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"Big Horn Bliss: Bighorn River's September Fishing Glory"
Published 7 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
Artificial Lure bringing you the September 5, 2025 fishing report from Big Horn, Montana and the legendary Bighorn River. Locals woke up to **clear skies, cool air, and prime fishing conditions** this morning. If you’re wondering about the tides: we’re inland here, so river flows matter more than any tidal swing. According to the latest weather out of the Bighorn Basin, expect a **high near 73°F** with overnight lows dipping to the mid-40s. Smoky haze drifts in at times thanks to neighboring wildfires, but that hasn’t slowed the bite one bit lately.
Sunrise hit around **6:30 AM** and sunset will show off behind the Big Horns close to **7:45 PM** tonight—these early and late hours are gold for anglers.
River flows are holding steady and water clarity is solid, thanks to recent cool nights and timely rainfall. **Morning fishing is best**, especially below 3-Mile Access, as consistent PMD (Pale Morning Dun) hatches have brought trout to the surface in softer seams and shallow flats. Fish are a little picky, so don't slack on presentation—run a clean dry fly or drop a nymph gently for those risers.
**Recent catches** have seen plenty of wild rainbow and brown trout, with most reports mentioning fish in the **16–20 inch range**. It’s been a “quality over quantity” morning; these trout are healthy, strong, and putting on a show for patient anglers.
Top **lures and flies** right now? You can’t go wrong with PMD cripples, CDC emergers, and classic RS2s. Bring along some size 16–18 patterns for best drift. For those running streamers, small olive buggers and black Woolly Buggers have turned some big fish, especially during cloudier stretches and dusk hours.
If you’re **bait fishing**—try drifting nightcrawlers or scented salmon eggs deep in the current, especially mid-river. Attractant helps when trout get selective.
For **hot spots**, local recommendations line up solid:
- **Below 3-Mile Access**: Steady hatches, good water quality, and active trout all morning.
- **Bighorn Access Area**: Look for soft seams, foam lines, and gravel bars—brown trout are cruising these stretches early.
- For waders, check out the **Afterbay section** just above the dam; fish stack here when flows settle and aquatic insects start popping.
Trout activity slows as the sun climbs so don’t wait too long to hit the water. Late afternoon brings sporadic hopper action on windy days, so toss a big, buggy dry if you see terrestrials blowing in.
For gear, keep it light and quick—**5-weight fly rods**, long leaders, and fine tippet have landed the most fish. **Streamer anglers** should switch up to 6-weight rods for extra punch.
Local chatter says expect **more browns staging for fall spawning** in coming weeks, so now’s the time to score a trophy before the crowds show up.
That’s the latest from Big Horn, Montana—where cool mornings, strong hatches, and hungry wild trout come together for perfect September angling.
**Thanks for tuning in**. Don’t forget to subscribe for the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please 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.
Sunrise hit around **6:30 AM** and sunset will show off behind the Big Horns close to **7:45 PM** tonight—these early and late hours are gold for anglers.
River flows are holding steady and water clarity is solid, thanks to recent cool nights and timely rainfall. **Morning fishing is best**, especially below 3-Mile Access, as consistent PMD (Pale Morning Dun) hatches have brought trout to the surface in softer seams and shallow flats. Fish are a little picky, so don't slack on presentation—run a clean dry fly or drop a nymph gently for those risers.
**Recent catches** have seen plenty of wild rainbow and brown trout, with most reports mentioning fish in the **16–20 inch range**. It’s been a “quality over quantity” morning; these trout are healthy, strong, and putting on a show for patient anglers.
Top **lures and flies** right now? You can’t go wrong with PMD cripples, CDC emergers, and classic RS2s. Bring along some size 16–18 patterns for best drift. For those running streamers, small olive buggers and black Woolly Buggers have turned some big fish, especially during cloudier stretches and dusk hours.
If you’re **bait fishing**—try drifting nightcrawlers or scented salmon eggs deep in the current, especially mid-river. Attractant helps when trout get selective.
For **hot spots**, local recommendations line up solid:
- **Below 3-Mile Access**: Steady hatches, good water quality, and active trout all morning.
- **Bighorn Access Area**: Look for soft seams, foam lines, and gravel bars—brown trout are cruising these stretches early.
- For waders, check out the **Afterbay section** just above the dam; fish stack here when flows settle and aquatic insects start popping.
Trout activity slows as the sun climbs so don’t wait too long to hit the water. Late afternoon brings sporadic hopper action on windy days, so toss a big, buggy dry if you see terrestrials blowing in.
For gear, keep it light and quick—**5-weight fly rods**, long leaders, and fine tippet have landed the most fish. **Streamer anglers** should switch up to 6-weight rods for extra punch.
Local chatter says expect **more browns staging for fall spawning** in coming weeks, so now’s the time to score a trophy before the crowds show up.
That’s the latest from Big Horn, Montana—where cool mornings, strong hatches, and hungry wild trout come together for perfect September angling.
**Thanks for tuning in**. Don’t forget to subscribe for the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please 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.