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Bighorn River Autumn Bonanza: Monster Trout, Streamer Madness, and the Hatch to Remember

Bighorn River Autumn Bonanza: Monster Trout, Streamer Madness, and the Hatch to Remember

Published 6 months, 1 week ago
Description
This is Artificial Lure coming to you with your Friday, October 24th, 2025, fishing report for Big Horn, Montana and the surrounding waters—including a look at the Bighorn River, the pride of fall angling in our corner of the state.

The sun popped up at 7:39 a.m. this morning and you can expect it to set right at 6:13 p.m., giving us a classic crisp autumn window to chase monster trout. No tides to speak of here inland, but with the mercury starting off in the mid-30s and climbing into the low 50s by afternoon, it’s layered flannel weather—perfect for a long float or some boots-in-the-gravel wading. Calm winds with the possibility of a gentle breeze make for pleasant casting and quiet drifts.

The Bighorn River is in absolutely prime condition for fall. Flows are steady and the water is running clear. Recent reports from Montana Outdoor and Montana Fly and Lake Fishing Reports confirm the bite is strong, with browns in their pre-spawn mode and rainbows aggressively stacking up behind them to feast on loose eggs and baitfish. Anglers are regularly netting 16- to 20-inch rainbows with a healthy number of browns pushing 22 inches or more. Most folks are reporting solid numbers—a good morning will put ten to fifteen fish to the net, with some trophy-sized browns standing out this week.

Best approach right now? Rig up nymphs early—try a beadhead sowbug, pink or orange egg pattern, or a tan Ray Charles on the bottom. Trails of midges and blue-winged olives (BWOs) are coming off by mid-morning, so keep a size 18–20 BWO nymph or a Zebra Midge as your dropper. By midday, the streamer bite just keeps building steam. Go with olive or black buggers, articulated streamers, or smaller sculpin patterns—give them a little twitch and hold on tight, especially in the deeper undercuts and tailouts.

If you’re bank fishing or want an easy bite, nightcrawlers and PowerBait are still putting rainbows on stringers below Afterbay, especially for folks sticking closer to shore. For the fly-only crowd, midges and baetis dries can work during the lunch-hour hatch if clouds roll in.

Top hotspots: Don’t miss the Three Mile section for streamer action as bigger browns cruise for easy meals, and the famous Afterbay reach is turning up hot for both numbers and size on nymphs.

Other fish in the mix this week include the occasional chunky cutthroat and a few lake trout for those venturing toward nearby reservoirs, but the Bighorn is the main stage for trophy trout this time of year. With the recent cooling trend, fish are more active all afternoon—especially 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

To wrap it up, get your hands on some sowbugs, eggs, and olive or black buggers, bring an extra thermos, and don’t miss a mid-fall day on the Bighorn. Traffic is light, scenery can’t be beat, and the fish are putting on weight for the cold months ahead.

Thanks for tuning in! Don’t forget to subscribe and never miss another bite-by-bite rundown—and as always, tight lines. 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

This episode includes AI-generated content.
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