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Salt Lake City Fishing Report - Cold Fronts, Stocked Trout, and Slow Winter Bites
Published 4 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Salt Lake City fishing report.
We’re between storms along the Wasatch this morning: cold, mostly clear, with highs near the freezing mark in the valleys and teens in the mountains according to the National Weather Service in Salt Lake. Light winds, so it’s a decent day to sneak in some mid‑week fishing if you’ve got ice gear and warm layers. Sunrise is right around 7:45 a.m. and sunset near 5:00 p.m., so you’ve got a tight daylight window to work with.
No need to worry about tides here in the valley—these are all freshwater reservoirs and rivers—so your “tides” are going to be barometer swings and light levels. Stable, cold high‑pressure days like this usually mean slower but predictable bites: think short feeding windows right at first and last light.
Utah DWR’s latest stocking reports show recent plants of rainbow trout in community waters like **Pond at Walden Park**, **Willow Pond**, and **Bountiful Lake**, along with good holdover browns and bows in **Jordanelle**, **Deer Creek**, and **Rockport**. They also note strong tiger trout and cutthroat numbers in higher reservoirs like **Echo** and **Causey** heading into winter, plus kokanee and smallmouth still present but sluggish.
Fish activity today:
Trout are in full winter mode—tight to deeper breaks and slower current, picking off easy meals. On the Weber and lower Provo, nymph rigs with small midge and baetis patterns are the play: size 18–22 zebra midges, WD‑40s, and tiny Frenchies under an indicator, with light tippet and just enough weight to tick bottom. Lake trout and splake up at Echo and Rockport are cruising 20–40 feet; electronics help, but even without, focus on old river channels and points.
Best lures and baits right now:
• For valley ponds and Bountiful Lake: small spoons like 1/8‑oz Kastmasters in silver/blue, or little marabou jigs in black or olive worked slow. PowerBait in chartreuse or garlic off the bottom still puts stockers on the stringer.
• On Jordanelle and Deer Creek: 2–3 inch tube jigs in white or smoke, tipped with a bit of nightcrawler. Slow, subtle hops.
• On the Weber/Provo: Euro‑style tungsten nymphs, small red or black midge patterns, and if you see noses, a tiny Griffith’s gnat or midge cluster late in the afternoon.
Couple of local hot spots to circle:
• **Bountiful Lake** – Easy access, family‑friendly, and those fresh rainbows are still dumb enough to eat. Work the southeast corner and the inlet area with bait on the bottom or a slow‑rolled spinner.
• **Lower Weber River (between Echo and Henefer)** – When flows are stable, this stretch fishes great in winter. Deep nymphing the buckets and seams will find healthy browns. Keep your wading conservative—ice shelves and slick rocks are no joke.
Ice conditions around the metro reservoirs are just starting to shape up but remain variable; Utah DWR and the Forest Service both stress checking thickness frequently and avoiding inlets, outlets, and pressure ridges. Take a spud bar, wear picks, and don’t fish alone.
If you’re staying low and tossing hardware, drop your retrieve speed way down. These cold‑water fish don’t want to chase; think “barely moving” rather than “burning bank.” Downsizing line to 4–6 lb fluoro on spinning gear helps a lot in this clear winter water.
That’s the word on the water from your buddy, Artificial Lure. 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
This episode includes AI-generated content.
We’re between storms along the Wasatch this morning: cold, mostly clear, with highs near the freezing mark in the valleys and teens in the mountains according to the National Weather Service in Salt Lake. Light winds, so it’s a decent day to sneak in some mid‑week fishing if you’ve got ice gear and warm layers. Sunrise is right around 7:45 a.m. and sunset near 5:00 p.m., so you’ve got a tight daylight window to work with.
No need to worry about tides here in the valley—these are all freshwater reservoirs and rivers—so your “tides” are going to be barometer swings and light levels. Stable, cold high‑pressure days like this usually mean slower but predictable bites: think short feeding windows right at first and last light.
Utah DWR’s latest stocking reports show recent plants of rainbow trout in community waters like **Pond at Walden Park**, **Willow Pond**, and **Bountiful Lake**, along with good holdover browns and bows in **Jordanelle**, **Deer Creek**, and **Rockport**. They also note strong tiger trout and cutthroat numbers in higher reservoirs like **Echo** and **Causey** heading into winter, plus kokanee and smallmouth still present but sluggish.
Fish activity today:
Trout are in full winter mode—tight to deeper breaks and slower current, picking off easy meals. On the Weber and lower Provo, nymph rigs with small midge and baetis patterns are the play: size 18–22 zebra midges, WD‑40s, and tiny Frenchies under an indicator, with light tippet and just enough weight to tick bottom. Lake trout and splake up at Echo and Rockport are cruising 20–40 feet; electronics help, but even without, focus on old river channels and points.
Best lures and baits right now:
• For valley ponds and Bountiful Lake: small spoons like 1/8‑oz Kastmasters in silver/blue, or little marabou jigs in black or olive worked slow. PowerBait in chartreuse or garlic off the bottom still puts stockers on the stringer.
• On Jordanelle and Deer Creek: 2–3 inch tube jigs in white or smoke, tipped with a bit of nightcrawler. Slow, subtle hops.
• On the Weber/Provo: Euro‑style tungsten nymphs, small red or black midge patterns, and if you see noses, a tiny Griffith’s gnat or midge cluster late in the afternoon.
Couple of local hot spots to circle:
• **Bountiful Lake** – Easy access, family‑friendly, and those fresh rainbows are still dumb enough to eat. Work the southeast corner and the inlet area with bait on the bottom or a slow‑rolled spinner.
• **Lower Weber River (between Echo and Henefer)** – When flows are stable, this stretch fishes great in winter. Deep nymphing the buckets and seams will find healthy browns. Keep your wading conservative—ice shelves and slick rocks are no joke.
Ice conditions around the metro reservoirs are just starting to shape up but remain variable; Utah DWR and the Forest Service both stress checking thickness frequently and avoiding inlets, outlets, and pressure ridges. Take a spud bar, wear picks, and don’t fish alone.
If you’re staying low and tossing hardware, drop your retrieve speed way down. These cold‑water fish don’t want to chase; think “barely moving” rather than “burning bank.” Downsizing line to 4–6 lb fluoro on spinning gear helps a lot in this clear winter water.
That’s the word on the water from your buddy, Artificial Lure. 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
This episode includes AI-generated content.