Home › Outdoors › Hunting & Fishing
Fishing report, August 21
Published August 21, 2007 at midnight
Colorado Division of Wildlifes fishing report for the week of Aug. 22, 2007:
Stocking report
Arkansas River No. 3B, below Pueblo Dam
Big Creek Lake, lower, southwest of Pearl
Chalk Creek Lake, west of Nathrop
Frantz Lake, northwest of Salida
Green Mountain Reservoir, northwest of Dillon
Gunnison River, North Fork No. 1, above Gunnison River
Mirror Lake, east of Tincup
OHaver Reservoir, southwest of Poncha Springs
Pothole Lake No. 1, lower, north of Taylor Reservoir
Pothole Lake No. 2, upper, northof Taylor Reservoir
Poudre River No. 2, North Fork to tunnel
Riverside Ponds, Salida
Shadow Mountain Reservoir, south of Grand Lake
South Platte River No. 6, above Lake George
Spring Creek No. 1, above Taylor River
Spring Creek Reservoir, northeast of Almont
Taylor Reservoir, northeast of Almont
Taylor River No. 1, above Almont
Wolford Mountain Reservoir, north of Kremmling
Wrights Lake, southwest of Nathrop
Overview
During the heat of August, fishermen might consider taking the high
road to timberline. Or hiking on a mountain trail leading upward, even
upward to some Alpine lake nestled in a cirque among jagged mountain
peaks, where banks of snow may linger through the hottest of
summers.
Such crown jewels of the high country can be found in mountain ranges
across the state. Some are relatively accessible; others require
significant efforts to reach. Some are mere potholes, and most are
deep. Invariably their setting is spectacular.
U.S. Forest Service maps are a good starting point for finding high-mountain lakes. Topographic maps provide greater detail, including access routes, elevations and the general contour of the region.
Though some high-mountain lakes are barren, most have native cutthroat trout, periodically replenished by the Colorado Division of Wildlife. Some also might have other species, including brook trout.
Alpine lakes have a devout following, and they have inspired their share of fishing lore. Often they are temperamental, either on or off, with little in between.
A lake might seem virtually lifeless for a day or two. A fishermans best offerings are ignored. Suddenly, the surface is live with feeding fish. Now, the fisherman can do no wrong. The same flies and lures that were ineffective earlier now are all but irresistible to the fish. The action is as spectacular as the setting.
Abruptly as it began, the action stops. The lake again appears lifeless. The scenery remains as breathtaking as ever.
Meanwhile, back in the lowlands, the fishing largely remains in its summer doldrums. Fish tend to be in deeper water, and the activity has slowed on most lakes and reservoirs, whether cold or warm water.
Even so, some change could be on the way. Surface activity by wipers, a summertime staple on many low-elevation lakes, is likely to improve as the moon grows full. Catfish should be moving into the shallows at night.
Stream fishermen generally continue to find good conditions. Though the main summer hatches largely are over, terrestrial patterns still are very effective.
Spawning kokanee salmon from Blue Mesa Reservoir continue to move into the Gunnison and East rivers, on their way to the DOWs Roaring Judy hatchery. Catch-and-release fishing for the salmon is permitted. Check the DOWs regulations booklet for specific closures and other details.
Denver Metro
- Arvada Reservoir Fishing for trout has been
fair on Power Bait, salmon eggs and small spinning lures. Early
mornings and late afternoons usually are the best times to fish this
time of year. Some catfish are being caught from the shore on night
crawlers and other traditional catfish baits. Only electric motors are
permitted for boating. Belly boats may not be used.
- Aurora Reservoir The water temperature is
70 degrees. Trout fishing from shore is slow to fair. The best area
from shore is the east end of the dam, using Power Bait from a slip rig
cast 40-50 yards out. Evening and morning fishing has been most
productive. From boats, fishing is slow to fair trolling with night
crawlers and Pop Geer, or anchoring in 25-35 feet of water and dropping
down crawlers or Power Bait. Walleye action currently is fair to good.
However, most are under the legal size limit. Most walleyes are being
caught using bottom bouncers with crawlers, jigs or spoons. Perch
action is fair to good using jigs. All other species are slow, or no
reports have come in. The limit for trout is two fish. Boating is
restricted to electric motors.
- Barr Lake The water level remains high and
the temperatures is 74 degrees. The overall summer fishing has slowed
with hot temperatures and the algae bloom. Catfish have been taken in
the evening southwest of the boat ramp, and a few walleyes and wipers
have been caught by boating fishermen.
- Bear Creek Fish in the tailwater right
below Evergreen. People using small Pheasant Tails or small midges have
been having a great time.
- Bear Creek Reservoir Fishing in the
reservoir has been slow. Rainbow trout have been caught on rainbow
Power Bait or salmon eggs. Some smallmouth bass have been taken on
worms.
- Berkeley Lake The 40-acre lake is stocked
with catchable-sized trout in the spring, and the trout provide most of
the early season action. The lake also has largemouth bass, bluegills
crappie and channel catfish, among other warm-water species. Fishing
for those improves later in the season. Boats are not permitted. A
recreation center, playground and other amenities are available on the
south side of the lake.
- Centennial Park Lake The lake is stocked
with catchable-sized trout in the spring. The lake also has a variety
of warm-water fish, including bass, crappie, catfish and perch, which
comprise most of the summertime catch. No boats are allowed on the
15-acre lake. A playground, restrooms and disabled-accessible fishing
pier are available.
- Chatfield Ponds Bass are close to shore.
Fish with a large shiner or fat worm right off the bank.
- Chatfield Reservoir The level remains good
and the temperature is above 70 degrees. The reservoir has plenty of
walleyes. Boaters working Rapalas along the dam face have done all
right. The spillway also is a likely location, but its largely
hit-or-miss. The minimum size for walleyes at the lake is 18 inches,
and only one exceeding 21 inches may be kept daily. Boaters are
reminded to watch out for unmarked hazards.
- Cherry Creek Reservoir The water level is
normal and the temperature is about 80 degrees. Boaters are getting
walleyes off the face of the dam on Rapalas or a Lindy Rig tipped with
a leech. Trout fishermen are catching a few on minnows off a
bobber.
- Clear Creek (above Colorado 119) Fish along
the edges with black Woolly Buggers or dry flies with a dropper.
Respect private property along the creek.
- Clear Lake The lake south of Georgetown off
the Guanella Pass road offers fair to good fishing for catchable-sized
rainbow trout. It also has some brook trout and a few browns. Fishing
can be fairly good on a variety of baits and lures, but success largely
depends on periodic stocking. The north shore often is the best
location. No boats are permitted on the lake.
- Evergreen Lake Try an Uncle Bucks
spinner or night crawlers around the inlet for some decent-sized trout.
Watch for tiger muskies in the shallows.
- Georgetown Lake Catching trout here usually
is little problem and regular stocking keeps the fishing good. Use
chartreuse Power Bait off the bottom or a night crawler broken in
half.
- Gross Reservoir Fishing for trout has been
fair. The inlet often is best, but the dam area also can be productive.
Try night crawlers or small spoons. Watch the shallows for tiger
muskies. A large, shallow-running Rapala might tempt one.
- Jim Baker Reservoir A few trout may be
taken on Woolly Worms and minnows off a bobber. The lake also has
smallmouth bass, walleyes, panfish and tiger muskies. Boats are not
allowed. Fishing hours are sunrise to sunset.
- Ketring Park Lake The 15-acre lake has a
variety of mostly small warm-water fish. The action has been slow.
Boats are not allowed.
- Main Lake The fluctuating 45-acre lake has
bass up to 18 inches, crappie, bluegills, catfish and other warm-water
species. Fishing has been slow to fair. Evenings generally have been
best. No boats are allowed on the lake.
- Quincy Reservoir The water temperature is
72 degrees. The water level is slowly dropping and will continue to
drop over the remainder of the summer. Trout fishing is slow to fair
using Callibaetis patterns and Hares Ears. Bass fishing has
slowed some, but is still rated at fair to good using jigs,
spinnerbaits, crawfish imitations, crankbaits, buzzbaits and surface
plugs. Perch action is fair to good on jigs. Most are on the small
side. Quincy Reservoir is restricted to fishing with artificial flies
and lures. Please see the definition of artificial in the Colorado
Division of Wildlifes fishing regulations booklet. The limit for
trout at Quincy is two. Bass must be at least 18 inches to keep. All
boats must be hand launched. Electric motors only. Information:
303-693-5463.
- Rocky Mountain Lake The lake has a variety
of warm-water fish including largemouth bass, panfish and catfish.
Trout are stocked in the springtime, and a few might still be taken off
the bottom on Power Bait. Boats are not allowed. The minimum size for
largemouth bass is 15 inches. A playground and restrooms are
nearby.
- Sloans Lake Summertime fishing has been
slow. An occasional bass may be taken on plastic worms or night
crawlers, and carp offer other possibilities.
- Smith Reservoir Warm-water fishing has been
poor to fair. The 45-acre lake has crappie, bass, bluegills, catfish
and perch. Its largemouth and smallmouth bass provide potentially good
fishing well into the summer. Early and late in the day tend to be the
best times. No boats are allowed on the lake.
- South Platte River (Waterton Canyon) The
river has been unusually high and discolored. The section from Strontia
Springs Dam downstream to 300 yards above the Marston diversion
structure is restricted to artificial flies and lures and offers the
best fishing. The most effective lures for spin-fishermen often are
small Panther Martins, Mepps or Blue Fox spinners. Night crawlers
usually are the most effective bait in the unrestricted lower
stretch.
- Standley Lake The lake is still at capacity
and the water temperature has been around 72 degrees. Trout fishing has
slowed down from the shore, but a few still are caught on Power Bait
and salmon eggs early in the morning. Boaters are having fair success
trolling for walleyes, wipers, trout and bass using a variety of spoons
and spinners. A few large walleyes and wipers were caught last week. A
$6 fee is required for drive-in access. Walk-in access is free. Permits
for boats under 20 horsepower are available for $15 per day.
Information: Standley Lake Visitor Center, 303-425-1097.
- Washington Park lakes Crappie running up to
10 inches, bass, bluegills and catfish can provide some interesting
fishing in an urban-park setting. Try a small Fle Fly jig or live
minnow below a bobber about 3 feet down for crappie during the cool
times of the day.
- Webster Lake The lake is stocked with catchable-sized trout in spring and early summer. Fishing for them usually is good early but tapers off during the heat of summer. The lake also has channel catfish, bass, perch and crappie. Warm-water fishing has been fair in the mornings and late afternoons. No boats are allowed. A disabled-access fishing pier, playground and other facilities are available.
