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Wasatch Front Fishing Report: Colder Temps, Slower Presentations, and Stocked Trout

Wasatch Front Fishing Report: Colder Temps, Slower Presentations, and Stocked Trout

Published 4 months, 1 week ago
Description
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Wasatch Front fishing report for the Salt Lake Valley and close-by waters.

No tides to worry about here, but timing still matters. SolunarForecast’s calendar for the 84150 area shows average fishing with better windows around the early morning and again late afternoon, so treat first light and the last two hours before dark as your prime bite. Sunrise comes just after 7 a.m. and sunset a bit before 5 p.m., so your “golden hours” are tight but productive.

Weather around the valley is cold but stable: chilly mornings near freezing, light breeze, and a weak winter sun. That combo keeps surface temps low, so fish are hugging deeper, slower water or mid‑column in reservoirs. Think slower presentations and smaller profiles.

Local chatter and shop boards up and down the Wasatch Front have the **community ponds** and **tailwaters** doing the heavy lifting right now:

• **Jordan River and community ponds (Murray, Willow, Bountiful)** – Folks have been picking off stocked **rainbows** in the 10–14 inch class, with an occasional holdover pushing bigger. PowerBait in chartreuse or garlic, salmon‑egg clusters, and small nightcrawlers under a fixed bobber a couple feet off bottom are doing work. For lures, think tiny silver Kastmasters, Panther Martins, and 1/16 oz marabou jigs crawled painfully slow.

• **Weber and Middle Provo** – High Country Fly Fishers’ home‑water notes still hold: consistent flows and clear water with good numbers of **browns** and **rainbows**. Nymphing is king: size 18–20 midge patterns, small baetis, and zebra midges under an indicator, with a split shot to get you down. Swinging small soft hackles at the tailouts is taking a few nicer fish.

Fish activity is classic shoulder‑season: lazy until the light softens. Expect a mid‑morning trickle of bugs, then a short afternoon window when trout look up for midges and small BWOs. If you see snouts, switch to a size 20–22 Griffith’s gnat or a tiny parachute BWO on 6X and keep your drift drag‑free.

Best producers across the Salt Lake area right now:

• **Top lures:**
Roostertails and Panther Martins in 1/16 oz, silver or gold blades.
1/8 oz Kastmasters in silver/blue.
Small marabou or tube jigs in white or black, fished slow along the bottom.

• **Best bait:**
Chartreuse or rainbow dough baits on size 12 treble or single egg hooks.
Half nightcrawlers on a size 8 bait hook with just enough weight to tick bottom.
For kids, a simple worm-and-bobber rig a couple feet down is still tough to beat.

Couple local hot spots if you’re sneaking out after work:

• **Murray Park Pond:** Easy access, well‑used trails, and regular plants mean plenty of willing stockers. Hit the inlet and the slightly deeper side by the gazebo with PowerBait on a 2–3 foot leader.

• **Bountiful Lake:** A touch more room to spread out. Work the west bank with small spoons and spinners fan‑casted at a 45‑degree angle and count them down before retrieving.

Slow it down, keep your hands warm, and don’t be afraid to size down your offerings—our urban trout are seeing a lot of pressure, and subtle usually wins.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more local fishing intel straight from Artificial Lure.

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

This episode includes AI-generated content.
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