Pennsylvania fishing reports
189 reports for Pennsylvania — what's biting, water temps, and where to focus.
Wild Browns Rising on Penns Creek as Prime Limestone Mayfly Season Unfolds
USGS gauge 01546500 logged a flow of 89.7 cfs at dawn on May 11 — moderate, wadeable conditions across central Pennsylvania's limestone trout belt. Field & Stream this week invokes Penns Creek directly, referencing anglers who time their visits around Hendrickson mayfly hatches that pull wild brown trout to the surface, and pairs it alongside Spring Creek as a destination limestoner defined by green drake hatches and "big, slurping browns." Water temperature data wasn't available from the gauge this reading cycle, but spring-fed limestone streams in this corridor typically hold in the mid-50s to low 60s°F through May — prime dry-fly territory once afternoon air temperatures climb. The characteristically high clarity of both streams demands long leaders, fine tippets, and careful approach angles. A Waning Crescent moon this week suppresses nocturnal light, which typically concentrates surface feeding activity into the best afternoon hatch windows rather than spreading it across the day.
Allegheny running high — fish concentrate below dam structures
USGS gauge 03036500 clocked 40,100 cfs at 5:00 a.m. on May 11 — well-elevated spring flow that compresses productive water into current seams, eddy pockets, and the slack zones immediately below the Allegheny's lock-and-dam chain. No water temperature was returned from the gauge; mid-May in western PA typically brings river readings in the upper 50s to low 60s°F, enough to sustain active post-spawn feeding across smallmouth bass, walleye, and catfish. No Pittsburgh-area charter or tackle-shop intel appeared in the current data feeds, so this report leans on seasonal signals and adjacent reporting: Tactical Bassin notes the bluegill spawn is in full swing across the mid-Atlantic and Midwest right now — a reliable proxy that smallmouth have moved through spawning and are transitioning to aggressive post-spawn feeding. Walleye in these tailwaters typically hold near dam aprons and deeper current breaks at this point in the season. Consult PA Fish & Boat biologist reports for the latest stocking schedules and local conditions before heading out.
Presque Isle walleye and bass shifting into May patterns as spring peaks
USGS gauge 04213000 recorded 608 cfs on the morning of May 11, with no water temperature reading available from this check — tributaries running at a moderate mid-spring pace. Direct Presque Isle on-water intel is limited in this update. Tactical Bassin reports the bluegill spawn is now in full swing regionally, a reliable seasonal benchmark that draws bass into accessible shallow cover and opens the door for early-morning topwater bites. Fishing the Midwest highlights jigs and live-bait rigs as the workhorses for walleye fishing through the spring-to-summer transition, consistent with Lake Erie's typical mid-May patterns. Yellow perch remain seasonally active near bay structure and breakwalls. Steelhead runs are winding down for the year at this point. Anglers should check PA Fish & Boat Commission biologist reports directly for Erie-specific stocking schedules, current conditions, and any applicable regulation updates before heading out.
Susquehanna trout in prime hatch window; smallmouth staging ahead of spawn
USGS gauge 01540500 recorded 56°F water and 20,700 cfs on the Susquehanna at 4:30 a.m. Monday — conditions that place trout squarely in their feeding window even as elevated flows push fish off mainstem riffles. Field & Stream's recent Pennsylvania feature highlights active stocked rainbow fishing on Loyalsock Creek, while Penns Creek and its limestone peers are seeing Hendrickson hatches pull wild brown trout to the surface. With the main stem running fast and elevated, the most productive water right now is tributary mouths, back eddies, and smaller feeders where flows are clearing. On the bass front, Tactical Bassin reports the bluegill spawn is in full swing — a reliable trigger that pulls large bass shallow around wood and weed-edge cover. At 56°F, Susquehanna smallmouth are staging just ahead of their own spawn; that bite should sharpen markedly as temperatures push toward 60°F in the coming days. Waning crescent moon tonight favors daytime bite windows over low-light periods.
Penns Creek Sulphurs and Green Drakes loom as May hatches build
Field & Stream recently invoked both Penns Creek and Spring Creek by name, calling their green drake hatches and "big, slurping browns the stuff of legend" and citing the Hendrickson season as the benchmark pursuit on Penns. USGS gauge 01546500 logged 95 cfs on the evening of May 10—a fishable, manageable flow for wading these central Pennsylvania limestoners. Water temperature data was not available at this reading. Mid-May sits squarely in the transition from the tail end of Hendrickson season into the arrival of Sulphurs, a hatch that typically fires on central PA limestone streams in the second and third weeks of May. Evening rises are the prime window; look for fish working flats and slower pools as spinner falls concentrate activity. The Last Quarter moon suggests darker overnight conditions that can push larger browns into feeding lanes earlier. The Penns Creek Green Drake hatch—the region's marquee event—is now just weeks away.
Allegheny running high as bass and walleye retreat to slack-water edges
USGS gauge 03036500 clocked the Allegheny at 40,100 cfs on the evening of May 10 — a sharply elevated reading that shifts the entire fishing equation across the Pittsburgh corridor. No water temperature was recorded at the gauge this cycle. Angler intel specific to this stretch is sparse in the current feed; most regional coverage this week tracks coastal striper migrations and general post-spawn bass transitions. Tactical Bassin reports the bluegill spawn is in full swing — a window that normally pulls smallmouth and largemouth into shallow cover — but at current flows, most bank-structure presentations are overwhelmed by current. Fish that would ordinarily hold on wing dams and rip-rap are displaced into tributary mouths, deep channel eddies, and the downstream faces of bridge abutments. Hatch Magazine's feature on caddis emergence tactics in tailrace environments is a useful frame for fly anglers; the regulated sections below dam faces offer more predictable, fishable flows when the open main stem is blown out.