Northeast
- Barnes Meadow Reservoir Fishing pressure
has been moderate on the weekends. Power Baits, salmon eggs and
spinning lures including Kastmasters, Rooster Tails, Mepps, Dardevles
and the like, as well as fly fishing, will work well. No motorized
boats are allowed, and please pack out what you pack in.
- Big Creek Lakes Fishing for catchable-sized
rainbow trout has slowed but remains fairly good on spinners and the
typical baits. A few mackinaw still are taken, but the action has
slowed from the early season. The bag and possession limit for lake
trout and splake on Lower Big Creek Lake is three fish, of which only
one can exceed 26 inches.
- Big Thompson River Flows are at 149 cfs.
Caddis and terrestrials are offering the best action. With the hot
weather, expect caddis hatches. Try No. 16 Elk Hairs and Silveys
Visibles, and Z Wings, Glo Bubbles and Hotwires for nymphs.
Hopper/dropper rigs are a good way to fish the Big T. A No. 10-12
hopper and a bead-head can make for some fun fishing. For spin-fishing,
Mepps and Panther Martins will work well. In the non-catch-and-release
section, salmon eggs are an ideal bait. Inquire in Estes Park for more
details.
- Boedecker Reservoir Fishing for catfish
from late afternoon into the night has been fair on chicken livers,
dead minnows and commercially prepared baits. Other species have been
slow.
- Boulder Reservoir Fishing for smallmouth
bass remains fair along the dam on jigs of various colors, Gitzits and
plastic worms. Some have been around 16-17 inches. Walleyes have been
plentiful, but they tend to be relatively small. Trolling has been
fair, but the activity generally is over by 9 a.m. Boating fees for the
reservoir have discouraged a number of fishermen.
- Boyd Lake The lake has been dropping. The
surface temperature is 78 degrees. Clarity is normal unless boat
traffic is heavy. Fishing has slowed, but with a little effort fish
still can be caught. The Huron Cove area recently produced some perch,
bluegills, white bass, catfish and small walleyes. Fishing for
largemouth bass has been challenging. Crankbaits have taken a few up to
15 inches by the pump house. Trolling for walleyes remains fair, at
best. Fishing for catfish has been fair to good at night. Check the
DOWs regulations booklet for size restrictions on walleyes and
largemouth and smallmouth bass. The Colorado Department of Public
Health and Environment has issued a mercury advisory for large walleyes
from the lake. Information: Park office, 970-669-1739.
- Carter Reservoir Trout fishing has been
slow. Walleye fishing has been excellent on the east side between
Carter Knolls and Dam 1. Walleye fishing is best using Flatfish,
crawler harnesses and pink Wedding Rings.
- Chambers Lake Fishing for rainbow trout has
been productive. The water level can fluctuate, but at last report was
very low and the boat ramp was not usable. The campground is open.
Power Baits, spinners, Kastmasters and similar lures will work well.
Remember, no live minnows may be used as bait above the 7,000-foot
elevation on the Eastern Slope of Colorado.
- Cowdrey Lake Cowdrey Lake is fishing well.
Hatches of damselflies, Callibaetis and some large caddis have been
coming off daily. The moss in the lake is growing fast, which makes for
tough fishing from the shore. During the hatch, try stripping a damsel
nymph in about 5 feet of water. Nymph fishermen should try fishing
below an indicator with a three-fly rig. Go 8-10 feet below an
indicator, fishing a Callibaetis, to a midge, to a Copper John.
- Dixon Reservoir The fishery appears healthy
after some concerns about winter kill. At last report, the water level
had come up, putting some of the weed beds under water and making
fishing easier. Fishing generally has been slow, however, though some
small bass and large carp might be taken. The temperature is 81-84
degrees and the algae bloom is in full swing.
- Douglas Reservoir The level is dropping,
the water is murky and the temperature is in the low 80s. Boat docks
are out of the water, but at last report, the ramp still was usable.
Fishing for small bass, crappie and carp is fair. Wiper action is
spotty. Trout fishing is marginal, at best.
- Dowdy Lake (Red Feather) As the summer
temperatures are rising, this is a great escape for some fishing.
Anglers have reported slow to poor fishing in recent days, however. Try
Power Bait from shore or casting Kastmasters back toward shore from a
boat.
- East Delaney Lake East Delaney is fishing
very well. Good hatches of damselflies, Callibaetis and caddis are
coming off daily. Damsel and Callibaetis nymphs are working the best
throughout the hatch. In the evening, try throwing mosquito patterns to
rising fish along the shoreline. The moss is starting to become a
problem. Try using a float tube or pontoon to fish the lake. Inquire in
Walden for more information. A habitat stamp is required to use the
state wildlife area.
- Estes Lake Lake Estes has been fishing very
well, especially in the mornings or evenings. For fly fishing, try
midges in size 18-22 for surface activity in the mornings and evenings.
Try Woolly Buggers, midges, caddis, hoppers, ants and beetles for
cruising fish. For spin fishing, try flashy lures and bait, especially
salmon eggs at the inlet. Fishing around the lake also can be good with
a worm or Power Bait.
- Flatiron Reservoir It was recently stocked
with 800 2- to 5-pound trout. Fishing is best using salmon eggs, worms
and lime-green Power Bait.
- Hidden Lakes The road to the lakes is open
and U.S. Forest Service campgrounds are available.
- Hohnholz Lakes Lake No. 3 is the place to
be. Of the three lakes, it has the largest trout and fishing is by
artificial flies and lures only. Use a black Woolly Bugger or a
gold-colored Kastmaster. The fish are big and hungry.
- Horsetooth Reservoir The water level
continues to drop, the midchannel temperature is 74 degrees and clarity
is good. Fishing for smallmouth bass remains fair. Most are in or
adjacent to deeper water. A variety of soft-plastic lures fished along
rocks and dropoffs may take some, and spinnerbaits and crankbaits can
be effective late in the day. Anglers have reported fair walleye action
in the Inlet Bay and South Bay areas. Reports also have come in of some
large walleyes taken along Soldier Dam, as well as during the nighttime
in the South Bay area. Some nice-size crappie have been caught at the
night in Inlet Bay. Silver Rat-L-Traps and white Mister Twisters are
still a good bet. All walleyes must be at least 18 inches long, but
only one can exceed 21 inches.
- Jackson Reservoir Fishing is slow to fair
for trout and small catfish in the outlet using standard baits. A few
undersize are being wipers being caught from the west shore using
Mister Twisters and worms. Fishing is slow in the lake for all species.
No reports have come in of fish being caught from boats. Since nights
are getting cooler and water is being released, fishing should begin to
pick up soon in both the outlet and the lake. The water level is about
3-4 feet down from full, and the lake is open to boating. Water is
being released for irrigation purposes. At this time, it appears the
reservoir will be open to boating through Labor Day Weekend and beyond;
however, this is only speculation.
- Joe Wright Reservoir Grayling are the
primary species caught in the lake, although rainbow and cuttbow trout
can be caught, as well. In recent days, fishing for 10- to 12-inch
grayling has been fairly good for fly fishermen in float tubes, canoes
or similar small craft. A variety of wet flies fished a little below
the surface over deep water has been effective. Fishing for trout has
been slow. The water level is down about 20 feet, visibility is good
and the temperature is 58-59 degrees. The lake has a special regulation
that only artificial flies and lures may be used (no bait fishing). The
daily bag and possession limit is two trout.
- Jumbo Reservoir The reservoirs water
level has dropped 6 feet from full over the last week because
irrigation has started. The most accessible boat ramp is the one on the
east. The others are almost out of the water. The trout fishing is fair
by trolling. Shad have been stocked into the reservoir, which will help
the young walleyes gain size. A habitat stamp is required to enter
Jumbo and Red Lion Annex.
- Lake John Lake John is fishing well. Great
hatches of damselflies and Callibaetis are evident 10 a.m.-2 p.m. every
day, weather permitting. During the hatch, try one of two things: If
youre a dry fly guy, put on a dry fly that imitates a damsel or
Callibaetis, followed by an emerger of that same bug. Try to locate
fish by seeing a rise, and cast to it. (Try to guess the direction in
which the fish is feeding.) If youre a nymph fisherman, try
fishing below an indicator with a three-fly rig. Go 8-10 feet below an
indicator fishing a Callibaetis, to a damsel, to a Copper John.
Spin-fishermen try Tasmanian Devils, Kastmasters, Rapalas and Mepps
Spinners. Inquire in Walden for the latest.
- Laramie River at Hohnholz SWA The camping
area remains the best spot for fishing. Trout are taking small Pheasant
Tails and RS-2s. Fishermen may use only artificial flies and lures, and
the bag and possession limit is two trout.
- Lon Hagler Reservoir Fishing generally is
slow, although some wipers and white bass have been taken very early
and late in the day. Some 2- to 3-pound catfish also have been taken at
night on the traditional catfish baits.
- Lonetree Reservoir The water level has
dropped but remains good. The temperature is 80-81 degrees, and
visibility is 2-3 feet. Fishing for small- to medium-sized bluegills
has been good along the outside edge of weed beds. An occasional perch
and crappie also might be taken, and some wiper boils have been noted
just before sunset. Fishing for walleyes has been slow. The minimum
size is 15 inches, and fishermen may take only one walleye longer than
21 inches per day.
- Long Draw Reservoir The road is open to the
lake and campground. Fishing has picked up and can be exceptional at
the right time of day. No bait fishing is allowed, but spinning lures
and artificial flies will work well.
- Lost Lake (at Chambers) Fishing pressure
has been high on the weekends, with some success. The lake has been
stocked, and Power Baits, salmon eggs and worms, as well as various
lures, will work well. The lake has a litter problem, so pack out what
you pack in.
- North Delaney Lake Its fishing is
good. The best reports are coming from night fishermen. Try fishing
from 7 p.m. to midnight. Throw size 2-4 black and olive leeches. Try
using a slow-sinking line or very long leader. The fish are fairly
deep, at 8-10 feet. Damsel and Callibaetis are coming off thick. Look
for cruising fish along the shore chasing damsels. Nymphing with two or
three flies fished 6-10 feet below an indicator is most productive
during the day. The lake is designated Gold Medal Water, and special
regulations apply. Fishing is by artificial flies and lures only. The
limit is two trout. Brown trout of 14-20 inches must immediately be
released. Rainbows and cutthroats of 18-22 inches must be returned to
the water. A habitat stamp is required to use the state wildlife
area.
- North Michigan Lake Fishing is good, with
people catching trout on worms, Power Bait and salmon eggs. Fly fishing
above and below the reservoir also has been very good. Anglers have
been most successful using Woolly Buggers, Prince Nymphs, Pheasant
Tails and a variety of caddis flies.
- North Park alpine lakes The high lakes are
fishing well. Nice-sized cutthroats are being caught on Adams, caddis
patterns and Woolly Buggers.
