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Late Fall Fishing Frenzy in Big Horn, Montana
Published 4 months, 4 weeks ago
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# Big Horn Montana Fishing Report — December 2nd, 2025
Well folks, it's your friend Artificial Lure coming to you on this early December morning here in the Big Horn country, and let me tell you, we're sitting in that sweet spot where late fall fishing is still firing on all cylinders before winter really clamps down.
We've had some genuinely fantastic conditions these past few weeks. Warmer than average temperatures mixed with overcast skies have kept the Yellowstone River and our local spring creeks very fishable. The Gardner River's been active too. That bonus round of fishing we've been enjoying isn't quite over yet—there's still time to get out there before things freeze up solid.
Here's what's been happening on the water. Nymphing has been solid, especially during that noon to 2:30 window when things heat up. You don't need to be out at first light fighting the cold—save yourself the misery. Start deep with a little weight and work your way up, targeting those slower pockets and structure. A size 10 or 12 Prince Nymph has been a workhorse, and the Pheasant Tail in similar sizes is money. Don't sleep on the Psycho Prince either—it's been turning heads.
Now, the streamer bite? It's been lights out good. Anglers are hammering fish on articulated and single-hook streamers in the deep inside bends and tail-outs. Those big fish are keying on white, pale and bright yellow, olive, and black patterns. The deeper, slower water is where the real bruisers are living right now.
On the spring creeks, there's still some surface action with size 22 Baetis hatching after 11 AM, and midges throughout the day. As we roll into December proper, those Baetis hatches will peter out and midges become increasingly important.
For spots, get yourself to those slower, deeper pockets on the Yellowstone—they're holding quality fish. The Paradise Valley spring creeks are consistent producers too, especially if you've got the finesse tackle for those smaller dry flies.
One heads up: keep your wits about you out there. Air and water temps in late fall and winter mean hypothermia is a real risk. Have a plan, dress smart, and carry your safety gear.
Thanks so much for tuning in, and please make sure to subscribe for more reports.
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.
Well folks, it's your friend Artificial Lure coming to you on this early December morning here in the Big Horn country, and let me tell you, we're sitting in that sweet spot where late fall fishing is still firing on all cylinders before winter really clamps down.
We've had some genuinely fantastic conditions these past few weeks. Warmer than average temperatures mixed with overcast skies have kept the Yellowstone River and our local spring creeks very fishable. The Gardner River's been active too. That bonus round of fishing we've been enjoying isn't quite over yet—there's still time to get out there before things freeze up solid.
Here's what's been happening on the water. Nymphing has been solid, especially during that noon to 2:30 window when things heat up. You don't need to be out at first light fighting the cold—save yourself the misery. Start deep with a little weight and work your way up, targeting those slower pockets and structure. A size 10 or 12 Prince Nymph has been a workhorse, and the Pheasant Tail in similar sizes is money. Don't sleep on the Psycho Prince either—it's been turning heads.
Now, the streamer bite? It's been lights out good. Anglers are hammering fish on articulated and single-hook streamers in the deep inside bends and tail-outs. Those big fish are keying on white, pale and bright yellow, olive, and black patterns. The deeper, slower water is where the real bruisers are living right now.
On the spring creeks, there's still some surface action with size 22 Baetis hatching after 11 AM, and midges throughout the day. As we roll into December proper, those Baetis hatches will peter out and midges become increasingly important.
For spots, get yourself to those slower, deeper pockets on the Yellowstone—they're holding quality fish. The Paradise Valley spring creeks are consistent producers too, especially if you've got the finesse tackle for those smaller dry flies.
One heads up: keep your wits about you out there. Air and water temps in late fall and winter mean hypothermia is a real risk. Have a plan, dress smart, and carry your safety gear.
Thanks so much for tuning in, and please make sure to subscribe for more reports.
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.