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Crisp Fall Fishing Outlook for Utah's Wasatch Front
Published 7 months ago
Description
Artificial Lure on the line, bringing you today’s fishing report for Salt Lake City and the surrounding Wasatch Front, Friday, September 26th, 2025.
We kicked off this crisp early fall morning with a sunrise at 7:17 AM, and anglers can expect sunset tonight at 7:23 PM. The weather is classic autumn—temperatures starting brisk in the low 50s, creeping up to the mid-70s by afternoon, with clear skies and a light breeze. If you’re planning a day outside, layer up early and break out the sunglasses by lunch.
Salt Lake itself doesn’t have tidal action because it's inland, but water levels are moderate to good. According to Snoflo, streamflows across Utah are currently at 82% of normal. The Provo River at River Road Bridge is running strong for this time of year at 546cfs, well above its September average, and Spanish Fork at Castilla saw a recent bump in flows, now sitting at 228cfs. Surface water in local reservoirs—Deer Creek, Jordanelle, and East Canyon—is stable, but lower than peak summer, so fish are moving out of the deep and cruising the drop-offs and shallows.
Recent catches in local waters have been solid. Anglers at Jordanelle and Deer Creek reported consistent action on rainbow trout, with several healthy browns mixed in. Utah Lake continues to produce channel catfish and white bass, with the bass bite on the uptick as cooling temps spark fall feeding frenzies. Black bass up at Pineview and Mantua are feeding hard near submerged brush and rocky points as baitfish school up. Reports from the Utah Wildlife Forum say fishing the alpine lakes with woolly buggers on a spinning rod is still putting plenty of trout on the stringer, especially from shore early and late in the day.
The best lures right now:
- For trout: gold or silver Kastmasters and small inline spinners like Panther Martins. Fly anglers are still scoring with olive or black woolly buggers and zebra midges under an indicator.
- For bass: try small soft plastics—Senko-style worms in green pumpkin or black—and slow-rolled spinnerbaits in natural shad colors.
- For catfish: stink baits and cut bait fished tight to the bottom near river mouths or deep holes after sunset.
- For white bass: anything flashy and quick—chrome or chartreuse jigging spoons, and small twisters bounced along the bottom will get you fast strikes.
Hot spots for today:
- Jordanelle Reservoir: fish the east banks and creek inlets for trout, switching to small crankbaits if the bite gets tough.
- Utah Lake State Park: the rocky points and marina cuts are kicking out white bass and catfish.
- Lower Provo River: flowing steady, and the riffles and tailouts below bridges have been giving up rainbows and browns all week.
Remember, with the fall colors popping, fish are on the move—focus on transition areas where summer deepwater meets shallow flats, and hit shaded structure as the sun rises. If you’re heading for alpine lakes, a solid spinning rod with lightweight buggers or spoons can still outfish elaborate rigs.
Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for regular reports, tips, and gear reviews. 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.
We kicked off this crisp early fall morning with a sunrise at 7:17 AM, and anglers can expect sunset tonight at 7:23 PM. The weather is classic autumn—temperatures starting brisk in the low 50s, creeping up to the mid-70s by afternoon, with clear skies and a light breeze. If you’re planning a day outside, layer up early and break out the sunglasses by lunch.
Salt Lake itself doesn’t have tidal action because it's inland, but water levels are moderate to good. According to Snoflo, streamflows across Utah are currently at 82% of normal. The Provo River at River Road Bridge is running strong for this time of year at 546cfs, well above its September average, and Spanish Fork at Castilla saw a recent bump in flows, now sitting at 228cfs. Surface water in local reservoirs—Deer Creek, Jordanelle, and East Canyon—is stable, but lower than peak summer, so fish are moving out of the deep and cruising the drop-offs and shallows.
Recent catches in local waters have been solid. Anglers at Jordanelle and Deer Creek reported consistent action on rainbow trout, with several healthy browns mixed in. Utah Lake continues to produce channel catfish and white bass, with the bass bite on the uptick as cooling temps spark fall feeding frenzies. Black bass up at Pineview and Mantua are feeding hard near submerged brush and rocky points as baitfish school up. Reports from the Utah Wildlife Forum say fishing the alpine lakes with woolly buggers on a spinning rod is still putting plenty of trout on the stringer, especially from shore early and late in the day.
The best lures right now:
- For trout: gold or silver Kastmasters and small inline spinners like Panther Martins. Fly anglers are still scoring with olive or black woolly buggers and zebra midges under an indicator.
- For bass: try small soft plastics—Senko-style worms in green pumpkin or black—and slow-rolled spinnerbaits in natural shad colors.
- For catfish: stink baits and cut bait fished tight to the bottom near river mouths or deep holes after sunset.
- For white bass: anything flashy and quick—chrome or chartreuse jigging spoons, and small twisters bounced along the bottom will get you fast strikes.
Hot spots for today:
- Jordanelle Reservoir: fish the east banks and creek inlets for trout, switching to small crankbaits if the bite gets tough.
- Utah Lake State Park: the rocky points and marina cuts are kicking out white bass and catfish.
- Lower Provo River: flowing steady, and the riffles and tailouts below bridges have been giving up rainbows and browns all week.
Remember, with the fall colors popping, fish are on the move—focus on transition areas where summer deepwater meets shallow flats, and hit shaded structure as the sun rises. If you’re heading for alpine lakes, a solid spinning rod with lightweight buggers or spoons can still outfish elaborate rigs.
Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for regular reports, tips, and gear reviews. 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.