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Big Horn Country Fishing Update: Bighorn River Late Fall Trout Tactics
Published 4 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Big Horn country fishing rundown.
Out here around Bighorn and Hardin, the **Bighorn River** below Yellowtail is still the main game. No tides to worry about this far inland, just river flows and weather. The National Weather Service Billings office has us much cooler with highs in the 60s, northwest winds 10–20, and on‑and‑off rain showers most of the day. That cloud cover and chop on the water are just what we like for trout pushing shallow and feeding longer.
Sun’s coming up about 7:35 a.m. and ducking out near 4:25 p.m., so your best bite windows are first light to about 10 a.m., then a late push from roughly 2:30 to dark. That afternoon breeze will stack bugs and food along the soft edges and inside bends.
Local shop chatter this week has rainbows and browns in the **14–18 inch** class being pretty steady, with a fair number of smaller cookie‑cutters and a few browns sliding over 20 for folks who put in the time. Most boats are talking **dozens of fish a day** when they dial the pattern, especially on the upper three miles.
Trout have shifted into full late‑fall / early‑winter mode: hanging on the **drop‑offs below shelves, soft seams, and inside turns**, not blasting through the fast heads like summer. Nymph rigs are still king. Think:
- **Midges and baetis**: zebra midges, black or red in 18–20; small PTs and olive mayfly nymphs in 18.
- **Scuds and sowbugs**: tan or gray in sizes 14–16 riding point.
- Run them under an indicator with just enough weight to tick bottom every few drifts.
On the gear side, folks are doing well with **1/8–1/4 oz marabou jigs** in olive or black, small silver or gold **spinners**, and tiny crankbaits in brown trout or rainbow patterns. Keep retrieves slow and lazy; water temps are down and fish won’t sprint far.
If you’re set on streamers, keep it smaller and neutral: olive or white buggers, thin zonkers, or kreelex‑style flash flies. Swing them on a slow mend or a short strip right along the foam lines and the ledges. The bigger browns are still willing, just not chasing like October.
A couple local **hot spots**:
- **Afterbay to 3‑Mile**: Classic Bighorn water. The shelves and long inside bends are stacked with fish right now. Work every soft seam; don’t just race to the next run.
- **Bighorn Access to Mallards**: A touch less pressure, especially midweek. Deeper buckets and slower guts are fishing well for nymphs and jigs; good place to find that better‑than‑average brown.
No big bait‑bite reports like you’d see on a lake right now, but if you’re running conventional and it’s legal in your stretch, a **nightcrawler chunk on a light rig** drifted naturally through the slow stuff will still bend a rod.
That’s the word from the river here in Big Horn country. 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.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Out here around Bighorn and Hardin, the **Bighorn River** below Yellowtail is still the main game. No tides to worry about this far inland, just river flows and weather. The National Weather Service Billings office has us much cooler with highs in the 60s, northwest winds 10–20, and on‑and‑off rain showers most of the day. That cloud cover and chop on the water are just what we like for trout pushing shallow and feeding longer.
Sun’s coming up about 7:35 a.m. and ducking out near 4:25 p.m., so your best bite windows are first light to about 10 a.m., then a late push from roughly 2:30 to dark. That afternoon breeze will stack bugs and food along the soft edges and inside bends.
Local shop chatter this week has rainbows and browns in the **14–18 inch** class being pretty steady, with a fair number of smaller cookie‑cutters and a few browns sliding over 20 for folks who put in the time. Most boats are talking **dozens of fish a day** when they dial the pattern, especially on the upper three miles.
Trout have shifted into full late‑fall / early‑winter mode: hanging on the **drop‑offs below shelves, soft seams, and inside turns**, not blasting through the fast heads like summer. Nymph rigs are still king. Think:
- **Midges and baetis**: zebra midges, black or red in 18–20; small PTs and olive mayfly nymphs in 18.
- **Scuds and sowbugs**: tan or gray in sizes 14–16 riding point.
- Run them under an indicator with just enough weight to tick bottom every few drifts.
On the gear side, folks are doing well with **1/8–1/4 oz marabou jigs** in olive or black, small silver or gold **spinners**, and tiny crankbaits in brown trout or rainbow patterns. Keep retrieves slow and lazy; water temps are down and fish won’t sprint far.
If you’re set on streamers, keep it smaller and neutral: olive or white buggers, thin zonkers, or kreelex‑style flash flies. Swing them on a slow mend or a short strip right along the foam lines and the ledges. The bigger browns are still willing, just not chasing like October.
A couple local **hot spots**:
- **Afterbay to 3‑Mile**: Classic Bighorn water. The shelves and long inside bends are stacked with fish right now. Work every soft seam; don’t just race to the next run.
- **Bighorn Access to Mallards**: A touch less pressure, especially midweek. Deeper buckets and slower guts are fishing well for nymphs and jigs; good place to find that better‑than‑average brown.
No big bait‑bite reports like you’d see on a lake right now, but if you’re running conventional and it’s legal in your stretch, a **nightcrawler chunk on a light rig** drifted naturally through the slow stuff will still bend a rod.
That’s the word from the river here in Big Horn country. 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.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI