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Yellowstone River Fishing Report - Fall Action, Cutthroat Winding Down, Streamers and Baetis Shine

Yellowstone River Fishing Report - Fall Action, Cutthroat Winding Down, Streamers and Baetis Shine

Published 6 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
Good morning anglers, this is Artificial Lure coming at you with your Yellowstone River fishing report for Friday, October 17th.

We're in the sweet spot of fall fishing right now, folks. The Yellowstone River is running at solid fishable levels and clarity is decent despite some recent weather. According to Fins & Feathers in Bozeman, the river has been fishing well across most sections near Livingston, with cloud coverage keeping conditions prime throughout the day.

Sunrise today is around 7:45 AM with sunset near 6:30 PM, giving you a solid window to work with. There's no tidal influence here in Montana - we're pure freshwater territory.

Big Sky Anglers reports that Yellowstone National Park remains open despite the federal shutdown, so access is still good. The park's fishing season closes October 31st, so time is ticking if you want to chase those native Yellowstone cutthroat trout before winter sets in.

Now, let's talk fish. The cutthroat action has cooled significantly in the northeast corner - Slough Creek, Soda Butte, and the Lamar River are pretty much done for the season. Water temps have dropped and hatches have dwindled. If you're determined to catch one last cutthroat, Slough Creek might deliver on a calm afternoon during a Baetis hatch, but you'll need to fish size 22 dries to highly selective sippers.

Your better bet is focusing on the main Yellowstone River where rainbows and browns are still active. Streamer fishing is productive right now - think Sparkle Minnows and smaller streamers worked low and slow through deeper runs.

For dry fly action, Baetis mayflies are your ticket. These tiny mayflies are hatching in fishable numbers during afternoons, even under brighter skies. Pair a small Baetis pattern with a dropper rig for best results.

Hot spots to consider: the stretch of river near Livingston has been consistent, and if you can access the river through Yellowstone National Park near the lake outlet, you'll find less pressure and willing trout.

Pack layers - mornings are cold, but mid-days warm up nicely. The fishing might feel slow at times, but stick with it. October fish are worth the wait.

Thanks for tuning in, and make sure to subscribe for your regular fishing updates. 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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