Fishing reports
7250 reports across all 50 states — current conditions and what's biting.
South Platte trico hatches peak; tailwater midges hold the Arkansas this July
Gink and Gasoline singles out the South Platte River as prime trico country in summer — dense spinner falls demand drag-free presentations and light tippet, and the fish reward precision anglers. Colorado's 2026 season is running lean: Cutthroat Anglers (CO) reported historically poor winter snowpack, pushing freestone reaches low and warm. Tailwaters on the South Platte and Arkansas are the smart play right now, insulated by consistent dam releases that keep temperatures manageable. AvidMax Blog (CO) has been spotlighting midge emergers — patterns like the Chocolate Foam Back and Titan Tube Midge — as top producers in clear, cold tailwater conditions. Cutthroat Anglers notes that in low-snowpack years, trout group tighter into holding lies, making them findable but requiring accurate, delicate presentations. Trout Unlimited cautions that warm-water stress is real this summer; plan morning sessions and be ready to rest fish quickly.
Canyon Ferry Walleye Active; Heat and Drought Pressure MT Trout
MT FWP Fishing News is the dominant signal for Montana anglers this week. On Canyon Ferry Reservoir, FWP and Walleyes Unlimited are encouraging anglers to keep more smaller walleye — fewer small fish competing for forage means faster growth for the larger class. The reservoir's walleye population dates to at least 1989, and current catch pressure makes the conservation reminder timely. For trout anglers on the Yellowstone and Missouri, conditions carry more uncertainty: MT FWP Fishing News flagged a below-average snowpack winter and a seasonal forecast running hotter and drier than normal, prompting a summer fishery townhall. The agency, partnering with USGS, MSU, and NOAA, also launched TroutCast on June 1, 2026, a web-based tool to forecast drought impacts on Montana's blue-ribbon rivers. Trout Unlimited echoes the concern, noting that warm water carries less dissolved oxygen and that heat-stressed trout should be handled quickly and kept wet.
Morning windows key for Bitterroot cutthroat as July heat tightens the bite
Trout Unlimited's current summer advisories are front of mind for Montana anglers this July 4th weekend, with rising afternoon water temperatures flagging the Bitterroot's lower reaches as increasingly stressful for trout during midday hours. No USGS gauge readings are available in this report window, but seasonal pattern for the Bitterroot in early July typically means flows have dropped from their spring-runoff peak, clearing up and warming toward afternoon thresholds. Field & Stream's recent coverage points directly at pocket water as the most productive summer holding zone, recommending a strike indicator rig with one or two subsurface flies worked upstream through river center. On Flathead Lake, lake trout (mackinaw) push toward deeper, cooler structure as surface temperatures climb through July. Hatch Magazine's ongoing discussion of bull trout ethics is worth revisiting: this federally protected char is present in the Flathead drainage and warrants careful handling if encountered.
Delta Bass Prime for Independence Day as July Heat Sets In
Independence Day weekend pushes the Sacramento-Delta into full summer mode, with largemouth bass the clear headliner. Specific on-the-water intel for the Delta is limited this cycle — no NOAA buoy or USGS gauge readings were available, and the regional aggregator NorCal Fish Reports did not yield a current bite summary. That said, Tactical Bassin's July bass coverage confirms that fish metabolisms hit an annual peak this month, with bass "aggressively feeding on a variety of prey species" and the bite capable of being exceptional for anglers who time their sessions right. In the Delta, that means targeting tule edges and mat cover with topwater at first light, then transitioning to deeper channel structure and shaded pilings through the midday heat. Striped bass and channel catfish round out the active freshwater targets. The waning gibbous moon supports evening and overnight feeding windows. Confirm current water temperatures locally before launching.
July heat drives Arizona bass into dawn and dusk windows
Tactical Bassin's July bass roundup calls elevated water temperatures the key driver of summer feeding behavior, and on Roosevelt Lake and the Salt River chain, that signal is in full effect as the 4th of July arrives. With no buoy or gauge readings available this cycle, midday surface temps on these desert reservoirs can reasonably be expected in the upper 80s based on seasonal norms, compressing productive fishing into the first two hours after sunrise and the final 90 minutes before dark. Largemouth and striped bass track this pattern closely, moving shallow only during low-light windows before retreating to deeper structure as the sun climbs. The waning gibbous moon reinforces early-morning feeding activity. Channel catfish remain a reliable target after dark along the Salt River chain's deeper pools. No Arizona-specific state agency or local charter reports were available in this cycle to confirm current bite windows or fish location. Confirm conditions with a local resource before heading out.
