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Salt Lake City's Fall Fishing Forecast: Trout, Cats, and Carp in Abundance

Salt Lake City's Fall Fishing Forecast: Trout, Cats, and Carp in Abundance

Published 7 months, 1 week ago
Description
Artificial Lure here, reporting on Salt Lake City's late September fishing scene—Sunday, September 21, 2025 at 10:36 AM MDT. We’re swinging deep into fall, and the weather’s really working with us: clear skies, crisp highs around 77°F, and light winds under five knots. Sunrise was at 7:14 AM with sunset hitting at 7:24 PM, leaving us nearly 12 hours of prime casting light and a sweet evening bite coming in right before dusk.

Local reservoirs are looking healthy, with Utah streamflows at 82% of normal—Spanish Fork and Provo River especially are seeing solid surges, making for lively waters and happy fish. Water temps in the area are sitting right in the mid-60s, ideal for trout and bass to get active. With no ocean nearby, there’s no tide to factor, so we’re purely working river and lake cycles for that fish frenzy.

This week, anglers around Salt Lake City have been pulling in consistent numbers of **rainbow trout, channel catfish, and bluegill** from Utah Lake and Oquirrh Lake. Bigger stories trickle out from the Provo River as well, with **brown trout** showing solid mid-day action. Carp are running strong in the shallows, giving bowfishermen and catch-and-release folks plenty of sport. If you're chasing bass, Strawberry Reservoir has coughed up some fat smallmouths, especially in rocky coves near drop-offs.

Lure selection is critical now as water clarity is good and temperatures drop. Locals are getting hookups on:

- **Silver and gold spinners** (Panther Martin, Blue Fox) for trout in flowing water.
- **Soft plastics** (green pumpkin Senko, curly-tail grubs) for bass, especially late afternoon.
- **Cut bait and stink bait** for catfish—around Utah Lake’s marshy edges.
- **Worms floated below bobbers**—always reliable for panfish and kids.

For hardcore fly anglers, the Provo and Weber Rivers are running BWO and caddis hatches mid-morning and late afternoon—size 18-20 dries and beaded nymphs are pulling double-duty.

If you’re looking for a couple of hot spots this weekend, here’s where the bite’s been on:

- **Provo River (River Road Bridge area):** Trout and whitefish are hitting hard; wade the riffles and work deep pools just downstream.
- **Utah Lake at Lindon Marina:** Loads of catfish action and good carp runs on dough balls and worms.
- **Big Cottonwood Creek** near Spruces Campground is producing wild browns for the patient—try small spoons or flies tight to the brush.
- **Oquirrh Lake** (Daybreak): Easy access, fun panfish, and the odd largemouth—stick to early mornings as rec traffic picks up fast.

Keep your rigs light and use fluorocarbon leaders; these clearer waters make fish a bit spooky. Reports from Sportsman’s Warehouse say **topwater plugs** and **spinnerbaits** are also hot right at dusk on Utah Lake for aggressive bass.

No major events on tap today but watch out for dark sky programs at the state parks if you’re camping out late—star parties start up around 9 PM. And if you’re night fishing, glow-in-the-dark jigs and those fluorescent Shad Raps are working after sunset.

Green River, Bear Lake, and the lower stretches of Jordan River are quieter, but definitely worth scouting if you want to avoid crowds and target channel cats or carp. Remember, local water management keeps flows balanced; with recent increases documented by Utah State University’s watershed surveys, we’re seeing more consistency and healthier fish populations.

Before heading out, always check for local regulations and keep those barbs pinched on all catch-and-release waters. Thanks for tuning in to the Salt Lake City fishing report—be sure to subscribe so you don’t miss next week’s update.

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