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Bozeman, MT Fly Fishing Report 8/22/18

Bozeman, MT Fly Fishing Report 8/22/18

Bozeman Fly Fishing Overview

Not much new to report on. Foam fishing is still great with large hoppers being the first choice for getting big fish to look up. Hoppers being a generic term for all big foam flies that float. Don’t forget to twitch. The twitch has been triggering strikes from big fish on all of the great rivers near Bozeman, Montana.  Our Montana fly fishing guides have been spending most of their time on the Madison River, Yellowstone River, Missouri River, and Yellowstone National Park as of late. Many of the smaller rivers are too low to float for the time being. Good time to mix it up and go wade fish for a day. Bring your favorite hopper, fish it well, and good things will happen.

Yellowstone River Fly Fishing Report

As good as it gets out there. Flows are right where we like them with fish holding and feeding all across, up, and down the river. Cooler temps and rain have kept us on our toes but the fish have stayed on the feed through the mud and cold fronts. Don’t be afraid to fish in the mud. Your tactics will need to change but big fish get dumb when they can’t see well. Try two of your favorite streamers or buggers dead drifted under an indicator. It works well. Less rain in the future forecast, look for the Yellowstone River to be totally clear by the end of the week and for the hopper fishing to be business as usual. We have been fishing just about every color in the rainbow with success but keep finding big pink hoppers on the end of our lines more often than others. Presentation is everything. Don’t expect any freebies in late August.

Madison River Fly Fishing Report

One of the best dryfly years in recent memory continues on the Madison River. Ants and other smaller terrestrials have become key players in addition to hoppers, mayflies, and the all important caddis. River flows are still great and temps are perfect. Don’t be afraid to fish the middle of the river. Lots of big brown hiding behind subsurface rocks. The bite has been steady from mid morning on. Cooler mornings mean you don’t have to race to be the first boat on. Our Madison River fly fishing guides have been mostly fishing from Ruby Creek down through Ennis, but the bite has been good all over. Look for this trend to continue through the end of the month. Flows are great right now for getting out the boat and using your feet to catch trout. Wade on!

Missouri River Fly Fishing Report

Dryfly fishing is all about opportunities. There are lots of opportunities right now on the Missouri River. Many long time Missouri River fly fishing guides are saying its as good as they’ve ever seen it in August right now. The trico hatch is thick, consistent, and keeping lots of fish looking up. Terrestrial fishing has picked up and anglers can expect action all day long with ants, beetles, and hoppers. Nymphing and trolling with crayfish has remained solid on the upper river along the grass edges and up against the bank. Aquatic grass is there but not too bad. Shaping up to be one heck of a fall. Still need to book your Missouri River fly fishing trip for Fall 2018? Give us a call today.

Yellowstone National Park Fly Fishing Report

Fly fishing in Yellowstone Park has been great all month and looks to only improve as we move into late August. Not too crowded this year. Maybe the smoke has been keeping people at bay. Focus your efforts on the Yellowstone River and its many tributaries. Flows are low enough that crossing streams is very possible now, a wade fishermen’s paradise. You’ll find our guides mostly on the Lamar River and Slough Creek in the AM through PM and occasionally on Soda Butte Creek in the PM. Lots of hoppers and smaller terrestrials around. Had a couple grey drakes flying around this past week with the cooler and rainy weather. A sure sign that fall is coming. Hot tip for you: probably not worth hiking into Cache Creek to fish it. Too low. Had to find that out the hard way.

Paradise Valley Spring Creek Fly Fishing Report

With everything else fishing so well right now, the Spring Creeks are not our first choice to fish right now. Fishing has been good, but you can fish the creeks all year! August is a great time to fish more seasonal waters. Head into Yellowstone National Park for endless miles of great wade fishing or wander up the Gallatin River for great wade fishing closer to Bozeman, MT. If you must fish the creeks here’s the scoop: Hatches have been thin, blind fishing with hoppers, ants, and beetles is your best bet for dryfly success. Nymphing in the riffles with scuds and midges remains good. Look for sulphur hatches to improve in the coming weeks.

Madison River Fly Fishing Guides, Trips, and Outfitting

Madison River Fly Fishing Guides, Trips, and Outfitting

Madison River Fly Fishing with the Montana Angling Company

Madison River fly fishing trips with our Montana fly fishing guides are the best way for anglers to enjoy the blue-ribbon fly fishing for trout on the renowned Madison River. Anglers can expect strong hatches, majestic scenery, and quality fly fishing on every Madison River fly fishing trip.

Our Madison River fly fishing guides and outfitter are all experienced professionals, committed to making our anglers’ trips truly memorable with an emphasis on custom outfitting, expert guiding, and authentic Montana fly fishing experiences. Our outfitter handles all bookings personally and works directly with anglers to create the perfect Montana fly fishing trips.

