Hump Day Missouri River Fishing Report

Hump Day Missouri River Fishing Report A short bulleted version of the Hump Day Missouri River Fishing Report. Good Trico spinner fall in the morning. The farther you are downstream the longer it lasts. If you are fishing at the dam it goes by and poof gone! Lower downriver the bugs keep coming for a while. … Read more

Mid July Missouri River Fishing Report

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text] Mid July Missouri River Fishing Report Mid July Missouri River Fishing Report begins and ends with the Trico hatch. Going strong here fishing central Montana’s Missouri River. It is the focus of most everyday. Missouri River Trico Hatch Timing is everything. You want to be in your spot or flat when the Trico’s fall … Read more

June is done Missouri River Fishing Report

June is done Missouri River Fishing Report

June is done Missouri River Fishing Report Caddis, Pale Morning Duns, Yellow Sally’s, Nocturnal Stones, Brown Drakes, Callibaetis, and now Trico’s. What is not to like?! July is a great month on the Missouri River with lots of dry fly opportunities. You really can fish the dry fly dawn til dusk. And June? June is … Read more

Wednesday Missouri River Montana Fishing Report

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text] Wednesday Missouri River Montana Fishing Report Damn good dry fly fishing. Most of the anglers I saw on Tuesday were toying with the dry fly. Good on them. Wednesday should be the same, with less wind. The wind came up about noon yesterday scaring most of the anglers into an early departure. Saving up … Read more

Headhunters Missouri River Weekend Fishing Report

Headhunters Missouri River Weekend Fishing Report

Headhunters Missouri River Weekend Fishing Report Rolling into the weekend with warm weather and light winds. Should be a great one on Montana’s Missouri River. Craig will be buzzing. Water levels dropping this week as we anticipate the filling of Canyon Ferry to be soon. The reservoir is 94.9% full with a topping out of … Read more

Missouri River Fishing Report: Holding Steady

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]It seems like it’s been a while since I’ve seen a couple of chutes open at Holter Dam. Drove up today to watch the water pour over the top. I like it. Makes it feel like there actually is some runoff around. The river is currently holding steady in the upper 6000’s. It crossed the 7000CFS line for a day, but has dropped a little since them. We are heading into a warming trend, including a few days of 90 degrees in the forecast. If we’re going to see some kind of jump in the flows it may be in the next 10 days.

CURRENTLY

While not all would agree, I think the increase in flows has been good for the fishing. Caddis, BWO and now PMD’s are hatching along with some random Caddis and mayflies that are more localized. If the weather is right – and when it is you can feel the humidity – the bugs are out and the fish are looking for them. Don’t be afraid to blind fish a Caddis or Flying Ant pattern in these conditions. You ‘ll probably pick off those occasional rising fish, and also get a few that did not show themselves. I’d have some BWO and PMD cripples (Harrop, Nymen) on me, along with some smaller midge clusters, Corn Fed Caddis, Blooms Caddis, Bloom’s Ant, CFO Ant, Purple Haze/Craze and possibly a small hopper pattern. Yes, I said hopper. And an All Stages Cadddis to hang off the back of larger more buoyant patterns.

Streamer fishing has definitely picked up over the last week. It had nowhere to go but up, as we’ve had one of the tougher streamer-springs I’ve witnessed. You can hit them on a variety of patterns, and colored water coming in from our local tributaries only helps. Try white, flashy, muted, olive, black, Kreelex, bugger… you get the idea. As usual, we tend to use somewhat smaller flies than the SW crowd and their Galloupy 2 hookers. BUT, this is the time of year you might find one of those big nasties on the end of our line. Cheech’s Leech, the Sex Dungeon or a big old Dali Lama are pretty popular patterns right now. The river is not high enough to require a sink-tip, but it’s probably a good idea to at least have a poly-leader in the boat for those deeper banks.

Nymphing has been good to excellent since flows stabilized. And by excellent I mean excellent. Our guide staff – and their customers – are reporting some insane days. If you’re not getting them try something different. Different fly, side of the river, depth, water type, etc. They are eating.

