. Grass is still clogging the edges, so it pays to get a pinpoint drift. Fish activity is strong in the early morning and again as the sun softens toward evening. Folks are pulling in rainbows and browns, with more reports of decent-sized trout lately. North Fork Anglers notes you shouldn't expect huge numbers, but there's a real chance for a trophy if you put in the time.
Best lures lately: stick with North Fork Specials and classic patterns like Prince Nymphs, Pheasant Tails, Optic Nerve, and Orange Lucent for subsurface work. Golden stonefly nymphs and Caddis or PMD dries are catching fish during afternoon hatches. For streamer junkies, Sculpzilla is a winner, especially when the light dims or the sky clouds over. If you see grass thick in your favorite spot, try a dry-dropper combo with a stonefly nymph below and a micro chubby or stimulator up top—fish those seams and any deeper runs where oxygen and food stack up.
Moving up to some of the local lakes like Beartooth, Luce, and Hogan, the story’s similar: cool mornings and dusky evenings are primetime, mid-day heat sends fish deep or into the weeds. Terrestrial topwater action is steady—think ants, beetles, and hoppers. Suspended chironomids and balanced leeches are drawing strikes just off the bottom. Callibaetis nymphs and dries are producing well when there's a hatch. Small attractor dries and slow-stripped streamers like Woolly Buggers or Slump Busters are good bets when things get slow.
Hot spots to target today:
- Afterbay Access and downriver toward Three Mile on the Bighorn—consistent flows, cooler water, and some nice runs stacking up fish.
- Otter Creek and Bighorn Access—lower pressure, tons of weed mats for cover, and a chance to toss terrestrials right up against the banks.
Recent catch reports show rainbows averaging 15-18 inches with a few pushing over 20. Browns are there too, mostly on nymphs and the odd streamer. Numbers are moderate, but many anglers are landing quality over quantity this week.
Best bait and presentation: if you're not fly fishing, try drifting nightcrawlers or leeches under a slip bobber near current breaks or eddy seams in the river. In the lakes, a small jig tipped with worm or PowerBait fished deep in the morning is effective on holdover trout.
Don’t forget, mornings and evenings are winning windows—the hot midday sun slows the bite, so use that time to re-tie, rehydrate, or check those knotty leaders.
Thanks for tuning in to the Big Horn area fishing report—don't forget to subscribe so you never miss an update! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
This episode includes AI-generated content.
Starting with the weather: today we've got mostly sunny skies, high temps topping out near 80°F, and a northwest wind around 9 to 15 mph, gusting as high as 21. Expect isolated showers or a rogue thunderstorm after 9 AM. If you're out early, it's a cool, clear start—sunrise was right about 5:59 AM and you can expect the sun to dip just after 8:30 PM. No tides to worry about this far inland, just pure river and lake action according to the National Weather Service and local forecasts.
On the Bighorn River, cooler evenings have perked up the bite. Grass is still clogging the edges, so it pays to get a pinpoint drift. Fish activity is strong in the early morning and again as the sun softens toward evening. Folks are pulling in rainbows and browns, with more reports of decent-sized trout lately. North Fork Anglers notes you shouldn't expect huge numbers, but there's a real chance for a trophy if you put in the time.
Best lures lately: stick with North Fork Specials and classic patterns like Prince Nymphs, Pheasant Tails, Optic Nerve, and Orange Lucent for subsurface work. Golden stonefly nymphs and Caddis or PMD dries are catching fish during afternoon hatches. For streamer junkies, Sculpzilla is a winner, especially when the light dims or the sky clouds over. If you see grass thick in your favorite spot, try a dry-dropper combo with a stonefly nymph below and a micro chubby or stimulator up top—fish those seams and any deeper runs where oxygen and food stack up.
Moving up to some of the local lakes like Beartooth, Luce, and Hogan, the story’s similar: cool mornings and dusky evenings are primetime, mid-day heat sends fish deep or into the weeds. Terrestrial topwater action is steady—think ants, beetles, and hoppers. Suspended chironomids and balanced leeches are drawing strikes just off the bottom. Callibaetis nymphs and dries are producing well when there's a hatch. Small attractor dries and slow-stripped streamers like Woolly Buggers or Slump Busters are good bets when things get slow.
Hot spots to target today:
- Afterbay Access and downriver toward Three Mile on the Bighorn—consistent flows, cooler water, and some nice runs stacking up fish.
- Otter Creek and Bighorn Access—lower pressure, tons of weed mats for cover, and a chance to toss terrestrials right up against the banks.
Recent catch reports show rainbows averaging 15-18 inches with a few pushing over 20. Browns are there too, mostly on nymphs and the odd streamer. Numbers are moderate, but many anglers are landing quality over quantity this week.
Best bait and presentation: if you're not fly fishing, try drifting nightcrawlers or leeches under a slip bobber near current breaks or eddy seams in the river. In the lakes, a small jig tipped with worm or PowerBait fished deep in the morning is effective on holdover trout.
Don’t forget, mornings and evenings are winning windows—the hot midday sun slows the bite, so use that time to re-tie, rehydrate, or check those knotty leaders.
Thanks for tuning in to the Big Horn area fishing report—don't forget to subscribe so you never miss an update! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
This episode includes AI-generated content.