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Frosty Fishing on the Jordan River and Great Salt Lake
Published 3 months, 1 week ago
Description
Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to fishing guide right here in the Salt Lake City valley on this crisp January 19th morning. Winter's grip is tight—expect highs around 32°F today with light snow flurries and winds gusting 10-15 mph from the north, according to the National Weather Service. Sunrise hit at 7:52 AM, sunset's at 5:18 PM, giving us about 9.5 hours of daylight. No tides up here in our freshwater spots since we're landlocked, but the Great Salt Lake's steady, and inflows from the Jordan River are low due to that ongoing drought vibe.
Fish are sluggish in this cold snap, but they're biting if you target depths 10-20 feet where water temps hover 35-38°F. Recent Utah DWR reports show solid action on perch and walleye in the lake—anglers pulled limits of 10-12 inch yellow perch on small jigs last week, plus a few 4-6 lb walleye near the causeway. In freshwater, Jordan River folks nabbed trout (15-20 rainbows and browns per outing) and some channel cats up to 5 lbs. Numbers are decent: 20-50 fish days for patient types, but crappie slowed with the freeze.
Best lures? Go small and subtle—1/32 oz glow tube jigs or curly tail grubs in white/pink under a bobber for perch. For walleye and trout, try Rapala ultralights or spoon jigs tipped with minnows. Live bait shines: worms or small minnows on #6 hooks rule the river; corn or dough balls for cats.
Hot spots: Hit the Great Salt Lake's Antelope Island causeway for perch—easy access, limits guaranteed. Or try the Jordan River below the 900 East bridge for trout; it's urban and productive.
Bundle up, check ice thickness if venturing out (8+ inches safe), and respect regs.
Thanks for tuning in, folks—subscribe for more reports! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.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.
Fish are sluggish in this cold snap, but they're biting if you target depths 10-20 feet where water temps hover 35-38°F. Recent Utah DWR reports show solid action on perch and walleye in the lake—anglers pulled limits of 10-12 inch yellow perch on small jigs last week, plus a few 4-6 lb walleye near the causeway. In freshwater, Jordan River folks nabbed trout (15-20 rainbows and browns per outing) and some channel cats up to 5 lbs. Numbers are decent: 20-50 fish days for patient types, but crappie slowed with the freeze.
Best lures? Go small and subtle—1/32 oz glow tube jigs or curly tail grubs in white/pink under a bobber for perch. For walleye and trout, try Rapala ultralights or spoon jigs tipped with minnows. Live bait shines: worms or small minnows on #6 hooks rule the river; corn or dough balls for cats.
Hot spots: Hit the Great Salt Lake's Antelope Island causeway for perch—easy access, limits guaranteed. Or try the Jordan River below the 900 East bridge for trout; it's urban and productive.
Bundle up, check ice thickness if venturing out (8+ inches safe), and respect regs.
Thanks for tuning in, folks—subscribe for more reports! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.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.