Nymphing is most popular in the morning, then a switch to the dry at lunch. Both because you’ve probably caught enough under the bobber, and more fish are feeding in the afternoons right now. But not all.

GET READY FOR

A big jump in the amount of Caddis and PMD’s you see out there. The upcoming heat should kick off both of those hatches. Make sure and have patterns that imitate all stages for the PMD hatch – nymph, emerger, Dun and Spinner (usually Rusty). And you’ll want to have a variety of caddis patterns. Low-riders for the glassy stuff, and some old school fluffy high-riders for the faster riffles and banks. Ninth has several great looking new spent caddis patterns that we have been itching to try. They look good, and should be effective.

Hopefully the river doesn’t jump too big, too fast. If it does, it may squash 95% of the dry fly fishing no matter how big the hatch. You can always find a few in channels and backwaters, but once she passes the 8000CFS mark, it can be tough to find heads.

FREESTONES

Most seem to be holding steady, but they should jump up in the next week as daytime highs reach 90 and nighttime lows stall in the upper 50’s. A few folks have been fishing the Dearborn and most reports have been good. Not bad, not great. Which is good. The scenery is spectacular and the flows make for an easy float right now. If I was thinking about it, I’d do it by this weekend.

Blackfoot is holding steady and is putting out some big fish in high water conditions (3000CFS). Streamers, slop-rigs, nymphing the slow insides and slough areas should produce. I expect to see it rise and get a little dirty next week.

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Headhunters guide Max Mattioli shows off a nice Rainbow caught by Rob.

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Sunday Motivator

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]Ben McNinch shows us a dandy Brown he landed the other day. Right when the water bumped, but hey, that’s his day off. Do you think Ninch is going to take the day off because they raise the water a little? Not a chance. And his he going to raise the white flag because things are tough? Negative.

Ben reported very good fishing – and several big fish – below Craig. He caught them on top and on streamers. He also broke out the two hander in a couple of spots and swung up a half dozen. Pretty good fishing, and we’ heard that from several folks in the last few days.

While the day they bumped the river was tough for some, once the flow stabilized and the fish settled down we’ve heard mostly good to great reports. Most of our guide staff reported that Friday was unbelievably good fishing both with nymphs and dries. The weather was perfect, and most of us like a little color in the water from runoff in the local tributaries.

The sun/wind over the weekend will give way to some moisture, clouds and bugs early in the week. Later in the week we will finally start to see high temperatures over 80 degrees (if the forecast holds true). I’m betting we may see the start of some intense PMD and Caddis hatches. Evening fishing could get very good in the next 7-10 days.

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Rising Water Fishing Report

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]Here we go. Runoff has arrived and with it a bump in flows. Not big enough to push the river out of its banks, but big enough to make you change tactics. The river is currently at 6790CFS (though it could increase by the time you read this) and briefly touched 7K. Inflows at Canyon Ferry are 10,000CFS. Canyon Ferry is 92% full. I’m not going to speculate what will happen, but I doubt we will see really big flows (above 13,000 CFS) below Holter. If we receive a big rain event, it could happen.

Temperatures are moderate so the runoff is pretty stabile in most areas. nearly every gauge I looked at least night was level or dropping slightly. The forecasted highs are to be under 80 through next week, so I expect everything to stay pretty close to where it is right now.

MISSOURI RIVER FISHING

When the first pulse hit 2 days ago, it definitely put a damper on the fishing. I heard mixed reports from most anglers, but some fought through it. Nymphing is the obvious choice when the water is on the rise. Dirty water flies like the San Juan Worm and Clouser Crayfish are coming into play, and you may need to lengthen your leader a bit depending on where you are finding the fish. Our guide staff doesn’t really like this flow much. It’s not high enough to change the game completely, and it’s not low enough for some of the tactics we’ve been using most of the spring. Some spots are fishing different while others are not. A handful of “high water” spots are coming into play. But don’t switch to your 15K tactics yet. Runoff from Little Prickly Pear and the Dearborn are adding some color to the river, but it’s not blown. Streamer guys like this color.