Record Brown Trout Headlines South Fork as Terrestrial Season Peaks
A new Idaho catch-and-release record for brown trout was just confirmed on the South Fork of the Snake River, where Caroline Langdale, fly fishing below Palisades Dam, landed a fish measuring over 30 inches and edging the previous record set in 2016, per Field & Stream. That benchmark fish signals the South Fork tailwater is fishing at a high level heading into the July 4th holiday weekend. No current gauge data is available, so anglers should confirm flows via USGS before launching. With midsummer heat building, Trout Unlimited cautions that warm water carries less dissolved oxygen and stresses cold-blooded trout; target the first two hours after dawn and the last hour before dark. Terrestrials are the summer game: hoppers, beetles, and ants drifted along grassy cutbanks are a natural fit for both rivers right now. Field & Stream's pocket-water playbook (strike indicator above one or two subsurface flies, worked upstream) is a reliable fallback when surface activity stalls.
Cumberland tailwater trout hold cool as lake bass switch to summer depths
Tactical Bassin's July bass report flags the holiday weekend as the year's peak heat window, when bass metabolisms run at full throttle but midday shallows become largely unproductive. On Lake Cumberland and the Cumberland River tailwater, that heat-season split plays out with particular drama: the tailwater below Wolf Creek Dam — fed by cold hypolimnetic releases — remains one of the few places in Kentucky where trout fishing stays viable through midsummer, while main-lake bass push to deep ledges and thermocline structure. No gauge readings are available for this report cycle, so exact flow and temperature figures should be verified through USGS or KDFWR before launching. Trout Unlimited underscores a broader summer caution, noting that trout struggle physiologically when water temps climb — a reminder to handle tailwater fish quickly and favor morning windows. The waning gibbous moon extends low-light feeding into the pre-dawn hours this weekend.
Salt River bass and Colorado tailwater trout hold through peak July heat
Tactical Bassin's July bass content notes that largemouth metabolisms peak in summer heat, with fish feeding aggressively before retreating to depth as the sun climbs — a pattern that plays out predictably on Arizona's Salt River chain of lakes every Fourth of July. No USGS gauge data or water temperature readings are available for this update; conditions are drawn from seasonal patterns and applicable angler intel. July 4th lands at the hottest point of Arizona's desert summer, with Phoenix-corridor air temperatures regularly exceeding 105°F and compressing productive fishing into the pre-dawn through 9 a.m. window and again after sunset. On the Colorado River at Lee's Ferry, Glen Canyon Dam releases keep tailwater temperatures cold year-round, sustaining rainbow trout fishing through conditions that would shut down most desert waters. Hatch Magazine spotlights carp as one of America's most underrated warm-season fly targets, and the Southwest river system offers ample shallow-flat opportunities to hunt them on the fly.
July 4th Weekend Brings Summer Peak to Missouri River and Black Hills Waters
Tactical Bassin reports that bass metabolisms hit 'an all time high' in July, and that holds true across South Dakota's Missouri River system as the Fourth of July weekend arrives. No gauge or buoy data is available for local waters this period, but seasonal patterns and regional angling intelligence point to a productive window for smallmouth bass on the Missouri River's rocky structure and tailwaters — topwater and fast-moving presentations shine before the sun climbs. For walleye, Fishing the Midwest highlights working the weedline edge as summer's best structural play; anglers who cover both shallow and deep transition zones tend to outperform through midsummer. In the Black Hills, Field & Stream's pocket-water trout guidance translates directly to smaller tributaries: wade mid-current, run subsurface nymphs under a strike indicator, and work pockets upstream through the heat of the day. Heavy holiday boat traffic on Missouri River reservoirs this weekend will push fish off midday haunts — plan first-light and evening windows.