- North Park streams The tributaries in the
valley are still experiencing unsettled conditions. Heavy afternoon
rains are bringing water levels up. When temperatures are right, look
for feeding fish to be exposed. The hopper-dropper rig is a great bet
this time of year. Under a grasshopper pattern, nymph with gold-ribbed
Hares Ears, Pheasant Tails, Prince Nymphs, 20-Incher stonefly and
leech patterns. Fish are also feeding on PMDs throughout the mornings.
Never walk up on a hole without first scouting it for visible
fish.
- North Platte River Heavy rain last week
raised Platte flows above 400 cfs. This should flush out much of the
moss, creating clean gravel beds for fall browns and improving the ease
of fishing. Clarity should improve over the next few days. In the
meantime, try nymphs, streamers or spinners.
- North Sterling Reservoir The lake has
dropped and the Elks Boat Ramp is almost out of the water. The south
ramp is still in good shape. Wiper fishing is fair to good for small
ones, with a few 15- to 18-inchers coming out. Try using green mussels
and shrimp. Catfishing still is good on the flats, with cut bait
working the best. Some smallmouth bass in the 12- to 15-inch range have
appeared along the dam. Work lures along the rocks for best
results.
- Parvin Lake (Red Feather) Fishermen may use
only artificial flies and lures, and the daily and possession limit is
two trout. Using a gold Kastmaster on the south side should produce
some nice browns. A large Prince Nymph will also do well. Boating is
prohibited except for float tubes used for fishing. A habitat stamp is
required to use the state wildlife area.
- Pinewood Reservoir Fishermans Cove remains
the most reliable spot. Salmon eggs and orange Power Bait have been
working best. Tiger muskie fishing has been decent using crawler
jigs.
- Poudre River Through some mostly
weather-related ups and downs, the upper Poudre has been generally
clear and fishing well. Caddis, pale-morning-dun and red-quill mayflies
have been the main hatches. Grasshoppers also have been evident.
Hopper-dropper rigs, with a Pheasant Tail or small Copper John as the
trailing fly have been especially effective.
- Prewitt Reservoir The reservoir water level
has dropped significantly because of irrigation. The boat dock is
barely in, so be careful putting boats on the water. Catfish and wiper
fishing is fair. Walleyes have slowed down. An annual habitat stamp is
required to enter Prewitt Reservoir.
- Ranger Lakes Ranger Lakes are fishing well,
especially the lower lake. Renegades, Bumblebee flies, Rooster Tail
spinners, caddis-pattern flies, Parachute Adams dry flies (in the
evenings), worms, Power Bait and salmon eggs all have been
effective.
- Rocky Mountain National Park Rocky is
fishing very well. The Big Thompson in Moraine is flowing at 31 cfs and
other streams are in great shape. Stoneflies and caddis are the main
hatches. For stoneflies, a No. 16 Yellow Sally is the trick. Elk Hairs,
Silveys Visible Caddis, Last Calls and Z Wings are good choices
for caddis. Terrestrial fishing has been very good, Hoppers (size
10-12,) beetles and ants are excellent searching flies for the park.
Spin fishing will take a few fish; go small and dark on your spinners.
Check the regulations before you fish in the park because it has
special-regulations areas and bait fishing is limited to kids in
selected areas. Inquire in Estes Park for more details.
- Seeley Lake Look for bass in fairly shallow
water around the weed beds. A black or white rabbit-hair jig will do
the job. The minimum size for bass is 15 inches. Habitat stamps are
required.
- Seymour Reservoir The lake is stocked with
catchable-sized rainbow trout. A variety of baits and spinning lures
can be effective. A habitat stamp is required of everyone visiting the
state wildlife area.
- Simpson Ponds With good water levels and
suitable temperatures, the ponds still provided periods of good fishing
for largemouth bass. Soft-plastic lures have been the most consistent.
Also, try topwater baits such as Chug Bugs, poppers and buzzbaits in
the evening. Catfish are active in the evenings into the night and may
be taken on stink baits, chicken livers and other typical catfish
baits.
- South Delaney Lake Fishing in South Delaney
lake has been good. Great damselfly, Callibaetis and caddis hatches are
evident. The best reports are coming from anglers fishing during the
hatch and looking for cruising fish along the shoreline. Try to spot
these fish cruising, throw a damsel nymph in front of one and strip it
to the shore. Fishing at or after dark greatly improves your chances
for catching larger fish. Rapalas, big streamers and crayfish patterns
are best.
- St. Vrain River The Vrain is running at 77
cfs at Lyons. Caddis and Yellow Sallies are good choices. Size 16
Sallies, Elk-Hair Caddis, Last Call Caddis and smaller Stimulators will
work as dries. Nymphs to try include Z-wing Caddis, Glo-bubble Caddis
and Mangy Caddis. Terrestrial fishing is good with Hoppers, size 10-12;
beetles and ants. Spinners such as Mepps or Panther Martin also will
work well.
- Teal and Tiago Lakes The lakes have been
stocked with catchable-sized trout. Fishing with standard baits and
lures has been fair to good. U.S. Forest Service camping facilities are
open for the season.
- Union Reservoir (Calkins) Fishing for
wipers has been slow. Shore fishermen are having some success catching
channel catfish using shad for bait. The reservoir remains full, and
large schools of shad can be seen along the shore.
- Watson Lake The water level is very good,
the temperature is about 72 degrees and visibility is 4-5 feet. Fishing
has been a little tough. A few smallmouth bass have been taken topwater
late in the day, and some sporadic surface activity has been noted at
sunset, but the overall fishing has been slow.
- Wellington Reservoir No. 4 The water level has been dropping. The temperature is 77-80 degrees, and visibility is about two feet. Fishing for all species has slowed with the warm weather. Try a worm off the bottom or a minnow on a bobber.
Northwest
- Blue River (below Green Mountain Reservoir)
Flows below Green Mountain Dam on Tuesday morning were 607 cfs.
Catch-and-release provisions went into effect May 1 for the river from
Green Mountain Dam to the Colorado River. The river holds its share of
trout, but through much of this section courses through private
property.
- Blue River (Dillon to Green Mountain Reservoir)
The flow below Dillon Dam on Tuesday morning was 164
cfs. The fishing between Dillon and Green Mountain remains consistent.
Caddis and BWOs are the main hatches north of town, with occasional
hoppers on the water. In town, midges and mysis remain the best
producers. Below town, BWO nymphs, caddis pupae, Pheasant Tails, Prince
Nymphs, Hares Ears, Stimulators, caddis, BWO dries and hoppers
have been producing.
- Colorado River (below Parshall) The flow at
Parshall, below the Williams Fork tributary, on Tuesday was 253 cfs.
Near Kremmling, below the Blue River confluence, the volume was 1,000
cfs. Though the flow and clarity can vary depending on rain and
tributary flows, conditions generally have been good and the river has
been fishing well downstream as far as State Bridge. Caddis have been
the main hatch this time of year, and grasshoppers and other
terrestrials also have been on the water. Muddler Minnows have been
effective in some of the faster water, and spin fishermen report
results on silver-bladed Mepps spinners.
- Colorado River (Glenwood to Rifle) The
Colorado River has been flowing at 2,850 cfs in Glenwood Springs and
has been too discolored to fish effectively. Below Rifle, the carp
fly-fishing has been very good in the backwater sloughs. Look for
tailing and mudding fish midday picking off crayfish and larger
nymphs.
- Colorado River (near Granby) Flows on
Tuesday were 126 cfs below Windy Gap, 253 cfs below the Williams Fork
confluence near Parshall and 1,000 cfs near Kremmling. Fishing
continues to be good. Caddis, mosquito and many other dry fly patterns
have been working, as have the normal wet flies such as Prince Nymphs,
RS-2s and Copper Johns. Some hopper action has been reported. Make sure
you have insect repellent; the real bugs out there are very hungry. In
the immediate Granby area and downstream to the bridge at the west end
of Byers Canyon, bait fishing is permitted and two fish may be kept.
Inquire in Granby for the latest conditions.
- Crystal River The Crystal River is flowing
at 201 cfs in Carbondale and recently has been too discolored to fish
effectively. Look for the river to clear in the next few days. Before
the river blew last week, the Crystal was fishing very well with
general attractor nymph patterns such as Princes, Copper Johns and
bead-head Pheasant Tails. Some good, though limited, dry fly fishing is
occurring above Redstone, up to Marble, with green drakes and
caddis.
- Elk River The Elk is flowing clear and
fishing well. Dry fly fishing has been good on both the Christina State
Wildlife Area and the upper river. Notable summertime hatches include
caddis, and Trico and red quill mayflies. Grasshoppers and other
terrestrials also are on the water.
- Elkhead Reservoir The reservoir is open,
after a two-year draw down for dam reconstruction. Access for fishing
and day use will be allowed this summer, with camping and other
activities coming on line as construction is completed. The lake
recently was stocked with catchable-sized trout and smallmouth bass.
Fishing is picking up as the water clears. The fish are concentrated,
so please be aware of how sensitive this new fishery is.
- Fryingpan River The Frying Pan River is
flowing at 297 cfs below Ruedi Reservoir and is gin-clear down to Mile
Marker 4. Below Mile Marker 4, the river is slightly discolored from
the mudslide two weeks ago. Green drakes are hatching all the way up to
Mile 12, with heavy PMD hatches throughout the river. The dry fly
fishing is still hot and heavy, though nymph fishing is equally
productive with the slight increase in water levels. Hot flies include
BDE Drakes, Drake Cripples, Drake Sparkleduns, Pink No-Hackles, Yellow
PMD Sparkleduns, Pheasant Tails, RS-2s, Soft Hackle BWOs, Barrs
BWO Emergers, Poxyback Baetis, Tims Mysis and Epoxy Mysis.
- Granby Reservoir Recent rain and some
cooler days improved catching for a short period of time. Otherwise,
fishing has become more challenging with the hot weather, especially
during midday, but catching still is possible. Stream inlets flowing
into the lake remain prime areas. Spinners, Rapalas, slip-bobber rigs
and bottom-fishing techniques all produce fish. Vertical jigging is
working well. Fish of 17 and 12 pounds, and a number in the 2- to
4-pound range recently were caught and released. Trolling with
downriggers for mackinaw, mainly at 50-70 feet, is producing fish
a 35-pounder and several between 10 and 30 pounds. Some kokanee
are being caught, but are proving a match for most fishermen. Inquire
in Granby for the latest conditions.
- Grand Lake Consistent fishing on this deep,
natural lake requires some learning and experience but can be highly
rewarding. Spinners, Rapalas, vertical jigging, fly fishing, trolling
and bait fishing all can produce brown and rainbow trout, large lake
trout and kokanee. Boat access between Grand Lake and Shadow Mountain
Reservoir is possible. The water level of this lake remains constant.
