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Big Horn Montana Fishing Report: Browns Prep to Spawn, Rainbows Feast on Bugs

Big Horn Montana Fishing Report: Browns Prep to Spawn, Rainbows Feast on Bugs

Published 6 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
Artificial Lure here on a crisp October morning, bringing you the Big Horn Montana fishing report for Sunday, October 12, 2025.

Just after sunrise at 7:19 AM, the cool air sat at 39°F, warming up to a mild afternoon near 62°F, with light winds out of the northeast and clear skies expected all day. Sunset tonight rolls in at 6:33 PM. Water flows on the river are steady, and with no major precipitation overnight, conditions are prime for active fishing.

Tides aren’t a factor on the Big Horn, but stream flows are stable and the river clarity remains excellent, making it perfect for sight-fishing today. According to the Bighorn Trout Shop’s late-week report, anglers are seeing classic fall activity: the brown trout are pushing shallow, prepping for spawn, and rainbows are moving into seams and riffles, chasing the big bug hatches. Recent catches have been strong—most boats and waders hauling in 15 to 25 trout per day, with the average brown running 16 to 19 inches, and some thick rainbows topping 18.

For the fly folks, the best action’s been on nymph rigs. Size 16 and 18 sowbugs are hot right now—pink and tan work best. Double rigs with a sowbug followed by a small scud or a black zebra midge below are getting consistent strikes. If you’re swinging streamers, black and olive woolly buggers, peanut envy, and sparkle minnows have been producing, especially in the deeper runs just after sunrise and again before dusk. Dry fly fans should key in on the afternoon baetis hatch, favoring size 18 Adams and comparaduns, particularly on slower seams and the tailouts in mid-river.

Spin and bait anglers are finding success with live nightcrawlers, but chartreuse and orange PowerBait on a drift gets bites too. If you’re tossing hardware, small gold spoons and Rapala countdowns in brown trout patterns have hooked some solid fish, especially along the brushy cutbanks.

For hotspots today:
- Three Mile Access – the riffles and tailouts are loaded with browns, good wading for nymphs.
- Bighorn Access near Fort Smith – streamer action has been superb right above the boat ramp.
- Don’t skip the runs around Soap Creek. Some of the season’s biggest browns have come out of here this week on black woolly buggers.

Pressure’s light so far this morning, so anglers can expect plenty of space to work the fish. The biggest advice today—watch for the browns on the move and stay mobile. The bite’s best early and late, with midday slower but a reliable baetis hatch around 2 PM.

That wraps the report from the Bighorn. Thanks for tuning in—be sure to subscribe for daily updates and tips. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI

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