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Bighorn Wintertime Trout Report - Nymphs, Midges, and Streamers in the Short Daylight Hours

Bighorn Wintertime Trout Report - Nymphs, Midges, and Streamers in the Short Daylight Hours

Published 4 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
Artificial Lure here with your Big Horn country fishing report, coming to you like a cup of hot gas-station coffee before first light on the river.

Around Big Horn, the air is running cold and crisp, with that steady early-winter pattern: mornings well below freezing, afternoons nudging up just enough to soften guides but not enough to shed a jacket. Expect light to moderate winds funneling down the valley, with a few passing snow showers possible and heavier snow stacking up in the surrounding Bighorn and Beartooth high country. Sunrise is roughly in that 7:30 window, with dusk settling in just after 4:30, so it’s a short fishing day and the prime window is late morning through midafternoon when the water and bugs both wake up a bit.

No tides to worry about here, of course; this is all river current and reservoir draw, and flows have been typical for early December—on the low and clear side on the Bighorn River below Yellowtail, with slow, deep wintering holes setting up nicely. Fish activity has shifted fully to winter mode: shorter bite windows but very consistent if you’re in the right lane and ticking bottom. Recent reports from local regulars and shop talk around the Big Horn and Fort Smith area have had anglers into solid numbers of trout—good pods of 14–18 inch rainbows with some browns mixed in, plus the occasional bigger brown in the deep bends. Numbers are still there if you stay patient and fish methodically; think a dozen-plus fish days for folks who stick with it and fish slow.

Best producers have been nymph rigs and tiny stuff. Small sowbugs, scuds, and midges in the 18–22 range under an indicator or tight-line setup are the bread and butter right now, with a split shot or two to get you down and a subtle yarn or small plastic indicator. A gray or tan sowbug followed by a black, olive, or red midge has been a classic combo. On overcast stretches, streamers are worth a swing—think small to medium sculpin or leech patterns in olive, black, or rust, fished low and slow off the bank drops and along ledge rock. Gear anglers are doing best with light jigs tipped with soft plastics or a bit of worm, and small silver or gold spoons crawled through deeper runs.

For bait, if you’re on still water or legal bait stretches nearby, nightcrawlers and minnows on slip rigs off the deeper points are pulling the occasional trout and walleye from local reservoirs and slower side water. Scented soft baits in natural colors can stand in where live bait isn’t allowed. Think subtle, natural, and slow; the fish are not looking to chase far right now.

A couple of hot spots to put on the list: the classic Bighorn River sections just below Afterbay Dam down through the first few miles remain the most reliable, with long, even runs and deep shelves loaded with wintering rainbows. Farther downstream, the bends and deeper slots around the 3-Mile to 13-Mile stretches can fish a little quieter pressure-wise but produce some of the better brown trout, especially if you commit to nymphing the inside seams and swinging or stripping a small streamer near the drop-offs.

That’s the scoop from Big Horn country—bundle up, fish slow, and lean on those midges and sowbugs. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. 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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