Post-spawn walleye and smallmouth active across Lake Erie's PA waters
USGS gauge 04213000 clocked 546 cfs on the evening of May 10th — moderate late-spring tributary flow that should keep Presque Isle Bay and the nearshore zone accessible for weekend anglers. With the Last Quarter moon and mid-May calendar, Lake Erie's walleye are completing their post-spawn scatter from late-April rocky reefs, pushing toward mid-depth contours in the 25–40 foot range. Tactical Bassin (blog) confirms the bluegill spawn is in full swing across Great Lakes-region waters this week, a consistent timing marker signaling that Erie's smallmouth bass are at or just past peak bedding on the gravel flats around Presque Isle's north shore — fish are beginning to pull off beds and stage in adjacent structure. Fishing the Midwest highlights jigs and spinning-gear live-bait presentations as top producers for walleye in the upper Midwest this spring. PA Sea Grant has flagged Round Goby expansion in Northwestern Pennsylvania waters as a growing invasive presence in the region's forage base; yellow perch are also on track for mid-May, expected on mid-depth sandy flats as the season progresses.
Penns Creek wild browns on the rise as sulphurs replace fading Hendricksons
Flow at USGS gauge 01546500 on Spring Creek registered 89.7 cfs as of 7:45 a.m. on May 10 — a moderate, wadeable level for Pennsylvania's limestone corridor in mid-spring. No water temperature was recorded at the gauge this morning. Field & Stream recently described the allure of Penns Creek's Hendrickson hatch for wild brown trout, calling these limestoners' green drake hatches and 'big, slurping browns the stuff of legend.' That Hendrickson window is at or past its seasonal peak now, but the transition sets up well: sulphur emergences typically begin filling the gap on both Spring Creek and Penns Creek through the second half of May, and the green drake — Pennsylvania's most celebrated trout-stream emergence — is generally two to three weeks out. Evening dry-fly fishing during the transitional hatch windows is a real opportunity for anglers who time their arrival carefully. No weather data was available for this report; check local conditions before heading out.
High Allegheny flows push smallmouth toward slack edges in post-spawn May
USGS gauge 03036500 on the Allegheny recorded 36,300 cfs as of 8 a.m. this Sunday — a significantly elevated flow that defines conditions across the Pittsburgh tailwaters this week. No water temperature data was available from the gauge. At these levels the river is running high and likely carrying color, pushing fish off main-channel structure and into slack-water edges, backwater pockets, and tributary mouths. Tactical Bassin (blog) reports that early May is the heart of the post-spawn bass transition nationally, with the bluegill spawn in full swing and larger fish beginning to prowl shallow cover — a pattern generally applicable to Pennsylvania's warm-water rivers, though high flows complicate access to those shallow haunts. PA Sea Grant recently convened Allegheny-area anglers around invasive Round Goby management in the watershed, underscoring the broader ecological pressures the river system is navigating this season. Anglers should target slack-water seams and consult PA Fish & Boat — Biologist Reports for current stocking and access information before heading out.
Lake Erie walleye rolling into May at Presque Isle
A Michigan Sportsman Forum angler trolling Lake Erie's Canadian side on May 8 reported landing six walleyes on Bandit crankbaits run 25 feet back on planer boards, pausing first at Bassett Channel in 21 feet of water to probe for perch before a mid-afternoon wind shift ended the session. While that report covers Ontario waters, walleye range freely across the PA boundary this time of year, and the same trolling approach remains the standard for Lake Erie's Erie County zone. USGS gauge 04213000 shows Cattaraugus Creek — a key Lake Erie tributary — at a moderate 395 cfs as of May 10, signaling that spring runoff is still present in the system. Steelhead runs in Lake Erie feeders are typically winding down by mid-May, though elevated tributary flows can briefly extend the window. No PA-specific state agency or charter reports were available in this update cycle; seasonal patterns and the available Great Lakes intel guide the outlook.
Susquehanna tributaries alive for trout as smallmouth approach the spawn
Water temps hit 56°F at USGS gauge 01540500 on the morning of May 10, with the Susquehanna running at an elevated 20,300 cfs — the spring push still very much in play. Field & Stream this week published a firsthand account of productive stocked-rainbow fishing on Loyalsock Creek, a Susquehanna tributary, with the author noting that Penns Creek and Spring Creek wild-brown regulars are eyeing the incoming Hendrickson and green drake hatches as peak mid-May approaches. That 56°F reading puts smallmouth bass squarely in their spawn window across lower-gradient stretches; Tactical Bassin's early-May update confirms that bass across mid-Atlantic latitudes are still cycling through the spawn, with post-spawn fish beginning their transition toward open-water structure. Elevated main-stem flows keep wading anglers focused on tributary mouths and slower inside bends. PA Sea Grant's recent Allegheny-area outreach flagged Round Goby expansion as an emerging concern — clean and dry gear when moving between river systems.
PA Limestone Trout Peak Hatch on Spring Creek
USGS gauge 01546500 logged Spring Creek at 101 cfs early this morning — a moderate, wading-friendly flow that keeps visibility reasonable through limestone-fed pools and riffles. Water temperature was not available in this gauge cycle. No specific on-the-ground reports from Spring Creek or Penns Creek appeared in this week's intel feeds, so conditions here blend gauge data with what's typical for central Pennsylvania limestone systems in early May. That said, early May is historically the most productive hatch window on both streams. Sulphur mayflies, Grannom caddis, and Blue-Winged Olives overlap in this period, giving wild brown and rainbow trout steady feeding cues from late morning through evening. Hatch Magazine notes that caddis emergences are foundational to trout-stream success at this time of year. MidCurrent's recent tying coverage highlights surface-film and open-water patterns as the right toolkit once hatches begin firing. Confirm current stocking schedules with PA Fish & Boat before your trip.