Summer Chinook Take Center Stage on the Columbia for July Fourth
Columbia River summer Chinook are historically at their peak push during the first week of July, making this Fourth of July weekend one of the better windows to target kings. No gauge readings or catch reports specific to this region arrived in our current feed cycle, so water temperature and flow data are unconfirmed — check current streamflow and state fishing reports before launching. On the mainstem, summer kings typically concentrate in current seams and depth transitions from the lower estuary up through the Bonneville reach. White sturgeon are accessible throughout the system year-round; retention rules are strictly zone-and-size dependent, so verify current state regulations before keeping any fish. The waning gibbous moon this weekend compresses the most productive feeding periods — concentrate effort at first and last light for best results. Boat traffic will peak Saturday through Monday.
Eastern Sierra trout shift to dawn and dusk windows as summer heat settles in
Reno Fly Shop's recent Truckee River report — the most geographically proximate intel available this cycle — describes 'good fishing' with the best action front-loaded into morning hours before summer heat and recreational traffic peak. That early-window pattern should translate directly across the Eastern Sierra drainages for the holiday weekend. Caddis, stonefly, and evening hatch activity are drawing fish to the surface, with Yellow Sallies, PMDs, Golden Stones, and caddis all in the mix per Reno Fly Shop's early- and mid-June updates. Terrestrial season is now fully underway: Trout Unlimited confirms that 'summer is in full swing' and trout are keying on ants, beetles, and hoppers falling into the current. Notably, western snowpacks are at historic lows this season per Cutthroat Anglers, pointing to lower, clearer conditions than typical — a setup that rewards light tippet, careful approaches, and precise casts.
Smallmouth and walleye hit midsummer rhythm across the Boundary Waters
Fishing the Midwest's Bob Jensen is calling July the heart of weedline season across Upper Midwest lakes, a pattern that tracks closely with what Boundary Waters and Iron Range anglers should expect this week as surface temps crest midsummer highs. No USGS gauge or NOAA buoy readings were available for this region this report cycle, so conditions are drawn from seasonal norms and regional technique intel. Tactical Bassin's July bass rundown notes that fish metabolisms peak this month, supporting aggressive moving-bait presentations through the warmest hours. In the BWCA's clear, cool lakes, smallmouth bass are the headline summer species, active along rocky points, island shorelines, and boulder fields. Walleye have completed their post-spawn scatter and are settling onto deeper breaklines in the 15-to-25-foot range. Northern pike hold along emerging weed edges in Iron Range shallower flowages. The waning gibbous moon and July 4th holiday boat traffic both favor working toward less-pressured portage lakes.
Early-July window opens on Wind River & North Platte trout
No gauge readings or Wyoming-specific shop intel arrived in this cycle's data feed — exact flow and temperature figures aren't available, so check your state agency's website before heading out. What the calendar and regional context make clear: early July typically marks the tail end of snowmelt runoff on both drainages, with conditions settling into summer form right around Independence Day. Trout Unlimited's current content flags rising summer water temperatures as the governing variable for trout welfare, urging anglers to fish early and seek faster, well-oxygenated pocket water as the day heats up. Field & Stream's midsummer pocket-water guidance recommends a 9-foot 5X leader with a strike indicator and one or two subsurface flies, picking pockets as you wade upstream. Morning windows before 10 a.m. are your best opportunity; afternoon thunderstorms are common at high elevations in July and can briefly push flows on freestone tributaries.
Mille Lacs walleye working depth transitions as July heat sets in
Fishing the Midwest's Bob Jensen calls out weedline and structure edges as the prime summer pattern in his 2026 open-water season roundup — and that read translates directly to Mille Lacs Lake, where walleye historically pull off the shallows and concentrate along rocky mid-lake humps and hard-bottom breaks in July. No NOAA buoy or USGS gauge data landed in this report cycle for the lake, and no Mille Lacs-specific charter or shop intel surfaced from our source feeds this week. With that gap acknowledged: the Waning Gibbous moon favors low-light bites at dawn and dusk, when walleye push shallower onto rocky points. Fourth of July weekend boat traffic typically compresses productive windows to the early morning and evening hours. Anglers should verify current walleye harvest slot limits with the MNDNR before keeping fish — Mille Lacs restrictions have changed frequently in recent seasons.
