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Winter Trout on the Wasatch Front: Midges, Patience, and Cold Water Strategy

Winter Trout on the Wasatch Front: Midges, Patience, and Cold Water Strategy

Published 1 month, 3 weeks ago
Description
This is Artificial Lure with your Salt Lake City area fishing report.

We’re between storms along the Wasatch Front and the weather today is calm and cool, with valley temps riding the 30s into the low 50s under partly cloudy skies and light winds. The barometer is steady, which generally keeps trout feeding but not frantic. Sunrise is right around 6:50 a.m., with sunset about 6:20 p.m., so your primetime windows are first light to about 10 a.m. and then 4 p.m. to dark. There’s no meaningful tidal swing for our local freshwater lakes and rivers, but wind on the bigger reservoirs will still push bait and stir things up along the windward banks in the afternoon.

Water is still cold on the lower Provo, Weber, and Jordan systems, so fish are conserving energy and holding tight to slower seams, deeper pools, and tailouts. Utah Division of Wildlife Resources reports steady winter catch rates on stocked rainbows along the Wasatch Front community ponds and improved flows on key tailwaters, keeping trout in good condition. Local shops around SLC are talking about consistent half‑day numbers on the lower Provo and Weber — a mix of 10–16 inch browns and rainbows, with the occasional 18‑plus showing for folks who stick to the nymph game. Community ponds like Willow, Bountiful Lake, and Jensen Nature Park have been giving up planter bows and a few fat holdovers on bait and small spinners.

Best producers right now are classic cold‑water offerings. Fly anglers: think small and subtle. Size 18–22 midge patterns (zebra midges, black or red, with a silver or copper bead) under an indicator with a tiny split shot have been the workhorses. Trail those behind a size 16–18 sow bug or scud in gray or olive. Keep your drifts slow and deep; if you’re not ticking bottom every few casts, add a bit more weight. Midday, watch for light midge hatches — when you see heads up in the foam lines, switch to a single griffith’s gnat or small black midge emerger and lengthen your leader.

Gear anglers on the rivers are doing well running small inline spinners in gold or copper, and 1/8‑ounce marabou or tube jigs in black, brown, or olive on 4–6 lb fluoro. Work the softer currents and inside bends instead of the heavy main flow. On the ponds, bait is still king: chartreuse or rainbow PowerBait on a light sliding rig, or a nightcrawler piece 18 inches under a small bobber for kids. Early and late, a 1/16‑ounce silver or gold Kastmaster, or a small black Panther Martin, will pick off the more active fish cruising the banks.

Couple of local hot spots to put on your list:

– Lower Provo River (below Jordanelle): Classic winter tailwater mode. Hit the deeper runs near access points like River Road. Nymph deep with midges and sow bugs; keep presentations slow. If clouds hang in, you may see a brief surface bite mid‑afternoon.

– Weber River between Wanship and Coalville: Less pressure than the Provo but similar pattern. Browns holding tight to structure and undercut banks. A small black jig or a gold spinner worked low and slow has been putting fish in the net. Respect private property lines; stay below the high‑water mark where allowed.

Closer to town, the Salt Lake community ponds are a good bet if you’ve only got an hour: Bountiful Lake and Willow Park are both producing quick limits of stocker rainbows on PowerBait and small spoons. Fish just off the bottom in 4–8 feet of water, and don’t be afraid to move every 15–20 minutes until you find a pod.

That’s the rundown from the Wasatch Front. This is Artificial Lure reminding you to dress warm, wade safe, and pack out more than you pack in.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe.

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