Fishing off the public dock area and in the channel between the lakes
remains good. Trolling is also productive. An early rising fisherman
has a good chance of catching fish. Inquire in Granby for
updates.
- Green Mountain Reservoir Fishing in the
reservoir is slow. Fish are being caught by the inlet and in the river
on gold Kastmasters. Early mornings and evenings are still the best
times to fish.
- Green River No current reports are
available. The Green, in the extreme northwest corner of Colorado,
remains open the year-around, with some of the best fishing in early
April and May, when spawning rainbows and cutthroats begin to feed
aggressively. Bead-head nymphs, stonefly patterns and midge imitations
all can be effective. Fishing usually slows down with warming water in
the summer but picks up again in the fall, when brown trout become
active.
- Harvey Gap Reservoir Even though the water
level dropped during the past week, the fishing still is very good.
Many good-sized perch of 13-14-inches reportedly have been caught in
the northeast end of the lake. The perch have been hitting on a small
hook with a small piece of a night crawler on the end. The catfish have
been active by the dam, mainly after dusk. Some good-sized trout have
been reported by the spillway.
- Highline Lake The bass are still biting.
Several ranging from 3 1/2 to 5 pounds have been taken. Folks are still
catching their limit of crappie on jigs of all colors. The catfish also
have been biting. Bass must be at least 15 inches long to keep. The
water temperature is above 70 degrees. Highlines water level is
at capacity and will be for the rest of the summer. Highline is open
for boating, so fishing usually is best early in the morning. Both boat
ramps are open. Use caution on the east ramp because of a buildup of
silt and debris from the inlet.
- Jerry Creek Reservoirs The Mesa County
reservoirs near Molina will close to public access on Aug. 20 for dam
and spillway reconstruction. They are to reopen on June 1, 2008.
- Lake Avery Hot weather has driven the trout
to deeper water. Power Bait, whether from boats or from the shore, has
been the most consistent producer of late. Trolling with a variety of
hardware also has been taking some fish.
- Mack Mesa Lake The water temperature is 75
degrees. Fishing is very slow. Anglers have reported catching sunfish.
Mack Mesa is restricted to hand-propelled craft or boats with small,
electric trolling motors. Dont forget your PFDs if you are
fishing from a boat.
- Muddy Creek Flows below Wolford Mountain
Reservoir came up significantly last week, and on Tuesday were 120 cfs.
Fly fishermen have done best using black and green Woolly Buggers.
Spinners also have been effective.
- Pearl Lake Pearl Lake fishing is by
artificial flies and lures only. Panther Martins, Rooster Tails and
spoons are seeing some success, with all colors catching fish equally
well across the lake. Fishing has been hit-or-miss in the early morning
and late evening hours. People are still catching fish, but a little
more work is needed to get them to bite.
- Rifle Gap Reservoir The water level has
been dropping, creating lots of mud lines that can stain the water
during windy times. The temperature is 76 degrees. Fishing for mostly
small perch in the west end by Rainbow Point has been good for shore
fishermen. The perch have been biting on small pieces of worm on a
small hook. Several reports have come in of walleyes being caught by
the island and around the boat ramp. Northern pike have become active
this week. A 42-inch, 25-pound pike was caught at Rifle Gap last
week.
- Rio Blanco Lake Hot weather and extensive
weed growth appear to have discouraged many fishermen. Topwater lures
still are taking a few bass and small northern pike early in the
morning, but the weed growth makes a boat a virtual necessity for
fishing.
- Roaring Fork River The Roaring Fork River
is clear and fishing well from Aspen to Carbondale. Below the Crystal
River, the Roaring Fork has been too discolored to fish effectively.
Look for some outstanding streamer fishing above Carbondale, especially
in the mornings and on overcast days. Nymph fishing has been very
productive during midday using No. 14-18 Princes, Copper Johns and San
Juan Worms. Dropper patterns should include BLMs, STDs, Lite Brite
Caddis and Sunken Rusty Spinners. Some limited, though productive, dry
fly fishing is occurring in the evenings during the caddis hatch and
rusty spinner fall.
- Shadow Mountain Reservoir Pumping through
the canal is happening often, making the canal and the area where it
dumps into the reservoir prime fishing areas. Kokanee have been
plentiful. Worms, artificial baits and salmon eggs fished on the bottom
have been productive. Slip-bobber rigs work very well, also. Spinners,
Rapalas and other lures work in the main reservoir. Fishing below
Shadow Mountain Dam has slowed down because of hot weather and algae
conditions. Sow bugs, nymphs, especially Greggs Emergers and RS-2s, and
caddis patterns have been doing well for fly fishermen. Lures and bait
also are productive. Brown trout are plentiful in this area. More
kokanee also are being caught in this location; mealworms are working
well.
- Stagecoach Reservoir Trout fishing is still
slow, but some fish are being caught across the lake on Power Bait,
Rooster Tails, Kastmasters, Dardevles, Panther Martins and other small
spinners. Northern pike are being caught across the lake in 10-20 feet
of water by bouncing tube jigs of baitfish or crawdad colors off the
bottom. One gentleman recently caught a 22.2-pound pike in 10 feet of
water near Pike Cove. In the tailwaters, trout fishing still is very
good. The water is flowing a little faster, but using small (No. 18-22)
midge patterns, scuds, RS-2s, Copper Johns, red San Juan worms and
nymphs will produce some fish. Early morning and before-dark hatches
have been occurring, resulting in some good dry fly fishing.
- Steamboat Lake Fishing has slowed down
because of warm weather. Salmon eggs, Power Bait, Rooster Tails, spoons
and Panther Martins continue to be proven producers through the hot
summer months. Fish have shown more preference to 1/16-ounce lure
sizes, but still aggressively bite up to 3/4-ounce lure weights. For
fly fishing, try dark-color Woolly Buggers.
- Sylvan Lake Fishing at Sylvan Lake is
excellent. Rainbow, brown and brook trout are biting on worms, Power
Bait, spinners and flies.
- Trappers Lake Fishing for cutthroat trout
remains fair to good, though success typically varies from day to day
and among fishermen. Some of the best activity has been early in the
morning. Renegades, muskrat nymphs and Parachute Adams have been
effective fly patterns. Spin fishermen have been taking some trout on
pearl-finish and black-and-white spoons. The lake is an outstanding
fishery for naturally reproducing cutthroat trout. Fishermen may use
only artificial flies or lures. The limit on cutthroats is two fish.
All cutts longer than 11 inches must immediately be returned to the
water alive. Fishermen are encouraged to keep all the brook trout they
catch.
- Vega Reservoir Anglers are still catching
fish at Vega Reservoir despite the lower water levels. Boat ramps on
the Island and at Oakpoint Campground are still open; however the boat
ramp in Early Settlers Campground now is closed. Storms typically have
been occurring in the early afternoon hours.
- White River The river remains low and
clear, and the hopper season is in full swing. A number of trout in the
18- to 19-inch class have been landed recently. Though single
grasshopper patterns have worked fairly well, hopper-dropper combos
have been especially effective. Bead-head Prince Nymphs, Copper Johns
and Pheasant Tails also can work well on their own but are even more
effective fished under a hopper pattern or Stimulator. Lure fishermen
have done OK on rainbow or black-with-yellow-spots spinners.
- Williams Fork Reservoir The lake remains
full. Fishing for kokanee salmon and a few rainbow trout has been fair,
but with hot daytime temperatures has been slowing down. A few mackinaw
have been taken from deep water. The reservoir also has some large
northern pike that prowl shallow areas of the lake into early August.
Large streamer flies, spinnerbaits and crankbaits are suggested.
- Williams Fork River The flow below Williams
Fork Reservoir on Tuesday was 117 cfs, down a little from last week.
Look for mixed hatches of midges, caddis, and blue-wing-olive,
pale-morning-dun and red quill mayflies. Effective fly patterns
generally are small, size 18-22.
- Willow Creek Reservoir Shoreline fishermen
are reporting some success for trout and trolling is producing results,
even though hot, daytime temperatures make it more difficult. This is a
beautiful area with a very nice campground and easy fishing access.
Boating is encouraged, but it is a no-wake reservoir. It generally gets
less fishing pressure than other area lakes. Worms, Power Bait and
salmon eggs are commonly used, as well as spinners, spoons and
crankbaits. Silver has been a good color in all types of lures. Fly
fishing is productive. Inquire in Granby for updates.
- Wolford Reservoir Fishing is starting to
pick up again. Rainbow trout are being caught from the banks using
rainbow Power Bait and night crawlers. Boaters are catching rainbows by
trolling with cow bells with night crawlers. Fishermen are still
landing kokanee near the dam using Needlefish.
- Yampa River (Hayden through Craig) The
river has come up slightly over the last week and with cooler water
temperatures, the fishing should pick up, as well. Try fishing late
evening or very early morning. Focus on deeper water and riffle runs.
Yampa River State Park will have walk-wade access, but floating will be
restricted until water levels allow legal access. Fishermen should be
very aware of stress on fish due to high temperatures and low oxygen
levels. Contact Yampa River State Park for more information.
- Yampa River (Stagecoach through Steamboat) Recent rains have improved flow and temperature conditions along the river, and the voluntary fishing closure has been lifted. Trico mayflies have been evident, and the hopper season is well under way. A few caddis still are coming off the river, and streamer fishermen have taken some fish on sculpin patterns.
Southeast
- Adobe Creek Reservoir (Blue Lake) The Blue
Lake high water boat ramps are still in service, but lake levels are
declining because of evaporation and irrigation releases. A few catfish
have been caught recently but overall, fishing has been slow.
- Antero Reservoir The Colorado Wildlife
Commission has approved an emergency regulations change for Antero to
reduce the loss of fish that have been caught and released. The new
daily bag and possession limit is two trout of any size, a change from
the earlier limit of four fish, of which only one could exceed 16
inches. The change went into effect on Aug. 13 and will be reviewed
after 90 days. Fishermen are asked to take some care with fish to be
released. Dont play them to exhaustion; use heavier fly lines and
tippets and stiffer-action spinning rods. Handle fish as little as
possible; keep them in the water and take time to adequately revive
them before release. The reservoir was drained in 2002. It has refilled
and been stocked with rainbow, brown, brook, cutthroat trout and
splake.
- Anticline Lake Fishing has been slow.
Additional stocking of trout before September is unlikely because of
high, summertime water temperatures. Most of the typical baits and
lures are effective here then, but success usually depends on periodic
stocking.
- Arkansas River No. 3 (through Pueblo) The
flow below the dam on Tuesday was 853 cfs. Flows typically are higher
on weekends. Fish generally still are concentrated in clearer water
near the banks and in pocket water. Fish a No. 12 bead-head Prince
Nymph, and use a San Juan Worm as the dropped fly. Black or olive
Woolly Buggers fished in the deeper water will be effective. Habitat
improvements have created deeper pools and structure for the fish to
thrive in even when releases from Pueblo Dam are minimal. Standard
fishing regulations and limits are in effect on this section of the
river.