Sticking with the standard BH nymphs will work, but you may want to go up to a #14 or #16 on those mayfly and caddis patterns. The same flies we’ve been recommending for the last month are still in play, but we’re starting to see a few PMD’s out. We typically find that nymph patterns that imitate the front end of a hatch are killers. So try something out of your PMD box.

Speaking of streamers it’s time to hits the banks tight with some big gaudy patterns. Yellow, White and flash are always popular in dirty water. My personal favorite in these conditions and this time of year is olive/white. But you’ll probably need to do a little experimenting until the fish settle down a bit. Did I say Black?

Bugs are hatching, so it’s conceivable that you’ll find some rising fish. If I was committed to the dry fly, I’d probably do two things. 1) Look patiently in side channels, and 2) fish the late afternoon and evening. Pattern selection probably won’t matter that much. Finding fish consistently rising on top will be your biggest battle, especially on sunny days. We often find that high water feeders are focused on emerging bugs, so make sure and have something like the translucent pupa to trail behind you dry.

The whole river is in play, but you should probably keep an eye on the Dearborn is you plan on floating below it. Right now it’s under 600 CFS and dropping slowly. This should have little to no negative impact on fishing. If you’re unfamiliar with the difficult to read nymphing water from Pelican to Cascade, you may want to avoid that float. Nymphing at these flows can be very good down low, but you need to know exactly the line to fish, and the lack of structure, drops and edges makes it very difficult to read.

WADE FISHING

We are right at the point where wade fishing spots begin to disappear. You can find good, wadeable water above Craig and around Pelican Point on both sides of the river. The Canyon will be difficult in all but a few spots, and those will likely be 1 man only situations. If you have a buddy or two with you, stick to the upper.

If you’re wade fishing be prepared for everything. Nymph fishing could involve unweighted rigs with PMD and Caddis emergers, or deep weighted rigs with a Worm and a Worm. Because you’re moving less than boat anglers, you’re more likely to find a surface feeder, so don’t leave your dries in the truck. Swinging streamers could be a good call, especially very early in the morning.

Most importantly, be careful wading, especially around the bottom of gravelly islands and on steep banks. No fish is worth a swim in waders.

If you don’t have a boat or a friend with one (a near impossibility if you live in Bozeman), we rent drift boats as do the other shops on the river. And if you’re a Veteran or Active Duty Military you can reserve one of our 2 Project Healing Waters Adipose Drift Boats for free. Just call the shop, and thank you for your service!

OTHER OPTIONS

From what I’m hearing from guides and shops around the state, some of the big freestone rivers are high, but still fishable – barely. Most are too high to be really productive, but you should find some fish and probably will hang a big one. I’m not going to make any specific recommendations because I don’t want to send you on a goose chase, but it’s worth a call to your favorite fly shop on either side of the divide to get the up to date report.

Lakes are another option right now, and most will be fishing very well. High elevations lakes are clear of ice and full of hungry fish. At lower elevations, the water and weather have remained cool so you should find excellent opportunities there as well. Lower elevation fish will be in post-spawn mood, looking to regain weight.

More and more anglers are out chasing Pike and Bass these days, and this is prime time for that. You’ll need to get a little intel then go exploring. Again, with sides of the divide have opportunities that don’t get nearly as much pressure as our famous trout streams.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]

Inconsistencies

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]The above image shows Missouri River guide Eric Mondragon and clients shoving off into the wind at Wolf Creek on Sunday morning. We’ve had plenty of wind lately. Often from the north, which impacts everything from boat control and casting accuracy to hatches and angler comfort. Wind often indicates a change in the weather, and we’ve had that as well. Lots of changes and inconsistencies in our weather patterns this spring.