Fly fishing the Madison River is one of the classic Montana fly fishing trips every angler should experience. Hatches cycle throughout the year and make for excellent dry fly fishing, nymphing, and streamer fishing year-round. The prime fly fishing season runs from June 20-October 31.

 

Our Madison River Fly Fishing Trips

Our Madison River fly fishing trip offerings include both float fishing and wade fishing options. Our guides operate high-end drift boats and rafts, outfitted for fly fishing, on float trips and have the experience to provide productive, safe, and fun fly fishing trips for anglers of all skill levels. Our outfitting includes guided fly fishing trips on the Upper Madison River, Lower Madison River, and the Madison River in Yellowstone National Park.

 

Madison River Fly Fishing Guides & Outfitting

The Montana Angling Company is proud to work with the hardest working professional fly fishing guides on the Madison River. All of our guides are committed to customer service and will put in the work to make your next trip, your best one yet. Anglers of all skill levels, from beginner to seasoned anglers, will find our guides add value to their Montana fly fishing trip. Our guides are excellent teachers equally capable of introducing fly fishing to anglers of all backgrounds as well as expanding existing knowledge of fly fishing, the Madison River, and Montana.

Our Madison River outfitting includes a variety of world-class trips. Day Trips are perfect for anglers with only a day or two to enjoy the fly fishing on the Madison River, while our Custom Trips offer a fully immersive experience that includes not only the fly fishing on the Madison River, but also other local blue ribbon fisheries including the Yellowstone River, Gallatin River, and more. We have partnered with the premier lodges on the Madison Valley to offer anglers all-inclusive fly fishing and lodging packages that combine our expert guiding with world-class lodging.

Anglers interested in learning more about our Madison River fly fishing guides, trips, and outfitting are encouraged to contact us today.

 

Montana Fly Fishing Skills: Learn How to Cast a Fly Rod

Montana Fly Fishing Skills: Learn How to Cast a Fly Rod

How to Cast a Fly Rod

Teaching anglers how to cast a fly rod and cast it well is something our Montana fly fishing guides do on a daily basis. Sometimes we work with seasoned anglers to polish up their stroke but many times we are starting from scratch and teach novice anglers who have never picked up a fly rod the basics. From our experience teaching hundreds of anglers the fundamentals of the cast, we have found a way to break it up into 3 basic steps. These steps are geared primarily toward casting a fly rod with a single dry fly, out of a drift boat, for wild Montana trout as we do so often, but is applicable across the whole wide world of fly fishing.

1. Start Low, Pause High, Finish Low

This is the core of the fly fishing cast. Forget 10 and 2 and leave your metronome at home. While all of that works well in the movies, modern fast action rods don’t respond as well to the slower and wider casting stroke of yesteryear. 90% of all fly casts during a day of fishing are the “pick up and lay down cast” where an angler already has line out and simply needs to recast, reposition the fly, or possibly shorten or lengthen their line. So this is the cast we are most concerned with.

The first step to mastering this cast is to always start your cast with the rod tip low (in the water), pause on your backcast with the rod tip high (closer to 12 than 2), and finish with your rod tip low (in the water). The result is a downward trajectory to your cast that will ultimately result in a fly-first presentation where your fly lands prior to your line. This allows for better mending, hooksets, and accuracy.

2. Slack is the enemy

The fly cast works when energy is directly transferred from your body, through your fly line and rod, and to your fly. In order to accomplish this, your fly line has to remain tight and connected to each other part throughout your casting stroke. The fly cast is all about efficient use of energy. Simply put slack line in your cast kills energy and kills your cast.

Starting your cast with loose line on the water is akin to starting off behind the 8-ball. You are setting yourself up to fail. Defeat slack in all parts of your cast. Make sure your line is taught before you attempt to pick up your line. Pinch the line under the index finger of the hand you hold the rod with and pull it in. Make sure the rod tip is low and line is tight before you start your cast.

The fly cast should be thought of two separate casts: a back cast followed by a forward cast. It isn’t one continuous motion but rather two separate casts with a defined pause in between. This pause should occur at the apex of the back cast and is what gives your fly line a chance to roll-out and remove slack in your back cast. If you do not wait long enough and you start your forward cast before your back cast you will just be beating air, your line will not go back forward. You can’t go two directions at the same time.

Defeat slack in your line and pause at the top of your cast. Combine this with starting low, pausing high, and finishing low and you will be well on your way to great casting.