Arkansas River bass bouncing back as July heat arrives on both rivers
MLF News reports the Arkansas River near Muskogee took a hard hit from torrential rains ahead of the mid-June Toyota Series event, leaving conditions well below peak. Local regular Rodney Copeland says the fishery should recover in time for the Phoenix Bass Fishing League Okie Division visit on July 18, and cautious optimism is building among area anglers. No specific White River reports landed in this cycle, but the world-renowned tailwater trout fishery below Bull Shoals and Norfork Dams typically holds through July on cold dam releases. Tactical Bassin notes that bass metabolisms are at their annual peak in July, with fish actively chasing prey across shallow timber, riprap, and emerging weed edges, consistent with summer patterns on the Arkansas River once flows settle. No USGS gauge data was available this cycle; verify current conditions before launching.
Driftless streams enter prime terrestrial season for Fourth of July weekend
Root River Rod Co's go-to Driftless streamer — a pine squirrel jig built to bounce rocky bottom without hanging up — is getting national attention in MidCurrent's Tying Tuesday roundup this week, a reminder that subsurface presentations remain productive on these tight, technical spring creeks even as midsummer heat takes hold. No live gauge data is available for this report, so check local streamflow before heading out. Trout Unlimited cautions that warm water carries less dissolved oxygen and urges anglers to fish early, handle fish minimally, and treat any reach running above 68°F as a no-fishing zone. The Fourth of July weekend traditionally opens the heart of terrestrial season on Wisconsin spring creeks: foam ants, beetles, and early-season hoppers belong in every box right now, cast tight to undercut banks and beneath overhanging brush. Shaded spring-fed reaches and pocket water are the most reliable midday holding lies when afternoon temperatures climb.
Bass and walleye lock into summer patterns across Upper Mississippi pools
With July 4th heat settling over the Upper Mississippi from Prescott to La Crosse, summer patterns are well established across the pools. No gauge or buoy readings are available for this cycle, but mid-summer water temperatures in this stretch typically climb into the upper 70s to low 80s°F — enough to push walleye toward deeper current seams during the heat of day and position bass aggressively on early-morning weedline edges. Tactical Bassin's July outlook confirms that bass metabolisms peak this month, making dawn topwater and shallow-cover presentations particularly productive before temperatures spike. Fishing the Midwest contributor Bob Jensen recommends targeting weedlines as a primary summer strategy, noting that anglers willing to mix species — walleye, bass, and panfish — find more consistent action when any single bite cools. No pool-by-pool charter or agency reports landed in this cycle; verify current conditions with local tackle shops before heading out.
North Shore Lake Trout and Coho on the troll as inland July bass peak
Per the MN DNR Lake Superior Summer Fishing report dated July 2, anglers trolling the Lower Shore from Duluth to Two Harbors are landing solid numbers of 19-25 inch Lake Trout and 16-18 inch Coho Salmon, with a few Chinook in the 20-28 inch range on the same passes. Surface temps on Superior ran 48-56°F this week, and rainy, windy conditions limited time on the water. When conditions cooperated, trolling bright stickbaits and spoons 20-80 feet below the surface drew the most strikes. Farther inland across the Twin Cities and North Woods, no direct lake or river reports are available in this edition — but July 4 weekend historically marks the heart of weedline season for walleye and peak aggression for bass. Fishing the Midwest calls working the weedline the go-to summer technique for MN mixed fisheries. A waning gibbous moon dims the overnight period heading into the holiday weekend, favoring early-morning and late-evening feeding windows.
Lake Erie Smallmouth and Walleye in Prime July Form in Western NY
No buoy or gauge readings populated for Lake Erie or the Niagara River this cycle, and no angler intel specific to Western New York reached today's source feeds. Seasonal patterns for early July in this corridor point to Lake Erie's eastern basin entering its prime smallmouth window, with bass working shallow rocky structure and points at first light before retreating to the 20-30-foot break by midday. Walleye hold on mid-lake humps and transitions in 25-40 feet, most active in low-light windows at dawn and dusk. Fishing the Midwest highlights working the weedline as a key mid-summer Great Lakes tactic, and that strategy translates directly to Erie's emerging grass edges. Yellow perch school over sandy flats. The Niagara River's current pulls walleye and smallmouth along bottom structure for drift presentations. Tactical Bassin confirms July is a high-metabolism month when bass actively chase a range of presentations throughout the day. Verify conditions locally before launching.