My first guiding job was in Ketchum, Id working for Todd Van Brammer at Sun Valley Outfitters. Todd often checked the weather (the newspaper and then The Weather Channel back then) and was looking and hoping for long periods of high pressure. “Inconsistent weather makes for inconsistent fishing” he would preach. He was right then, and still is.

We’ve had some great fishing this spring, but we’ve experienced some shockingly tough fishing as well. May is traditionally a great month on the Missouri River, and considered an “easy” time of year to put fish in the net, but that has not held true this year. Our weather patterns seem to be in a constant state of change, and – as my old boss taught me – so has the fishing. Hatches have not had a chance to settle in to a routine so the trout haven’t either.

Bottom line? It’s hard to expect consistently good fishing when the mercury and barometer are jumping all over the place.

According to the weather-man, things are about to change. Consistency seems to be headed our way. The forecast for the next 10+ days shows another day of windy conditions (today) followed by a solid week or more of partly cloudy conditions, highs in the 60’s slowly moving into the 70’s, and little to no wind by Missouri River standards.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row][vc_column][us_image image=”18766″][vc_column_text]No more big cold fronts and Pacific moisture, no more 80 degrees one day, 50 the next, no strong frontal systems. It looks like just what the dry fly angler needs. A week of winds less than 10mph, partial cloud cover and temperatures warm enough to trigger the bugs. And the wind-vane stays S and W where we want it. Flows are ideal right now – hovering just under 6000 CFS – and hopefully the stars will align and let us finish off this month strong. Water temps are approaching the mid 50’s which may trigger some of our June hatches a little early.

And I see some T-Storms mixed in as well, and I love seeing some boomers in the forecast. While I’m no fan of fishing in a lightning storm, I know I’ll see bugs on those days, including those insane micro-burst-hatches that often precede T-storms.

For those wanting to hit a freestone river, The Dearborn and Blackfoot should fall into nice fishing shape this week, and should benefit from the forecast. They both appear to be stabilizing and should drop and clear a bit if the forecast holds true. Those not-to-hot high temperatures and lack of significant rain are exactly what you want during runoff. Neither will be much of a wade fishing option this week – still to high – but should offer up some great float fishing.

And speaking of The Weather Channel, check out our buddy/meterologist/fly fishing nut Reynolds Wolf at TWC.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]

May Missouri River Fishing Forecast

May Missouri River Fishing Forecast

May Missouri River Fishing Forecast Today on the Headhunters Fly Shop Blog you get the May Missouri River Fishing Forecast. What to expect, wish for, and believe for the month ahead. Missouri Rive May Weather and Water Forecast May is the second rainiest month of the year. The only one that exceeds May is June. … Read more

April 28th Missouri River Fishing Report

April 28th Missouri River Fishing Report

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text] Shit hot short fishing report today this Thursday in late April. BWO’s: Top to bottom. Hatch generally in the afternoon, but yesterday started about 937am and did not stop. March Browns: Yep. This is a short lived hatch and when you blink it will be gone for another year. 7-10 days of this bug … Read more

Missouri River Mid-Week Report

Missouri River Mid-Week Report

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text] Missouri River Mid-Week Report Already Thursday today while Headhunters Fly Shop brings you the Missouri River Mid-Week Report. Th espirn his happening. The Golden-Eye ducks are gone and the Pelicans are here. Must be spring. The air temps have ranged from 80F to snowing. When you pack to come to the Mo in April … Read more

Missouri River Fishing Report Weekend Update

Missouri River Fishing Report Weekend Update

Missouri River Fishing Report Weekend Update All good heading into this April weekend here on the Missouri River. Izaak’s is open, the BWO’s have arrived for real, Midges abound, and the sun is shining. I understand the Oasis is open all days of the week as well. Joe’s Bar? 8-2am daily. Headhunters Fly Shop daily … Read more

April Fools Missouri River Fishing Report

April Fools Missouri River Fishing Report

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text] April Fools Missouri River Fishing Report Our warmest weekend greets the April Fools Missouri River Fishing Report today. We love the 60’s in the spring months. We have just come out of a snowy and rainy period that lasted a couple weeks. After this weekend we dip back into the snow/rain for a day … Read more

