Episode Details
Back to Episodes
Crisp Fall Fishing in Salt Lake City - Trout, Panfish, and Carp Bites
Published 6 months, 1 week ago
Description
This is Artificial Lure, your local angling expert with the morning fishing report for Salt Lake City and the surrounding valleys, Saturday, October 25th, 2025.
We’re waking up to crisp fall air – current conditions are mostly clear with morning temps hovering near 40°F, and today’s high will climb to about 68°F. Winds are light and the barometer is holding steady, making for a classic Utah autumn fishing day. No tidal activity in the region, as we’re fishing freshwater lakes and rivers, not the coast.
Sunrise came in right at 7:46 AM with sunset set for 6:38 PM tonight. You’ve got a solid window for morning and late afternoon bites, but according to Farmers’ Almanac, today’s fishing activity rates *poor* overall. That means the fish are likely to be finicky, so expect to work a little harder for your catch.
Recent reports from anglers around Salt Lake say the most action is still coming from cooler, deeper water. At Little Dell Reservoir and Causey, trout are perking up in response to dropping water temps. Cutthroat and rainbows are being caught on midges and small nymphs fished under indicators – think #18 Zebra Midge or black Pheasant Tail, with slow and patient retrieves. Word from the Wet Fly Swing podcast is Euro-nymphing and streamer tactics are getting results, especially with Brown Trout chasing olive Woolly Buggers as they stage for spawn in tailwaters and rocky shoals.
Sugarhouse Park Pond is offering fair panfish action. Bluegill and juvenile bass are picking up pieces of nightcrawler and small chartreuse jigs worked close to weed edges. For bass, Bass Fishing Daily recommends walking baits in bone or olive, especially during low light conditions near main lake points and deeper drop-offs. The Double Swimbait Rig, featured on Core Tackle’s YouTube, shows promise for late-season largemouth—try pairing a smaller shad imitation with subtle split shot to tempt wary post-frontal fish.
All around the Jordan River, carp and catfish are biting steadily for folks using dough balls, stink baits, and chicken liver. Target deep pools and eddies; bring a sturdy rod and get ready for a fight. Recent catches include a handful of channel catfish up to 5 pounds—no record-breakers, but enough for solid action.
Hot spots to hit today:
- **East Canyon Reservoir**: This higher-elevation lake is producing good-sized rainbows on PowerBait in orange and fluorescent green. Troll spinners early, switch to bait rigs as the sun climbs.
- **Big Cottonwood Creek**: Good numbers of wild browns are cruising the undercut banks. Try swinging streamers and drifting small stonefly patterns for best results.
As for best baits and lures, go small and natural. Live nightcrawlers, wax worms, and white bread for carp. On artificials, olive or black Woolly Bugger, copper John, and soft plastics in green pumpkin. For bait anglers, chicken liver and stink bait are time-tested for local cats.
Remember, with crowds thinning and water cooling, now’s the time to fish those favorite spots before winter kicks up. Be safe, pack warm, and respect the other anglers out there.
Thanks for tuning in! If you love these reports, don’t forget to subscribe and share with your fellow Utah anglers. 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’re waking up to crisp fall air – current conditions are mostly clear with morning temps hovering near 40°F, and today’s high will climb to about 68°F. Winds are light and the barometer is holding steady, making for a classic Utah autumn fishing day. No tidal activity in the region, as we’re fishing freshwater lakes and rivers, not the coast.
Sunrise came in right at 7:46 AM with sunset set for 6:38 PM tonight. You’ve got a solid window for morning and late afternoon bites, but according to Farmers’ Almanac, today’s fishing activity rates *poor* overall. That means the fish are likely to be finicky, so expect to work a little harder for your catch.
Recent reports from anglers around Salt Lake say the most action is still coming from cooler, deeper water. At Little Dell Reservoir and Causey, trout are perking up in response to dropping water temps. Cutthroat and rainbows are being caught on midges and small nymphs fished under indicators – think #18 Zebra Midge or black Pheasant Tail, with slow and patient retrieves. Word from the Wet Fly Swing podcast is Euro-nymphing and streamer tactics are getting results, especially with Brown Trout chasing olive Woolly Buggers as they stage for spawn in tailwaters and rocky shoals.
Sugarhouse Park Pond is offering fair panfish action. Bluegill and juvenile bass are picking up pieces of nightcrawler and small chartreuse jigs worked close to weed edges. For bass, Bass Fishing Daily recommends walking baits in bone or olive, especially during low light conditions near main lake points and deeper drop-offs. The Double Swimbait Rig, featured on Core Tackle’s YouTube, shows promise for late-season largemouth—try pairing a smaller shad imitation with subtle split shot to tempt wary post-frontal fish.
All around the Jordan River, carp and catfish are biting steadily for folks using dough balls, stink baits, and chicken liver. Target deep pools and eddies; bring a sturdy rod and get ready for a fight. Recent catches include a handful of channel catfish up to 5 pounds—no record-breakers, but enough for solid action.
Hot spots to hit today:
- **East Canyon Reservoir**: This higher-elevation lake is producing good-sized rainbows on PowerBait in orange and fluorescent green. Troll spinners early, switch to bait rigs as the sun climbs.
- **Big Cottonwood Creek**: Good numbers of wild browns are cruising the undercut banks. Try swinging streamers and drifting small stonefly patterns for best results.
As for best baits and lures, go small and natural. Live nightcrawlers, wax worms, and white bread for carp. On artificials, olive or black Woolly Bugger, copper John, and soft plastics in green pumpkin. For bait anglers, chicken liver and stink bait are time-tested for local cats.
Remember, with crowds thinning and water cooling, now’s the time to fish those favorite spots before winter kicks up. Be safe, pack warm, and respect the other anglers out there.
Thanks for tuning in! If you love these reports, don’t forget to subscribe and share with your fellow Utah anglers. 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.