- Arkansas River (Buena Vista to Salida)
While the third week of August usually sees a steep decline in flows on
the Arkansas, powerful rains have kept the river up at 875 cfs in
Browns Canyon. Murky water has created some challenges, but as of
Sunday, visibility had improved a lot and fishing had resumed. Hoppers,
red quills and attractor patterns all are taking fish.
- Arkansas River (Leadville to Buena Vista)
Sunday saw flows of 213 cfs at Hayden Meadows, 400 cfs at Granite and
591 cfs above Buena Vista. Clarity is excellent downstream to the
confluence with Clear Creek, where reservoir outflows were murky and
impacting visibility. Hoppers, attractor dries and bead-head nymphs all
were productive.
- Arkansas River (Salida to Canon City) More
rain last week raised flows and muddied the river in Bighorn Sheep
Canyon. As of Sunday, flows were 922 cfs at Wellsville and 1,150 cfs at
Parkdale, clearing and dropping by the day. Hoppers, red quills and
attractor patterns all are effective as this water clears.
- Beckwith Reservoir Fishing for 10- to
12-inch rainbow trout has been poor. The lake also has largemouth bass,
crappie and bluegills, which comprise most of the catch during the
summer. Boaters have access near the south end of the dam. Only
electric motors may be used.
- Blue and Bear Lakes The popular small lakes
southwest of La Veta offer fishing primarily for catchable-size rainbow
trout. Fishing success largely depends on periodic stocking.
- Bonny Reservoir Fishing has slowed a bit
because of the heat and the boat ramp becoming harder to use. A few
catfish are still being caught on the north side with typical baits.
The boat-ramp depth is 2 feet, and the channel going out to the main
lake is only 10-12 inches deep. A few smaller (12- to 14-foot) boats
have been basically hand launched and pushed through the channel to
access the main lake.
- Brush Hollow Reservoir Fishing for trout
has slowed way down with the heat of summer, but fishing for catfish
has picked up in the evenings. Fishing for warm-water species that
include largemouth bass, walleyes, crappie and bluegills remains fair.
The water level had started to drop, but recent heavy rains have filled
the reservoir. Wakeless boating is permitted. A habitat stamp is
required to use the state wildlife area. A mercury advisory by the
Colorado Department of Public Health is in effect for walleyes of a
certain size.
- Catamount Reservoirs, North & South
Fishing has slowed from the early season, but remains fair to good.
Anglers still are taking trout on Woolly Buggers, Prince Nymphs, Copper
Johns and assorted spinning lures, including Kastmasters, Little Cleos
and Dardevles. On South Cat, where bait fishing is permitted, salmon
eggs and yellow Power Bait have been effective. Fishermen may use only
artificial flies and lures on North Catamount. Access to both is from
the Pikes Peak Highway and requires paying a fee. Hours of operation:
through Sept. 3, 7 a.m.-8:30 p.m.; Sept. 4-30, 7 a.m.-4 p.m., weekends;
8 a.m.-4 p.m., weekdays.
- Cheesman Reservoir The Goose Creek arm of
the reservoir has reopened to fishing after a five-year closure
following the Hayman fire. Fishing has been hit-or-miss, best early in
the morning and late in the day. Smallmouth bass have comprised much of
the catch, with a few brown and rainbow trout taken near the Goose
Creek inlet. The lake has rainbow and brown trout, smallmouth bass,
northern pike and yellow perch, and recently was restocked with
fingerling kokanee salmon.
- Clear Creek Reservoir The drawn-down lake
is closed to all public access until maintenance work on the dam is
complete. The DOW will assess conditions by mid-December to determine
if ice fishing will be available then.
- Cottonwood Lake Fishing remains fair to
good on night crawlers, salmon eggs and rainbow Power Bait. Super
Dupers, Thomas Buoyants and Z-Rays have been effective lures. Various
types of flies have been productive in the evenings. High lakes in the
vicinity are open and fishing for mostly cutthroat trout has been fair,
primarily on small lures and flies.
- Crystal Creek Reservoir Fishing for
catchable-sized trout has slowed a bit, but remains fair to good on a
variety of baits and lures. Power Bait, salmon eggs and worms all have
been taking some fish. Kastmasters, Dardevles and Panther Martin
spinners have been effective lures. Fly-bubble rigs have worked well in
the late afternoon on some days. The water level is considerably better
than the past couple of years. The reservoir is part of the North Slope
Recreation Area, and access requires paying a fee at the Pikes Peak
Highway tollgate. The highway crosses the dam. See the entry for the
Catamount reservoirs for hours of operation.
- Daigre Reservoir Fishermen report good
success for rainbow trout on light-green flies, various nymphs and
other dark flies, and Pistol Petes. Fishermen may use only artificial
flies and lures at the lake.
- DeWeese Reservoir Trolling with cow bells
or lures remains the most productive. Shore fishermen have been
catching fish on lures, rainbow and green Power Bait, marshmallows,
Fireballs and worms. Most trout are around 12 inches, with some up to
16-17. The lake also has abundant smallmouth bass, mostly of 6-12
inches but with a few up to 16.
- Elevenmile Reservoir Overall trout-fishing
success is fair. With recent stockings, fishermen are doing well along
the coves near the marina. The best reports are coming from shoreline
fishermen along the south side of the reservoir. Worms combined with
marshmallows, various Power Baits and assorted spinners seem to be
working the best. Trout that have been caught recently are ranging from
12- to 20-plus inches. Water temperatures are reaching up into the 60s.
Kokanee fishing has picked up for boaters. Northern pike fishing is
great. The bag and possession limit is 10 kokanee salmon and four
trout, of which only two can be 16 inches or longer. No limit applies
to northern pike. Boating is permitted daily from a half-hour before
sunrise to a half-hour after sunset.
- Fountain Lake Like other urban lakes in
Pueblo, this one is stocked most months the year, but not through the
heat of summer. Trout fishing typically is good in the spring, usually
slows down during the summer months, but picks up in the fall. The lake
also has some catfish that can grow quite large.
- Hayden Meadows Reservoir The lake south of
Leadville offers fair to good fishing for catchable-sized trout.
Various lures and worms have been most effective in recent days, with
the best activity early and late in the day. Fly fishing usually is
good late in the afternoon into the evening.
- Horseshoe Reservoir The water level is good
and the temperature is in the high 70s to low 80s. Trout fishing has
slowed down. Fishing for warm-water species has been good. Worms and
Power Bait are a couple of popular items to use. Fishing for catfish
still is good, especially in late evenings using water dogs. The boat
dock is in place on the north side of Horseshoe. Information:
719-738-2376.
- Huerfano River The main public access to
the primarily brown trout fishery is on the Huerfano State Wildlife
Area southwest of Gardner. Fishing can be quite good, but conditions
are very brushy. The upper river, from the national forest boundary to
the headwaters, has a flies-and-lures restriction and a two-fish
limit.
- Jefferson Lake Paving operations are
complete and the road is paved all the way to the boat ramp parking
lot. Fishing for rainbow trout and small mackinaw from the shore has
been quite good. Larger lake trout are in deeper water. Night crawlers,
black-and-white Dardevles and Kamlooper spoons have worked well. The
lake typically offers good fishing for catchable-sized rainbows and
occasional brook trout. Small (12- to 18-inch) lake trout can be taken
from shore throughout the season. Campgrounds have been busy on
weekends. Information: 1-877-444-6777.
- John Martin Reservoir Though dropping, the
reservoir still covers lots of surface acres and both boat ramps remain
in operation. The fishing last weekend was good in the spillway for
catfish and freshwater drum on shrimp and chicken livers. Fisherman on
the reservoir were catching wipers between the east and west boat
ramps.
- Karval and Kinney lakes Kinney has been
producing a few small catfish, but few fishermen have been on the water
and the overall fishing appears pretty slow. Trout stocking of both
lakes and the nearby Hugo SWA ponds has been suspended for the summer.
All also have most of the common warm-water species. Deer flies can be
a nuisance this time of year.
- Lake Henry The water level at Henry is
good. Fishing is slow for all species.
- Lake Meredith Water conditions at Meredith
are poor. Large expanses of aquatic weeds have taken over this large,
shallow reservoir. Boating is discouraged because of the weeds. Fishing
for all species is slow. This is the third year since the lake was
restocked, after having been drained. Fish should be approaching
catchable size. Crappie, saugeyes, catfish and wipers have been stocked
in good numbers since the lake was refilled.
- Manitou Lake The popular U.S. Forest
Service lake north of Woodland Park is heavily stocked with
catchable-sized trout through the summer. Fishing success largely
depends on the stocking. Weekdays are less crowded. The water level is
good, but some weed growth can hamper fishing. Payment of an entry fee
is required. Campgrounds and other amenities are nearby.
- Martin Lake The water level is good.
Fishing for trout is fair; a few still are being caught. The lake has
been stocked several times, and the kids pond also has been
stocked with trout. The water temperature is in the low 80s. Some
catfish and bass have been caught. Northern pike also are active. Baits
that are being used are worms, Power Bait, minnows and water dogs.
Information: 719-738-2376.
- Montgomery Reservoir The lake near Hoosier
Pass offers fair to good fishing for catchable-size rainbow trout and a
handful of brook and brown trout. Success usually depends on periodic
stocking. Fishing is prohibited on the south side of the reservoir and
from the west face of the dam.
- Monument Lake This 40-acre lake filled last
year and has provided good fishing for catchable-sized trout in 2007.
The standard assortment of baits and lures has been effective. The
level remains high and the water has been somewhat discolored. Trout
stocking has been suspended until water temperatures cool. Warm-water
fish have been stocked as part of rebuilding the fishery but will not
be large enough to interest fishermen for another year or two.
- Monument Reservoir Shoreline fishing for
rainbow and brown trout has been good on Power Bait, and many fly
patterns also have been taking fish. Likely patterns include black
gnats, mosquitoes, Royal Coachmen and gray-hackle yellows. Live minnows
may not be used at bait in Eastern Slope waters above 7,000 feet in
elevation and on virtually the entire Western Slope.
- Nee Gronda Reservoir Boat access is
available with the completion of a new low-water ramp on the east side.
Small- to medium-sized boats are recommended on this ramp. Fishing is
slow for most species. Typically, midsummer fishing is slow. As fall
approaches and water temperatures cool, fishing should improve,
especially during morning and evening hours. Anglers should watch for
surface-feeding schools of wipers this time of year. Fishing can be
fast and furious for those who can find the surface action.
