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Salt Lake Fishing Report: Winter Trout, Carp & Walleye Hotspots
Published 3 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
This is Artificial Lure with your Salt Lake fishing report.
We’re starting the day cold and clear along the Wasatch Front. Overnight lows dipped into the teens in the valleys with highs pushing into the mid‑30s this afternoon under mostly sunny skies and light winds, according to local forecasters at FOX 13 Utah and the Utah Public Radio weather desk. Sunrise hit around 7:50 a.m. with sunset about 5:20 p.m., so you’ve got a tight winter window and prime bite during the first and last couple hours of light.
No real tidal swing to worry about here—Great Salt Lake is landlocked—so think in terms of barometer and light instead of tides. Stable high pressure and clear nights usually mean slower, finicky fish mid‑day, but active windows right at dawn and dusk.
Water levels on the Great Salt Lake are still historically low, with GreatSaltLake.uslakes info showing elevations hovering a bit above 4,190 feet last fall and only minor recovery since. That, plus the salinity, keeps the lake itself a niche game for rough fish and experimental outings; the real fishing around Salt Lake City is on the rivers and community reservoirs.
Recent word from Utah Division of Wildlife Resources updates and local shop chatter is that the **Jordan River** through town has given up decent winter carp and the odd walleye on slow‑rolled plastics and bait rigs. More exciting, conservation crews have been busy up and down the Wasatch Front placing Bonneville cutthroat trout into smaller creeks like Beus, Mill, and Stone over the last 15 years, with self‑sustaining populations building in several of those streams, according to a detailed KSL report on DWR’s cutthroat program. Those tiny canyons aren’t numbers spots yet, but they’re a sign of strong trout water in the bigger rivers below.
For most anglers this week, the hot bites are:
• **Provo River (a short drive from Salt Lake):** Mid‑winter nymphing is steady. Fish are mostly 10–16 inch browns and rainbows with the occasional nicer fish. Think small midge and baetis patterns under an indicator, or euro‑style nymphing in the deeper runs. Best colors: black, olive, and cream in sizes 18–22. Spin anglers: 1/8‑oz silver or gold inline spinners and small brown trout‑patterned crankbaits, fished slow.
• **Weber River (Weber Canyon and below Echo):** Similar story—cold, clear, and low, but good if you stay stealthy. According to regular Weber reports compiled by local shops, anglers are seeing moderate catch rates, mostly browns with the odd cutthroat mixed in. Tiny jigs tipped with a waxworm, or marabou jigs in olive and black, have been producing for spin fishermen.
Closer to town, community ponds like **Sugar House Park pond**, **Bountiful Lake**, and **Community Fisheries in Kaysville and Farmington** typically hold stocked rainbows and sometimes channel cats. Winter action there leans slow, but bait on the bottom—nightcrawlers, salmon eggs, or scented dough baits—can still put fish on the bank, especially during warm spells.
As for “what’s been caught lately,” shop talk this weekend has leaned toward:
• Brown trout on the Provo and Weber: mostly 12–16 inches, a few pushing 18.
• Rainbows in community ponds: eater‑size stockers when the ice is thin or open.
• Carp and an occasional walleye in the Jordan River: carp on corn and dough, walleye on slow swimbaits and jig‑and‑minnow combos.
Lure and bait recommendations for today:
• Rivers:
• Small **midge and mayfly nymphs** (fly guys).
• 1/16–1/8 oz **marabou jigs** in olive, black, or brown.
• **Inline spinners** in silver or gold with a touch of red.
• Light fluorocarbon (4–6 lb) and long leaders—these winter fish are spooky.
• Ponds and stillwater:
• **PowerBait**, cheese or garlic scents, on a small treble with a sliding sinker.
• **Nightcrawlers** cut in half on a #
We’re starting the day cold and clear along the Wasatch Front. Overnight lows dipped into the teens in the valleys with highs pushing into the mid‑30s this afternoon under mostly sunny skies and light winds, according to local forecasters at FOX 13 Utah and the Utah Public Radio weather desk. Sunrise hit around 7:50 a.m. with sunset about 5:20 p.m., so you’ve got a tight winter window and prime bite during the first and last couple hours of light.
No real tidal swing to worry about here—Great Salt Lake is landlocked—so think in terms of barometer and light instead of tides. Stable high pressure and clear nights usually mean slower, finicky fish mid‑day, but active windows right at dawn and dusk.
Water levels on the Great Salt Lake are still historically low, with GreatSaltLake.uslakes info showing elevations hovering a bit above 4,190 feet last fall and only minor recovery since. That, plus the salinity, keeps the lake itself a niche game for rough fish and experimental outings; the real fishing around Salt Lake City is on the rivers and community reservoirs.
Recent word from Utah Division of Wildlife Resources updates and local shop chatter is that the **Jordan River** through town has given up decent winter carp and the odd walleye on slow‑rolled plastics and bait rigs. More exciting, conservation crews have been busy up and down the Wasatch Front placing Bonneville cutthroat trout into smaller creeks like Beus, Mill, and Stone over the last 15 years, with self‑sustaining populations building in several of those streams, according to a detailed KSL report on DWR’s cutthroat program. Those tiny canyons aren’t numbers spots yet, but they’re a sign of strong trout water in the bigger rivers below.
For most anglers this week, the hot bites are:
• **Provo River (a short drive from Salt Lake):** Mid‑winter nymphing is steady. Fish are mostly 10–16 inch browns and rainbows with the occasional nicer fish. Think small midge and baetis patterns under an indicator, or euro‑style nymphing in the deeper runs. Best colors: black, olive, and cream in sizes 18–22. Spin anglers: 1/8‑oz silver or gold inline spinners and small brown trout‑patterned crankbaits, fished slow.
• **Weber River (Weber Canyon and below Echo):** Similar story—cold, clear, and low, but good if you stay stealthy. According to regular Weber reports compiled by local shops, anglers are seeing moderate catch rates, mostly browns with the odd cutthroat mixed in. Tiny jigs tipped with a waxworm, or marabou jigs in olive and black, have been producing for spin fishermen.
Closer to town, community ponds like **Sugar House Park pond**, **Bountiful Lake**, and **Community Fisheries in Kaysville and Farmington** typically hold stocked rainbows and sometimes channel cats. Winter action there leans slow, but bait on the bottom—nightcrawlers, salmon eggs, or scented dough baits—can still put fish on the bank, especially during warm spells.
As for “what’s been caught lately,” shop talk this weekend has leaned toward:
• Brown trout on the Provo and Weber: mostly 12–16 inches, a few pushing 18.
• Rainbows in community ponds: eater‑size stockers when the ice is thin or open.
• Carp and an occasional walleye in the Jordan River: carp on corn and dough, walleye on slow swimbaits and jig‑and‑minnow combos.
Lure and bait recommendations for today:
• Rivers:
• Small **midge and mayfly nymphs** (fly guys).
• 1/16–1/8 oz **marabou jigs** in olive, black, or brown.
• **Inline spinners** in silver or gold with a touch of red.
• Light fluorocarbon (4–6 lb) and long leaders—these winter fish are spooky.
• Ponds and stillwater:
• **PowerBait**, cheese or garlic scents, on a small treble with a sliding sinker.
• **Nightcrawlers** cut in half on a #