3. Cast with your big muscle groups

Keep your elbow glued to your hip and cast with your arm and shoulder, not your wrist. It is common to see new fly anglers that have previous spin fishing experience to try to cast with just their wrist. If you follow the previous two steps and use your wrist you will get passable results. But you will tire out, quickly, trust me. Some wrist casters may make it a whole day but most won’t make it to lunch with out complaining about tired hands and wrists. The fly cast is a dynamic and powerful motion. Your wrist muscles are too small to handle all of the force. To fix this, glue your casting elbow to your hip, keep your wrist totally stiff, and pivot around your elbow with your arm and shoulder when you cast. Using these larger muscle groups will quickly translate to more power, better distance control, and longer days on the water with less fatigue.

The fly cast isn’t a super human feat of strength but rather a deliberate stroke that requires commitment to each step along the way and efficient use of your body and fly rod. If you ever feel like you have to muscle the fly out, stop, you are doing too much. Reset, go back to the basics, and think about stopping sooner, waiting longer and casting with your shoulder, not with your wrist. This will save you a lot of frustration and sore muscles.

Bozeman, MT Fly Fishing Report 11/6/18

Bozeman, MT Fly Fishing Report 11/6/18

Bozeman Fly Fishing Overview

Election day fishing report. Stop by your polling place and cast a vote on the way to the river. If you are a Montana resident and support clean water and responsible mining, great day to vote yes on I-186. Visit https://www.yeson186.org/ to learn more.

Snow day in Bozeman. Coming down pretty good, reports indicating several feet deep in the high mountains. What does this mean for anglers that aren’t ready to call it a season yet? Still lots of great fly fishing to be had in Bozeman, Montana. Fly fishing pressure is non-existent on our local rivers like the Madison River and Yellowstone River. Weather becomes the major variable that can hamper success on our rivers in November. Water temps are still great and the fish are on the feed. Float tips this past week on the Madison River were great. Calmer days with highs above freezing will be your best bet from here on out.

Fish have started to move into deeper, slower water as temperatures have started to come down. Targeting them with nymphs and streamers will be your best bet from here on out. DePuy’s Spring Creek will be your best bet for dry fly fishing close to Bozeman, MT from here on out. The Missouri River and the Big Horn River will be your next best bets. Good midge hatches and lingering BWOs.

Winter/Spring Special Guide Trips run from now until the end of April 2019. Good fly fishing at a great price. Give us a shout to book your Bozeman fly fishing trip today.

Madison River Fly Fishing Report

The best float fishing option around for anglers fly fishing in Bozeman, MT this month. Flows are still above 1000CFS, water temperatures are great and lots of great trout on the feed. The trout on the Madison River have started to stack up in deeper, slower runs, and targeting these buckets with nymphs will produce consistent results. Our anglers and Bozeman fly fishing guides have had great luck in the past week with stonefly nymphs, worms, lightning bugs, midges, and larger caddis nymphs. Streamer fishing has also been excellent. Black, white, olive, and flashy have all been productive. Lots of lake fish have moved into the lower half of the upper Madison River. Great fly fishing for larger than your average rainbow trout and brown trout. We saw quite a few redds this past week, steer clear of these spawning areas, especially when wading.

Yellowstone River Fly Fishing Report

Streamer bite has been solid and nymphing has been good. The dry fly hatches are just about done for the year, but fly fishing with attractor flies will still yield some strikes. Great time of year to target the middle of the river. Nymphing 3.5-5ft deep on the current edges will be your best way to keep rods bent. The whitefish spawn is full on right now and they are feeding extremely aggressively. Enjoy catching whitefish, lots of fun in between trout. Our fly fishing guides generally nymph with larger attractor nymphs through November. Large stonefly patterns, buggers, crayfish, or princes are great top flies. Hare’s ears, princes, jig style flies, and lightning bugs are great second flies. Streamer fishing with smaller buggers has been productive and will continue to be all month long. Anglers hoping to catch the biggest and baddest of brown trout this month will want to throw big flies and cover lots of water. Big brown trout on the Yellowstone River never come easy. Just keeping casting.

Missouri River Fly Fishing Report

The ‘Mo continues to provide and will continue to do so all through the month of November. We are looking forward to our annual end of season Thanksgiving fly fishing trip that has previously been on the Big Horn River, but will be held on the Missouri River this year. Lots of fun, no matter what the weather decides to do. The upper Missouri River from Holter Dam to Craig will be the main attraction for visiting angler this month. The nymphing will continue to be outstanding. Czech nymphs, midges, sow bugs, smaller buggers, and larger attractor nymphs like worms and hare’s ears will all be on the table. Look for fish to move into slower water as water temperatures continue to drop. Having a hair trigger for setting the hook becomes very important. If your bobber so much as wiggles, set that hook. And don’t be surprised if it doesn’t take off running. For the dry fly anglers, opportunities will continue to present themselves all month long but it will not be an all day thing. A window here and a window there. Mostly midges with some lingering BWOs. If I was planning a November fly fishing trip to Montana, the Missouri River would be first on my list.