- Nee Noshe Reservoir Nee Noshe is very low,
at less than 500 acres. Boat access is very difficult. The current
low-water ramp is in need of extension before it is usable. Plans are
being developed to complete the extension before the Labor Day holiday.
Fishing is very good for wipers and white bass, and fair for saugeyes.
Anglers willing to push their boats through the mud to gain access are
catching nice creels of wipers by trolling jigs and crankbaits; bank
fishermen are having success with worms and shrimp.
- Nichols Reservoir Fishing for pan-sized
trout has slowed somewhat but should improve with recent stocking.
Nichols is accessed by a hiking trail leading down from the Rampart
Reservoir dam. The reservoir is heavily stocked with catchable-sized
trout and offers better-than-average fishing through the summer.
- North Lake Fishing for mostly rainbow trout
has been excellent on a variety of flies. Productive patterns have
included emergers, mosquitoes, Royal Coachmen, red Humpies, black
gnats, gray-hackle yellows and Royal Wulffs. Red-and-white lures and
silver Kastmasters also have been effective. The lake also has an
improving population of splake. Fishermen may use only artificial flies
and lures at North Lake. Habitat stamps are required of all visitors to
the state wildlife area, unless excluded by age or disability.
- OHaver Reservoir Fishing in recent
days has been poor to fair. An occasional trout has been taken on Power
Bait, night crawlers and fly-bubble outfits. Though fishing with bait
is the method preferred by most at the lake, fish also respond fairly
well to flies during low-light or overcast periods of the day.
- Palmer Lake The water level has been very
low the past few years, but has recovered somewhat this summer with
abundant rain. However, very few fish are available. Trout may be
stocked when water temperatures cool off later this summer or in the
fall.
- Pikeview Reservoir Fishing generally has
been slow. Fishermen have been catching a few saugeyes and catfish.
This Colorado Springs city lake is a developing warm-water fishery with
a variety of species present, including some decent-sized saugeyes.
Construction work is complete, and a paved, designated off-street
parking area is available. Sidewalks have been poured along the east
and south shorelines. Other amenities include a wheelchair-accessible
sidewalk to one of two fishing piers and enclosed pit toilets.
- Prospect Lake The lake in Colorado Springs
was refilled in 2006 and was stocked with fingerling crappie, channel
catfish, saugeyes and wipers. Anglers should expect the rebuilding of
this fishery to yield better size on warm-water fish by 2008 and 2009.
Catchable-sized rainbow and Snake River cutthroat trout were stocked
last spring. Trout stocking has been suspended because of warm water
temperatures but will resume in the fall when temperatures cool.
Summertime fishing has been slow, with fishermen catching a few trout
and some small wipers and catfish.
- Pueblo Reservoir Fishing for decent-sized
wipers and largemouth bass has picked up a little in the west end on
leeches along the rocks. Early mornings have been the best time. Worm
harnesses with night crawlers have taken some mostly small walleyes in
the north marina cove. A few catfish have been taken in the evening but
fishing for them remains unusually slow. The water level is the best in
recent years and the clarity is good. Fish populations remain good.
Walleye numbers remain high, but most are not legal-sized. Wipers are
stable, with many in the 15- to 22-inch range. Smallmouth and spotted
bass are doing very well, and largemouths have been increasing with
higher water. Catch rates will be high, but most bass will be under 15
inches. Catfish numbers are low to moderate but many are
good-sized.
- Quail Lake The overall summertime fishing
has been slow, but anglers have been getting some small perch and an
occasional northern pike. The Colorado Springs city lake is stocked
with catchable-size trout into early summer, but with rising water
temperatures stocking is suspended until the fall. The lake also has a
variety of warm-water fish, including largemouth bass, catfish and
bluegills.
- Queens Reservoirs Upper and Lower Queens
reservoirs are dry.
- Rampart Reservoir Fishing for decent-sized
rainbow trout and an occasional mackinaw has been fair. Mornings and
late afternoons have been the best times. Water levels are good. The
lake is heavily stocked with rainbow trout and also has mackinaw.
Fishing for mackinaw from shore is especially good soon after ice-out,
but during the summer heat anglers should fish deeper, along drop-offs
from 40 to 60 feet deep. Access to the boat ramp requires crossing the
dam and can be affected by Homeland Security considerations. In
general, it is available from mid-May to early October, but
restrictions apply to some types of vehicles. Recreation facilities are
managed by a U.S. Forest Service concessionaire and entry requires
payment of a fee.
- Runyon Lake This is one of several
Pueblo-area lakes stocked through much of the year. The lake recently
was stocked with catchable-sized trout, but additional plants before
September are unlikely because of high water temperatures. The lake
also has some catfish that can grow to impressive size.
- Skaguay Reservoir Fishing for
catchable-sized trout from the bank has been good with green Power
Bait. The water level remains good after several years of drought and
likely will remain that way through the summer. The lake also has some
northern pike up to 40 inches, and anglers are encouraged to keep all
the pike they catch. The inlet area offers the best pike habitat.
Facilities include a boat ramp. Wakeless boating is mandatory and a
habitat stamp is required. The creek below the dam offers fishing for
brown trout.
- South Platte River (between Spinney and Elevenmile)
The Trico hatch is occurring between 8 and 10:30 a.m.
Pale morning duns have been coming off later, and many micro caddis
still are around. Flows remain above average, and on Tuesday morning
were 276 cfs. Some good-sized trout still are being reported. A good
number of browns in the 10- to 18-inch range have been caught and
released. Pheasant Tail nymphs, caddis and San Juan worms have been
effective in the higher water, along with the usual midges. Fishermen
may use only artificial flies and lures on the stream, and
catch-and-release rules apply. As usual, this area attracts large
crowds.
- South Platte River, Deckers area Flows
below Cheesman Dam remain above average, and on Tuesday morning were at
494 cfs. The water through Cheesman Canyon has been fishably clear.
Below Deckers, clarity still can be an issue. In the canyon, fish have
been moving into riffles and faster runs. San Juan worms and scud
patterns may take some fish, and midge activity around the edges of the
main current is possible. A small nymph or midge emerger trailing a San
Juan worm or larger Pheasant Tail can be an effective rig.
- South Platte River, Elevenmile Canyon Flows
have on Tuesday morning were 260 cfs, down a little from last week but
still a bit high. Look for Tricos, afternoon caddis, pale morning duns
and possibly some blue-wing-olives to be on the water. Standard dry fly
patterns imitating the above, along with caddis pupae and larvae,
drowned Tricos, Barrs PMD emergers and Pheasant Tails should be
effective.
- Spinney Mountain Reservoir Spinney fishing
is fair to good. Fishing at Spinney is by artificial flies and lures
only, with a bag and possession limit of one trout at least 20 inches
long. Midges, Callibaetis mayflies and damselflies have been evident on
the water. The surface water temperature is in the mid-60s. Both boat
ramps are open. Fishing has been good throughout the day, with average
trout catches in the 18- to 22-inch range. The most successful flies
have been various nymphs, midges, scud patterns and streamers. As
usual, tube jigs and lures also are productive. This is a day use park,
opening a half-hour before sunrise and closing one hour after sunset.
Boating is permitted daily from a half-hour before sunrise to a
half-hour after sunset.
- Tarryall Reservoir Plenty of rising trout
have been evident, but they have been selective feeders. Shore
fishermen have taken a few on Mepps spinners, rainbow-pattern Dardevles
and a variety of baits. Fly fishermen have enjoyed some good activity
for rainbows and browns in the upper end of the lake on damselfly and
Callibaetis mayfly imitators. Northern pike also have been prowling the
region and can be taken on streamer flies and crankbaits. The lake has
rainbow and Snake River cutthroat trout in the 11- to 16-inch range and
an occasional larger brown. Its northern pike have been growing in size
and turning up in the catch more frequently. Anglers are encouraged to
keep all the pike they catch. Wakeless boating is permitted. A habitat
stamp is required of all visitors to the state wildlife area.
- Trinidad Reservoir Trinidad Lake currently
is around 750 surface acres and dropping. The surface temperature is
70-75 degrees, with subsurface temperatures around 60-70. Fishing has
been fair, although the dropping lake levels and rain have made it
spotty at times. Trout fishing is good from shore and boats. Catfish
have been good. Bass and perch are still good, with a few bass over the
minimum length being caught. Some legal-sized walleyes have been caught
from boats, and a lot of short walleyes still are being caught from
shore. Wipers and crappie have been slow. Anglers are reminded to check
for special limits on bass and walleyes at Trinidad Lake. Boaters use
caution because floating debris may be in the lake and other hazards
are starting to appear.
- Turks Pond Well repairs have helped improve
the water level at Turks Pond. A new boat ramp extension was added last
summer. Fishing is good for catfish and fair for wipers. A 17-pound
wiper reportedly was caught recently. Turks Pond has a good population
of large wipers.
- Turquoise Lake The lake is almost full.
Fishing is in a summer slowdown, typical of large reservoirs, but has
improved a bit with stocking from the Leadville National Hatchery.
Night crawlers, salmon eggs and Power Bait all have been taking some
fish. The inlet and Tabor boat ramp areas appear to be best. Mackinaw
have moved into deeper water. Large crankbaits, spoon-type lures and
sucker-tipped Gitzits still might take a few. The bag and possession
limit is two lake trout. Two boat ramps and U.S. Forest Service camping
facilities are available.
- Twin Lakes The water level remains high.
Fishing for rainbow trout from the shore has slowed but still is fair
on the lower lake. The power plant vicinity and the channels around and
near the dam have been the best areas. Power Bait has been the most
productive. Mackinaw have moved into deeper water. Deep-trolling with
blue or silver Flatfish or tube jigging along the bottom might take a
few. The mackinaw population continues to rebound, with the average
size approaching 20 inches and some approaching 40. Catchable-sized
trout are stocked through the summer.
- Twin Lakes (Mount Elbert) Forebay Fishing
for rainbow trout and occasional mackinaw remains fair in the forebay
just to the north of Twin Lakes. Dardevles, Kastmasters, Krocodiles and
Power Bait have been working well. The forebay has the best population
of lakers in the Arkansas River basin. The average size is 17 inches
and the largest exceed 40. The forebay also has abundant rainbow trout,
replenished by periodic stocking. Hand-carried boats including float
tubes are permitted on the forebay. However, boaters should be aware of
potential fluctuations and strong currents. The best boater access is
at the southwest corner of the reservoir. Park along the edge of the
road but do not block the locked gate.
- Two Buttes Reservoir Two Buttes Reservoir
is dry.
- Valco Ponds Three of the old dredge ponds
along the Arkansas River below Pueblo Reservoir are open for fishing.
They offer saugeyes and channel catfish, as well as some decent-sized
bass and bluegills. Limited-harvest fishing for the bass is strongly
encouraged to protect their population.