Monday Morning Montana Fishing Report

Monday Morning Montana Fishing Report

Monday Morning Montana Fishing Report Fished yesterday afternoon with my wife. Saw a few other boats on the water below Craig. Boats from the top to the bottom and some Easter wade fishers as well. Looked like family time on the river. Good work. Spend time with the family! Bobber Lobbers Pink is still the … Read more

Easter Weekend Missouri River Fishing Report

Easter Weekend Missouri River Fishing Report

Easter Weekend Missouri River Fishing Report The machine is in full motion here on Montana’s finest tailwater fishery as we move into the Easter Weekend Missouri River Fishing Report. The Midges are in motion, the BWO’s are nearly a topic of discussion, Izaak’s is open, Headhunters expanding their spring hours soon, guides out daily with the … Read more

March Mobile Fishing Report

[vc_row][vc_column width=”2/3″][vc_column_text]Braden Lewis is bringing us the Mobile Fishing Report for mid-March. Fishing continues to change with the seasons as we move from winter to spring. Nymphs, streamers and now… dries. We should be talking about mayflies on next months video report. You can always find this embedded on the home page as well as the blog sidebar.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][vc_column width=”1/3″][vc_raw_html]JTNDaWZyYW1lJTIwc3JjJTNEJTIyaHR0cHMlM0ElMkYlMkZwbGF5ZXIudmltZW8uY29tJTJGdmlkZW8lMkYxNTk1NTY2ODIlM0Zwb3J0cmFpdCUzRDAlMjIlMjB3aWR0aCUzRCUyMjMwMCUyMiUyMGhlaWdodCUzRCUyMjUzMyUyMiUyMGZyYW1lYm9yZGVyJTNEJTIyMCUyMiUyMHdlYmtpdGFsbG93ZnVsbHNjcmVlbiUyMG1vemFsbG93ZnVsbHNjcmVlbiUyMGFsbG93ZnVsbHNjcmVlbiUzRSUzQyUyRmlmcmFtZSUzRQ==[/vc_raw_html][/vc_column][/vc_row]

St Patty's Day Missouri River Montana Fishing Report

St Patty’s Day Missouri River Montana Fishing Report

St Patty’s Day Missouri River Montana Fishing Report Wearing green today and fishing the green too. St Patty’s Day Missouri River Montana Fishing Report here on the Headhunters Fly Shop Blog this Thursday March 17th. Green buggers, Little Green Machines, Green Weenies, and the like should all be on fire today. Just because they are the … Read more

Missouri River Montana March 12th Fishing Report

Missouri River Montana March 12th Fishing Report

Missouri River Montana March 12th Fishing Report Warm weekend for the mid March time frame. Looks like another good time to fish Montana’s Missouri River in Craig. I’d rather not be anywhere else if those damn midge get really rolling and noses appear! Some ideas for you this weekend fishing the Mo. As we always … Read more

Missouri River Midge Hatch

Missouri River Winter Midge Hatch

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text] Missouri River Winter Midge Hatch Early March has arrived and midge fishing is on our minds. On any given day you can certainly find a window of activity with fish falling for the skittering midge fly. And skitter they do. The lower river all the way up to Mid-Canon has been the reported hot spots. … Read more

Missouri River March Fishing Forecast

Missouri River March Fishing Forecast

Missouri River March Fishing Forecast Things to think about in March We are already a few days into the 3rd month here on the Missouri River. The Missouri River March Fishing Forecast looks strong. Average water levels and warming water temps are what we will see this month along with more and more midge flies … Read more

Montana Winter Fishing

Montana Winter Fishing Report 2.25.16

Montana Winter Fishing Montana Winter Fishing has brought us weather warmer than average. River level lower than average. Fishing about average. Some days. The weather of course seasonably warm with some daytime highs int eh id 60’s like this Friday. Cooling a bit over the weekend but still warm. A good weekend to fish, fer … Read more

Mobile (or not) Video Fishing Report

[vc_row][vc_column width=”2/3″][vc_column_text]If you check out the home page of the Headhunters Website today, you see a tall skinny video in the blog section, featuring our new Mobile Video Fishing Report. We’ve threatened to do this for years. Looks like we’re actually following through. Instead of a detailed fishing report, this will be more of a monthly overview of the conditions we are experiencing, and those you should expect. Hopefully you’ll enjoy some nice footage along the way.

