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Pre-Runoff Bighorn River: Nymphing for 20-Fish Days in March Madness
Published 1 month, 1 week ago
Description
Howdy, folks, this is Artificial Lure, your Big Horn, Montana fishing guru, comin' at ya live on this crisp March 18th mornin' at 7:30. We're talkin' the Bighorn River and surrounds—pre-runoff window's tight, but the trout are wakin' up hungry as snowmelt ramps.
Weather's holdin' steady: highs in the upper 40s, lows near freezin', light winds from the northwest per local forecasts. No tides here in river country, but flows are risin' fast—Madison Range snowpack's loaded, pushin' Bighorn tribs like the Little Bighorn. Sunrise was 7:15 AM, sunset 'round 7:20 PM—prime daylight for nymphin' from dawn till noon before afternoon murk hits.
Fish activity's peakin': trout sensin' pressure changes, feedin' aggressive on dislodged bugs. Recent reports from Montana Outdoor show big browns, rainbows, and cutthroats hammerin' nymphs—folks pullin' 20+ fish days on the upper Bighorn near Hardin stretches. Yellowstone cutthroats are showin' too, first-of-the-year fish on midges upriver toward Livingston. Lake trout action's hot at nearby spots like Bighorn Reservoir, with Mack Days-style hauls echoin' Flathead's 1,800+ catches last week despite wind and snow.
Best lures? Pat’s Rubber Legs size 6-8 for stonefly action in off-color water—drift deep in seams. Tungsten Zebra Midge 18-20 as dropper, Hare’s Ear 12-14 weighted heavy, Copper John 14 red or chartreuse for flash. San Juan Worm size 12 red for worm washouts. Rig euro-style, 12-14 ft leader, extra split shot—tight-line slow inside bends. Live bait? Fathead minnows or worms under a float for walleye and sauger stackin' in pools.
Hot spots: Wade the slower seams below riffles from Yellowtail Dam down to Afterbay—visibility's 18-24 inches early. Or hit the Bighorn access near Hardin for public wadin'—fish stack in transitions. Be on water by sunrise, off by 11 AM.
Thanks for tunin' in, y'all—subscribe for more! 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
Weather's holdin' steady: highs in the upper 40s, lows near freezin', light winds from the northwest per local forecasts. No tides here in river country, but flows are risin' fast—Madison Range snowpack's loaded, pushin' Bighorn tribs like the Little Bighorn. Sunrise was 7:15 AM, sunset 'round 7:20 PM—prime daylight for nymphin' from dawn till noon before afternoon murk hits.
Fish activity's peakin': trout sensin' pressure changes, feedin' aggressive on dislodged bugs. Recent reports from Montana Outdoor show big browns, rainbows, and cutthroats hammerin' nymphs—folks pullin' 20+ fish days on the upper Bighorn near Hardin stretches. Yellowstone cutthroats are showin' too, first-of-the-year fish on midges upriver toward Livingston. Lake trout action's hot at nearby spots like Bighorn Reservoir, with Mack Days-style hauls echoin' Flathead's 1,800+ catches last week despite wind and snow.
Best lures? Pat’s Rubber Legs size 6-8 for stonefly action in off-color water—drift deep in seams. Tungsten Zebra Midge 18-20 as dropper, Hare’s Ear 12-14 weighted heavy, Copper John 14 red or chartreuse for flash. San Juan Worm size 12 red for worm washouts. Rig euro-style, 12-14 ft leader, extra split shot—tight-line slow inside bends. Live bait? Fathead minnows or worms under a float for walleye and sauger stackin' in pools.
Hot spots: Wade the slower seams below riffles from Yellowtail Dam down to Afterbay—visibility's 18-24 inches early. Or hit the Bighorn access near Hardin for public wadin'—fish stack in transitions. Be on water by sunrise, off by 11 AM.
Thanks for tunin' in, y'all—subscribe for more! 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