July heat fires up Ozark and Missouri River bass as summer peaks
Tactical Bassin notes that July ranks among the best months for freshwater bass anywhere in the country, with fish metabolisms at a seasonal peak and feeding windows bookending the hottest parts of the day. For Missouri and Ozark River anglers, that means largemouth and smallmouth are pushing into shallow cover at first light and again at dusk, while midday heat sends fish tight to current breaks, blowdowns, and deeper channel edges. Fishing the Midwest points to weedline transitions as reliable producers, with bass and walleye both staging along submerged vegetation as summer fully settles in. No gauge readings are available for this report cycle — confirm current river conditions before launching. The waning gibbous moon favors late-evening and pre-dawn feeding pushes. Fourth of July holiday pressure is expected on popular access points; targeting mid-river structure and shaded riparian cover away from boat ramps will give you the best shot at quality fish.
Summer Bass Bite Heats Up as Cumberland Flows Run Lean
USGS gauge 03434500 on the Cumberland River is logging 255 cfs — a lean summer stage that concentrates fish around structure and tightens the bite window to early morning and evening. With July now fully underway, Tactical Bassin reports that bass metabolisms are running at a seasonal high this month, making active feeding patterns the norm despite the heat. Low flows push baitfish tight to channel edges and submerged timber, turning ambush points into reliable producers for largemouth and spotted bass. Waning Gibbous moon conditions this weekend favor pre-dawn and dusk pushes over midday grinding. Catfish are a strong secondary option — summer low water traditionally stages them near deeper current breaks and dam tailraces. No water temperature reading is available from the gauge at this time, but surface temps across Tennessee impoundments typically run well into the upper 70s to low 80s by early July. Check local forecast before heading out on what promises to be a busy holiday weekend.
Summer heat arrives on the Colorado & Arkansas — trout target cool seams
Water temps on the Colorado River registered 71°F at USGS gauge 09095500 on the evening of July 3 — right at the upper edge of comfortable trout-fishing territory. Cutthroat Anglers (CO) put it plainly: more than 60% of the Lower 48 is in some level of drought and Western snowpacks ran at historic lows this winter, yet 'the fish that remain are active, grouped up, and ready to bite for the angler willing to hike a little further or cast a little lighter.' Crystal Fly Shop noted the Colorado River shedding its runoff flows and entering a prime summer window, with green drakes and golden stones on the near horizon. At 71°F and with holiday-weekend pressure on popular access points, the most productive play will be early-morning sessions targeting shaded, oxygenated pockets and tailwater stretches where regulated releases keep temperatures in check. Field & Stream echoes the approach: mid-river pocket water holds active summer trout and requires far less technical precision than slow-water flats.
High Water on the Mississippi Pushes Catfish and Bass Into Slack-Water Holds
The USGS gauge 07289000 on the Mississippi at Vicksburg is recording 888,000 cfs as of July 4 — well above the seasonal baseline and a condition that fundamentally reshapes where fish are holding. In heavy current, blue and channel catfish abandon the open channel and stack in wing-dam eddies, tailrace pools, and flooded timber along cutbanks where current relief gives them an edge on prey. On the bass front, Tactical Bassin highlights July as one of the peak feeding months of the year, with largemouth metabolism running at its seasonal high and shallow-cover topwater bites firing in the early morning hours. The Pearl River, less influenced by the swollen mainstem, offers more stable and accessible conditions for bass and crappie anglers. A waning gibbous moon this holiday weekend supports nighttime catfish sessions on cut bait and fresh shad — a technique that suits big blues in turbid, off-color water. No water temperature reading is available from the gauge this cycle; anglers should plan on warm, stained conditions throughout the system.
Neely Henry bass bite sizzling as Coosa enters summer stride
Bass fishing on Alabama's Coosa River system is delivering this Fourth of July weekend. Per MLF News, Neely Henry Lake, a Coosa River impoundment near Gadsden, "has been fishing phenomenally in recent months, including some eye-popping weights in regional team events," with the Phoenix Bass Fishing League Bama Division event scheduled there for July 18 generating real pre-tournament buzz. Shallow cover, particularly water willow, is reported as a primary bass producer right now. USGS gauge 02339500 logs a stable 779 cfs flow; no water temperature is recorded at the gauge, but midsummer Alabama surface temps typically push into the upper 80s°F, moving bass toward dawn and dusk feeding windows. Tactical Bassin notes that July puts bass metabolisms at an annual high, making aggressive early presentations worthwhile before midday heat sets in. The waning gibbous moon this weekend may extend low-light feeding windows into pre-dawn hours, giving anglers who launch early a distinct edge.