We’re also going to use this to feature some of our staff and guides. But don’t worry, I’m sure Mark and others you’re familiar with will be reporting as well.

Why is it tall and skinny? Check it out on you mobile device and you’ll see why. Easy to watch full screen with one hand. No turning your device sideways. Of course you can still watch it on your desktop.

This is referred to as “vertical video” and is very controversial among film makers. Meaning they hate it.  But like a lot of folks, I watch many (most?) videos on my phone. It makes sense. Think about it.

And for those wondering why, almost half of our website visits are on mobile devices. An indication of both our customers tech-saviness and age, and hopefully a result of the hard work we’ve put in trying to keep our site mobile friendly.

And for the first test edition, here’s Shane Wilson who hammered them on nymphs the other day when we filmed this. He’s dialed…[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][vc_column width=”1/3″][vc_raw_html]JTNDaWZyYW1lJTIwc3JjJTNEJTIyaHR0cHMlM0ElMkYlMkZwbGF5ZXIudmltZW8uY29tJTJGdmlkZW8lMkYxNTYwMDM2NjMlM0ZieWxpbmUlM0QwJTI2cG9ydHJhaXQlM0QwJTIyJTIwd2lkdGglM0QlMjIzMDAlMjIlMjBoZWlnaHQlM0QlMjI1MzMlMjIlMjBmcmFtZWJvcmRlciUzRCUyMjAlMjIlMjB3ZWJraXRhbGxvd2Z1bGxzY3JlZW4lMjBtb3phbGxvd2Z1bGxzY3JlZW4lMjBhbGxvd2Z1bGxzY3JlZW4lM0UlM0MlMkZpZnJhbWUlM0U=[/vc_raw_html][/vc_column][/vc_row]

Missouri River Fishing Report

Missouri River Fishing Report 2.17.16

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]Missouri River Fishing Report February 17th. Water levels are holding at 3700cfs about 1000cfs below our winter average. Water temps are 36.5F. Pretty standard for February. And this mid-February fishing report is pretty standard too. Many anglers spread out throughout the river from top to bottom. A good winter float is to either put in … Read more

February Fly Fishing Forecast 2016

Missouri River February Fly Fishing Forecast 2016

February Fly Fishing Forecast 2016 We can start be saying the winter weather has left us for the next 10 days. Monday the daytime high achieved 58F. Look ahead. More to come. Today we bring you the February Fly Fishing Forecast 2016. Not a ton to report or predict as it still qualifies as a winter month. … Read more

Headhunters Fly Shop Monday Fishing Report

Headhunters Fly Shop Monday Fishing Report

Fished a couple days this week and did not have the best of luck. Thought it was pretty tough.

Did catch some nice Whitefish though.

Nymphers have been getting it done for the most part. Swingers have been having better luck from the reports coming into the shop Sunday and Monday morning.

Water levels are up but not to the level of the historical data. The water levels are at 3880cfs. Not the 5K we like in the winter months. Will we see that level? Probably not this winter unless we see a wet late winter and spring. Which we are not scheduled to have…but Mother Nature works in strange ways.

Water temperatures are holding at 35 degrees. Still cold but not in that 33F range like it was a few weeks ago.

February has arrived and I think we are happy? We are one month closer to summer I guess. Spring and summer dreams move to the forefront of our minds.

For the fishing report  here on the daily Headhunters Fly Shop Blog.