Paradise Valley Spring Creek

From here on out probably the best overall option for anglers fly fishing in Bozeman, Montana. DePuy’s, Armstrong’s, and Nelson’s Spring Creeks will continue to fish well all month long. And the warming huts on DePuy’s Spring Creek are a great place to ride out winter weather. Midges will continue to hatch all month long. Calm wind helps a lot. Lots of fish in the creeks right now, and look for numbers to only increase through the winter into March. Nymphing has been outstanding with small midges #18-22 and sowbugs #16-20. Larger scuds have also been producing. Nymphing the runs below riffles in the morning and dry fly fishing after 11:30 AM has been a good program for all day success.

Gallatin River

As it gets colder and days get shorter, proximity to Bozeman, MT becomes a major consideration for a day of fly fishing. And the Gallatin River sure is close. Nymphing with larger attractor nymphs including stoneflies, worms, larger hares ears, and princes will be great on the Gallatin River from here on out. No rod fees, lots of access, and consistently good fishing for wild trout make it a great option for all anglers in November. Probably where you will find our fly fishing guides fishing. Streamer fishing can also be great if you are willing to keep moving and covering water. Small, heavy buggers are your best bet.

Yellowstone National Park

CLOSED FOR THE SEASON.

Bozeman, MT Fly Fishing Report 7/29/18

Bozeman, MT Fly Fishing Report 7/29/18

Bozeman Fly Fishing Overview

The hoppers are here. The banks of the Yellowstone River, Madison River, Missouri River, and many rivers of Yellowstone National Park are buzzing and clicking all day long as hundreds and hundreds of the tasty trout snacks are starting to fly around. We have seen trout on all of these rivers start to key in on our favorite of the terrestrials and it is making for great fly fishing for our anglers and Bozeman, Montana fly fishing guides. Expect hopper fishing to only improve over the next month. Plenty of cold water this year. Shaping up to be one great August to fly fish in Montana

Yellowstone River Fly Fishing Report

Flows are below 6K and the fly fishing on the Yellowstone River is great. Hoppers, PMDs, caddisflies, goldenstones, and yellow sallies have been the daily trout fare. Throw the dryfly, stick with it, and you will be rewarded. Nymphing and streamer fishing is as good as ever, both up on the banks and out in the middle. Flows against the cut banks are slowing and mid-river riffles are quickly dropping into shape. Wade fish or drift, either way will work. Our favorite bugs? X-caddis, parachutes, chubby chernobyls, PTs, hares ears, pat’s rubber legs, 20 incher stones, lightning bugs, and all sorts of sculpins.

Madison River Fly Fishing Report

The Madison continues to provide. Hoppers, yellow sallies, PMDs, and king caddis are all on the menu. Tricos around early. The middle of the river has been treating us well, but look for a few big trout tucked in tight to the banks starting to look for hoppers. The Madison is fishing well top to bottom. Flows are prime for getting out of the boat and doing some wading. Look for fishing to continue to be great through August thanks to the completion of the Hebgen Dam project. Expect good flows and water temps to keep the bite going all summer long.

Missouri River Fly Fishing Report

Tricos have arrived. Daily hatches are thick. Head to the upper river for the best action. Bring your best reach cast. Lots of targets out there but fish to one, don’t group shoot. Set if you think its close. Fishing is good from the dam all the way to cascade. Nymphing along the grass edges continues to produce big numbers. Try a big attractor (crayfish, bugger, etc.) followed by a match the hatch nymph behind. Don’t let the grass scare you. The fish are there and on the feed. Look for hopper and ant action to only get better in the coming weeks.

Paradise Valley Spring Creek Fly Fishing Report

Smorgasbord out there but not much to say for the consistency of things. Seeing fair to good hatches but varies a lot day to day. Tiny midges, tricos, PMDs, sulphurs, and terrestrials are all in play on top. Nymphing for numbers continues to be good. We like small midges and 7x tippet for better hookup rates. Get out there early, the bugs are already there.

Yellowstone National Park

The park is finally fully open to fly fishing as we have passed the annual July 15th opening of the Yellowstone River and there is almost no better place to be as a fly fisherman right now. We have seen great hatches and equally great fishing across the Yellowstone River drainage: drakes on the Lamar and Soda Butte, PMDs on Slough creek, stoneflies still on the Yellowstone River, and terrestrials everywhere. We love fishing for native cutthroat trout. These rivers are chock full of ‘em. No better time than the present to get in on some cutty love!