- Wahatoya Reservoir Fishing for rainbow
trout remains good. Anglers have been using a variety of nymphs,
light-green flies and Pistol Petes. Fishermen may use only artificial
flies and lures. Boats with motors are prohibited.
- Willow Springs Ponds The ponds east of Interstate 25 near Fountain have been rehabilitated, refilled and stocked with a variety of fish that includes small and catchable-sized bass, wipers and panfish. Trout were stocked earlier, and will be stocked again in the fall. A fish-consumption advisory for some species of fish only is in effect because of tetrachloroethylene (PCE), and anglers are advised to read the informational signs at the lakes.
Southwest
- Animas River The river is running clear and
low again after a break in the monsoon rains. Grasshoppers are in their
prime, so hopper patterns in sizes 8 and 10 are recommended, drifted
along the bank. Caddis hatches continue in the evenings. Spinners
should be working well, also. If the water is cloudy, use streamers
Woolly Buggers and sculpin patterns.
- Beaver Creek Reservoir Fishing is picking
up, with good action for 10- to 12-inch rainbow trout using bait and
lures from shore. Fly anglers report good fishing using large black
Woolly Buggers for rainbow and brown trout.
- Big Meadows Reservoir Fishing was reported
as good for 10- to 13-inch rainbow trout and some brook trout using
bait and flies. Fly anglers reported good success using large black
Woolly Buggers.
- Blue Mesa Reservoir Kokanee salmon are in a
pre-spawn mode, gradually moving toward the Gunnison River inlet. Most
remain fairly deep, in 50-75 feet of water. The best results are by
trolling with Dick Nites and Arnies, or by vertical jigging on calm
days with Swedish Pimples and similar spoons. Lake trout fishing is
slow. Look for them at 150 feet. Trout fishing has been fair, with most
fish taken on bait off the bottom or trolling from 30 to 45 feet with
cow bells and worms or Rapalas. Perch fishing is good in any of the
shallow bays around the lake on small jigs or worms.
- Conejos County (high-country lakes) The
high lakes are open. Be prepared for thunderstorms; good rains with
lightning are not uncommon. Red, Trail, Green, Blue, Glacier, Tobacco,
Bear, and Lake Anne have been some of the more popular high lakes with
anglers, and have been fishing well. Fishing is expected to be good
throughout the summer and into fall.
- Conejos County (small streams) Conejos
County is home to many small streams that are open and fishing fair to
good for a variety of trout, including brooks, browns, and cutthroats.
A few small streams in Conejos County are native-cutthroat trout waters
with special fishing regulations, so please consult your 2007 fishing
regulations directory.
- Conejos River Fishing on the Conejos has
been excellent for brown trout. Insect activity has been good. Conejos
County has been experiencing heavy rains, causing stream conditions and
flows to change daily, so anglers should check local stream flows prior
to fishing the Conejos. Angling pressure has been moderate. The Conejos
River has two sections of special fishing regulation waters: From the
upper boundary of Aspen Glade campground upstream to Menkhaven Resort,
artificial flies, only, with a daily bag and possession limit of two
trout at least 16 inches long, and from the confluence with the South
Fork of the Conejos River upstream to the lower bridge at Platoro,
artificial flies and lures only, with a daily bag and possession limit
of two trout at least 16 inches long.
- Crawford Reservoir The lake offers fishing
for trout, northern pike, yellow perch, crappie, largemouth bass and
catfish. Fishing was reported as fair over the weekend. Catfish still
can be caught at night on chicken livers or hot dogs. A few perch,
pike, trout and crappie were taken during daytime hours. Night crawlers
seemed to be best bait. Water temperatures are still in the low 70s.
The lake is still going down 12-15 inches per day, and the Iron Creek
boat ramp is closed because of low water. Be advised, if beaching your
boat overnight: Dont pull it too high out of the water.
- Dolores River (lower) With little water
flowing out of McPhee Reservoir, the level is low and fishing is
poor.
- Dolores River (upper) The river is running
clear and low, ideal for dry flies and spinners. Hatches are
continuing, so emerger patterns and dry flies are a good bet.
Grasshopper patterns also are good now. Try streamers when the water is
running muddy.
- East River The East was flowing at 135 cfs
at Almont on Tuesday morning. Though rain can temporarily discolor the
water, the river generally has been fishing well with dry flies and
nymphs. Mixed hatches of caddis and Yellow Sally stoneflies have been
coming off most of the day. Productive fly patterns include elk-hair
caddis, royal and yellow Humpies and Stimulators for dries; Prince
Nymphs and 20-Inchers for nymphing.
- Echo Canyon Reservoir Warm weather has
warmed the lake substantially, so fishing is rated as only fair.
Fishing is best in the morning and evening with worms, Power Bait,
small spinners and dry flies for trout and bass. Weed growth along the
bank is a perennial occurrence, so casting from the shore is getting
tougher. Fishing will improve in late summer when the weather begins to
cool again.
- Gunnison River (below Crystal Dam) Flows
have jumped up to 917 cfs. Clarity is fair to good. Fishing lately has
become work. Caddis and PMDs are the main hatches. Try yellow and
melon-quill patterns in sizes 16-18. Use a Stimulator as a strike
indicator in the hopper-dropper combination. Midges, especially a red
midge, are doing well in the afternoon and into the evening. Scuds in
olive and orange, Copper Johns, Pheasant Tails and Prince Nymphs are
the usual patterns for nymphing.
- Gunnison River (through the canyon) The
flow in the Gunnison Gorge is now 914 cfs. A No. 14 bead-head
Hares Ear is still hot this week, and hoppers have been good. But
the hottest pattern is the Micro Mayfly. Prince Nymphs and San Juan
Worms are fair this week. Fishing has been good the past few days, and
river from the Smith Fork downstream to Pleasure Park is clear again.
The North Fork is low enough to wade. A commercial shuttle/return-boat
service is still available through the Pleasure Park.
- Gunnison River (Upper from Almont to Blue Mesa)
The Gunnison on Tuesday morning was flowing at 489 cfs.
Though localized heavy rains can create some clarity issues below the
Ohio and Tomichi Creek tributaries, the river generally is clear and
has been fishing well. Caddis activity has been fair in late afternoon
into the evening. Dark-bodied elk-hair caddis patterns and yellow
Humpies have been effective on the surface, and a variety of nymphs
also have worked well. Streamer flies, stonefly nymphs and
silver-bladed spinners also can be productive. Kokanee salmon from Blue
Mesa Reservoir have begun entering the river. Fishing for them is
permitted, but a catch-and-release provision is in effect. Inquire in
Gunnison for updates.
- Jackson Gulch Reservoir Rainbow trout were
stocked early in the season and fishing has been good. The water level
is receding and boats now are launching on the lower ramp. Afternoon
thunderstorms have been occurring. Perch continue to be plentiful but
are mostly small. Action along the dam for both trout and perch has
been good. For trout, typical baits such as salmon eggs and Power Bait,
fished just off bottom or suspended just below the surface, fly
fishing, small crankbaits and inline spinners have been producing. For
consistent perch action, suspend a small jig tipped with a worm under a
slip bobber at about 15 feet or cast small flies along the shallow
banks. Camping and other facilities are available. Information:
970-533-7065 or 970-882-2213.
- Joe Moore Reservoir The reservoir near
Mancos is full and has been stocked with catchable rainbow trout.
Recent population sampling by the DOW revealed an abundance of 8- to
10-inch yellow perch and some nice-sized black crappie. Most of the
perch were along the lake bottom.
- La Jara Creek La Jara Creek has been
fishing well for brown trout. Fishing has been good on worms, spinners
and artificial flies. Trout spook easily, so anglers should take a
stealthy approach when fishing the creek. Expect good fishing well into
the fall.
- La Jara Reservoir The reservoir is open and
fishing has been fair for brook trout and splake. However, the level is
low and the weeds have grown high and thick. Fishing with anything
other than dry flies may be difficult. Last years gill-net
surveys showed the splake and brook trout populations to be doing well.
Splake and brook trout averaged 16 inches. Fish have been feeding on
freshwater shrimp, leeches and damselflies.
- Los Pinos River The river is running low
and clear above Vallecito Reservoir. Use small dry flies and spinners.
This section of river, however, gets substantial pressure. Access below
the reservoir is limited by private property.
- McPhee Reservoir The level is starting to
drop and the water is warming up. Trout fishing has slowed. Smallmouth
bass anglers are reporting good success, but the fish are small. For
smallmouth bass, use plastic worms and lizards. Remember that a slot
limit applies to bass. All smallmouth and largemouth bass 10-15 inches
long must be returned to the lake immediately. The DOW recently
completed an electro-fishing survey and found good populations of
smallmouth bass, trout and yellow perch.
- Miramonte Reservoir The 405-acre lake south
of Norwood is part of the Dan Noble State Wildlife Area and offers
potentially good fishing for larger-than-average rainbow trout. The DOW
stocks subcatchable rainbows, which grow to size in the lake. Crayfish
are a primary source of forage for the trout, and crayfish-imitating
flies and lures generally work well. While catch rates appear to be
down somewhat in the past year or two, the average fish size has been
larger.
- Mountain Home Reservoir Fishing for rainbow
trout is reported as good using the typical baits and lures.
- Navajo Reservoir The lake level is high at
6075.49 feet. The water temperature on the Colorado side is 72 degrees
in the morning, 75 degrees in the afternoon. Northern pike and large
mouth and small mouth bass have been biting lakewide on red crankbaits.
Fishing is best in the early morning. Kokanee-salmon fishing has picked
up on the New Mexico side of the lake between Francis Canyon and the
San Juan arm, along the canyon wall. Salmon reportedly are biting on
white corn at 35 feet. The water is very clear, Fishing for crappie has
been slow on minnows, but they still are biting. Trout are biting on
night crawlers and power bait.
- Piedra River The level is ideal for dry fly
fishing. But frequent afternoon thunderstorms have made the river
challenging to fish this summer. Use caddis, Renegade and emerger
patterns. After rain, when the water is off-color, try streamers.
- Platoro Reservoir The reservoir is open and
fishable. Platoro Reservoir has been fishing well for rainbow trout,
and fair for kokanee salmon. Anglers have been catching rainbows on a
variety of baits such as Power Bait, worms and spinners. Construction
of the new boat ramp has been completed. Water levels are good and the
reservoir is open to boats.
- Ridgway Fishing Ponds Huck Finn Day will be
Aug. 18, starting at 9:30 a.m. Come dressed as Huck Finn and win
prizes. The fish are down deep, so fish off the bottom. The
Pa-Co-Chu-Puk area of Ridgway State Park is excellent for children
because it has the only water below the dam that is not restricted to
artificial flies and lures or catch-and-release fishing. A limit of
four trout may be kept there, both by children and licensed adults (16
years or older).
- Ridgway Reservoir The lake is dropping
pretty quickly. The fishing has been really good. Rainbow trout are
biting on pretty much anything. Fishing for them is best around the
boat ramp. The salmon are being caught along the face of the dam.
- Rio Grande high-country streams
High-country streams are running high but clear. Fishing is reported as
fair to good using bait, spinners and flies. Fly fishermen have had
good success drifting stonefly and mayfly nymphs.
- Rio Grande River The river remains high but
is clearing. Willowfly, caddisfly and green-drake mayfly hatches are
reported from Del Norte to Creede. Fishing was reported as good to
excellent using large dry stonefly patterns, green drake and small
elk-hair caddis presented on the surface.
- Road Canyon Reservoir Fishing for rainbow,
cutthroat and an occasional brook trout has slowed somewhat but remains
pretty good. Trolling fire-tiger-colored Rapalas and rainbow
Rat-L-Traps has been productive. Shore fishermen have done OK on night
crawlers off the bottom. Spinning lures and night crawlers below a
bobber have worked well late in the afternoon. Many of the fish have
been 16-18 inches, with some a little larger. The trout have been
exceptionally chunky. A habitat stamp is required of everyone in the
state wildlife area.
- San Juan high-country lakes, streams
Fishing is excellent in the high-country lakes and streams. On small
streams, use dry flies and hopper patterns but be stealthy, as the fish
are skittish at this time of year. Spinners are a good bet, as are
worms and Power Bait in the lakes.
- San Juan River The water level is low and
fish are wary. Use dry fly patterns, emergers, nymphs and hopper
patterns. Try a dropper rig, with a dry fly and a nymph tied in below.
Regular afternoon rains will cause the water to run muddy. High-country
creeks are fishing well with small dry flies and spinners.
- San Luis Lake The San Luis Lake water level
is low and the boat ramp is not usable. Catchable (9-inch) rainbow
trout were stocked in early April. Angling for carp was reported as
good for 12- to 13-pound fish on streamer flies and nymphs.
- Sanchez Reservoir The lake is clear and the
water level is rising. The boat ramp is usable. Walleye fishing is
improving. Anglers report catching 16- to 20-inch walleyes using
plastic worms worked along the bottom in 25 feet of water.
- Smith Reservoir (San Luis Valley) An
emergency fish salvage is under way at the Costilla County reservoir
south of Blanca, prompted by a sharp drop in the water level because of
irrigation demands. All bag and possession limits have been suspended
through Sept. 3. Fishermen may catch and keep as many fish as they
want. Only standard fishing methods may be used, and all other
regulations including license requirements remain in effect. Both boat
ramps already are out of the water and the shoreline is muddy. The lake
is annually stocked with rainbow trout, which grow quickly in the
reservoir.
- Summit Reservoir A fish salvage is under
way on the lake northwest of Mancos before chemical treatment begins to
remove white suckers. All bag and possession limits have been suspended
and fish can be taken by snagging and hand dip nets, in addition to
standard fishing techniques. Live minnows may not be used as bait. The
salvage will run through Aug. 24, at which time the reservoir will be
closed. Fishing licenses and habitat stamps are required. Though
non-native white suckers are the dominant species, the lake also has
rainbow trout, crappie, bass and channel catfish. The lake will be
restocked next spring.
- Taylor Reservoir Fishing from shore has
slowed with the hot weather. Trolling for rainbow trout with cow bells
and night crawlers has been OK. Fishing for kokanee salmon recently has
improved. Most have been suspended at about 35 feet above a 70-foot
bottom. Rainbow-colored and pink lures have worked best. Lake trout are
in 90 feet of water. Trolling lures such as Apex on downriggers has
been effective, or try anchoring and fishing with night crawlers off
the bottom.
- Taylor River The river has been dropping
and soon may come down some. Flows on Tuesday were 301 cfs at Almont
and 246 cfs below Taylor Dam. Above Almont, caddis and small stonefly
patterns have been working fairly well. Stimulators, Prince Nymphs,
Hares Ears and Copper Johns have been working well. Woolly
Buggers and other streamers also remain a good bet. The tailwater
directly below the dam offers good fishing for exceptionally large
rainbows, but the area attracts large crowds. Mysis shrimp and midges
are the go-to patterns. Think small sizes 18-24.
- Trujillo Meadows Reservoir Trujillo Meadows
Reservoir is open and accessible. Fishing has been fair for brown trout
and rainbows. Fishing pressure has been moderate during the week and
heavy on the weekends. Effective methods for trout at Trujillo Meadows
have been worms and lures in brown- and rainbow- trout patterns.
- Tucker Ponds Fishing is reported as fair to
good for stocked rainbow trout of 10-14 inches using bait and
flies.
- Uncompahgre River in Ridgway Park The
fishing is good now. Flows on the river have been stable. Colorado
River cutthroat, Snake River cutthroat, rainbow and brown trout all
call this section of the Uncompahgre home.
- Vallecito Reservoir Fishing for 13- to
15-inch rainbow trout from the bank continues to be excellent. Salmon
eggs are the preferred bait now. The fish also will take worms,
spinners, Power Bait or dry flies. Anglers are still catching northern
pike by trolling Rapalas. A mercury advisory has been issued for
consumption of northern pike from the lake.
- Williams Creek Reservoir Fishing for trout has been good in the morning and evening. As the water is warming up, action in midday is slow. Use worms, Power Bait, small spinners and dry flies. The fishing on the creek below the reservoir is good with small flies and spinners.
Bulletin Board
- Antero emergency regulations change
A new daily bag and possession limit is in effect for Antero Reservoir. The new limit is two trout of any size. The earlier limit was four trout, of which only one could exceed 16 inches.
The Colorado Wildlife Commission approved the emergency change to the fishing regulations Aug. 13 to reduce the loss of fish that anglers have caught and released.
The change was prompted by a significant loss of fish to hooking mortality. Many trout had grown larger than 16 inches in July, when the reservoir reopened to fishing. With the earlier limit, many hard-fighting trout were dying after being caught and returned to the water.
Rising summertime water temperatures added to the stress on the fish.
The emergency measure will be reviewed in November.
The reservoir had been closed since 2002, when it was drained. The Denver Water impoundment on the South Fork of the South Platte River was restocked with thousands of rainbow, brown, brook and cutthroat trout, and splake, a brook trout/lake trout hybrid.
- Fish-releasing tips
The point of catch-and-release fishing is to enable fish to live on, to continue growing and fight another day. Anglers are encouraged to practice the following precautions to improve the odds for fish survival:
Do not play the fish to exhaustion. Use appropriate tackle to land the fish quickly. Fly fishermen might use a heavier line weight with as stout a leader tippet as possible. Spin fishermen might use a stiffer-action rod and heavier line.
Keep the fish in the water as much as possible when handling and removing the hook.
Remove the hook gently and do not squeeze the fish or put your fingers in its gills.
If the fish is hooked deeply, cut the line. Do not attempt to remove the hook.
Release the fish only after its equilibrium is recovered. Gently hold the fish in the water and move it slowly back and forth until it can take off on its own.
Release the fish into the most oxygenated water possible.
- Jerry Creek Reservoirs closure
Jerry Creek Reservoirs, in Mesa County near Molina, are closed to public access through June 1, 2008, for dam and spillway reconstruction. The reservoirs offer potentially good catch-and-release fishing for largemouth bass and bluegills.
- Smith Reservoir fish salvage
An emergency fish salvage is under way on Smith Reservoir, south of Blanca in Costilla County. All bag and possession limits for the lake have been removed through Sept. 3.
Fishermen may catch and keep as many fish as they want during that time. Only conventional fishing methods are permitted, and all other regulations, including license requirements, remain in effect.
The move was prompted by a sharp drop in the water level because of irrigation demands. Both boat ramps already are out of the water and the shoreline is muddy.
Rainbow trout are stocked annually and grow quickly in the productive lake.
- Summit Reservoir fish salvage
An emergency fish salvage is under way at Summit Reservoir, northwest of Mancos, and most fishing regulations have been suspended through Aug. 24.
The reservoir will be chemically treated in late August to eliminate white suckers, a species that is not native to the San Juan Basin. Consequently, all bag and possession limits for the lake have been removed.
In addition to standard fishing methods, fish also may be taken by snagging and hand dip nets. The following may not be used: seines, cast nets, trotlines, underwater spear fishing, firearms, explosives, toxicants and electricity. Live fish may not be used for bait, and live fish from the lake may not be transported to other waters.
Fishing-license and habitat-stamp requirements remain in effect. Salvage fishing is permitted from sunrise to sunset. The reservoir will be closed Aug. 25 for the treatment operation.
Though white suckers dominate the fish population, the lake also has rainbow trout, crappie, bass and channel catfish. The lake will be restocked next spring.
- Lightning awareness
Summertime fishing also is the time for summer thunderstorms, complete with lightning and possibly heavy rain. Colorado is among the top states in the country for recorded lightning strikes. Lightning poses some special hazards to fishermen, especially if they are on or near large bodies of water, on exposed hillsides, or carrying graphite fishing rods.
When thunderheads are building, its best to get off the water quickly. Seek appropriate shelter, but avoid tall objects such as trees. If necessary, lie flat on the ground under low-profile brush until the storm passes. Dont carry graphite rods or aluminum rod cases; leave them on the ground, find shelter and return for them later.
- Be bear aware
Fishermen and campers are reminded that many of their favorite waters are in bear country. Taking simple precautions such as not leaving food out where bears can find it and keeping a clean camping site can avoid potential problems for people and bears alike. The Colorado Division of Wildlife offers brochures and other information for reducing the risk of bear encounters. They are available at DOW offices statewide.
- Regulations changes
The Colorado Wildlife Commission recently approved some changes to the fishing regulations that are not included in the 2007 fishing brochure. They went into effect May 1.
On the lower Blue River, catch-and-release provisions were enacted from Green Mountain Dam to the Colorado River. On the upper Blue and its Swan River tributary, longstanding closures in the fall to protect spawning brown trout from Dillon Reservoir have been removed.
On the lower Gunnison River, through the Black Canyon and Gunnison Gorge, a slot limit protecting brown trout has been dropped.
Flies-and-lures restrictions have been extended on the Gunnison from the North Fork confluence downstream four miles to the Relief Ditch diversion. Anglers there also must release all rainbow trout.
Flies-and-lures and catch-and-release provisions were extended to the Poudre River through Gateway Park downstream to the North Fork confluence.
Quality fishing regulations were enacted for Johnstown Reservoir. A 15-inch minimum-size provision applies to walleye/saugeyes and bass, a 10-inch minimum to crappie.
Artificial flies-and-lures fishing with a catch-and-release provision for bass were approved for the Bald Eagle Pond in St. Vrain State Park.
Back to Top