Apparently the fish have gone a mini winter strike. When will they stop picketing? Oh, maybe later this week. Who knows when the bite will come back. A few guide trips out this week that had moderate success. Not great in the morning but better in the afternoon. So our suggestion is to fish in the afternoons. The air temps are always warmer, or almost always warmer in the pm.

Worms are what Ninch likes in the winter. John is all in on the worm for the off season as well. I am on the fence. I like a big pink weight fly. The firebead is still a good idea for a tail fly. Pink Lightening Bugs, Tailwater Sows, Ray Charles, Bubble Yum, Blooms Rainbow Weight Fly, Rainbow Czech and more.

The swingers are fishing both Skagit and Scandi heads with various tips attached. Whether you like to dredge with a Skagit system with unweighted flies or fish the upper water column with your Scandi line the Missouri River is your winter Trout Spey resource. Stop in for any Trout spey gear you may need for any trout fishing journey here or otherwise.

Check out our Missouri River Lodging sites if you are planning a spring summer or fall trip to our neighborhood. Craig Trout Camp is very popular with 4 properties right here in Craig. Our famous Spring Special is coming soon. A perfect second trip to the Mo this year. Why not?

Headhunters located in Craig is your 12 month destination. Why stay anywhere else?

Fly shop open daily @ 8am.

 

Friday Foto & Fishing Report

Friday Foto & Fishing Report

Friday Foto & Fishing Report

A landscape at Cellphone Bluff.

Windy and warm this week. Threatening some snow maybe this afternoon?

An awakening on the river this week as well. Lots of anglers out and about as the weather allowed for springlike clothing. The water temps are up a bit and the shelf ice  has disappeared from the banks. The snow is nearly gone on the flats, still some in the hills. But for the most part all gone.

It will return but not in the near future. Warmer temps will grace us for the next week at least. As mentioned above the wind usually is the ugly unwanted partner. Makes for good casting practice.

Missouri River Weekend River Tips

  • You can fish other runs other than the upper river. With the ice free arena ranging from the dam to at least Mountain Palace you can roam. Some anglers even fishing below MP to Pelican Point. Swingers can be found anywhere.
  • Trout Spey fans are fishing the Clouser, small leeches, Kreelex, buggers, Marabou Clousers, Skiddish Smolt, Mozuri Minnows, and may more. The two handed game is pretty strong as of late. Come by for all you need in lines, leaders, tips, and flies. We are the information source wen it comes to Montana Spey.
  • Nymphers are finding trout in the slow, the medium slow, and even some medium speed waters. Most of the anglers are not rocking split shot. Most of the anglers are finding Pink to be the answer. If you cannot stomach the fruity flies you may try Zebra’s, grey sows, Ray Charles, Little Green Machines, Worms, Depth is the key for bobber fishers. Find it. Fish it. Love it.
  • Skittering Midge present in backwaters, eddies, and along inside edges. Fish it if you can. Flies that can entertain Mo River Trout include CDC Hanging Midge, Midge Cluster, Buzzball, Adams, Griffith’s Gnat, CDC Cluster, Double Posted Cluster, Bunny Dun Midge, and more.
  • See us for your shuttle this weekend. Fill up your coffee cup or Thermos while you get the skinny at Headhunters. Always discounted winter  lodging @ Craig Trout Camp and a few other select river properties. A good time to demo and Adipose Drift Boat before the masses arrive. We also facilitate the Project Healing Waters boats which are always free of charge for vets and active duty military members. Call today to reserve one of two Adipose and Headhunters sponsored drifters.

Headhunters is your only full time fly shop on the Missouri River. Thanks for your patronage. Open all 7 days @ 8am.

Sunday Morning Fishing Report Headhunters Style

Sunday Morning Fishing Report Headhunters Style

Ever use a hook sharpener? A good idea if you want to increase your hook-up rate. A cheap investment for a giant return. Write it off as an investment in your fly fishing year.

While cooler yesterday than the high on Friday of 49F today may bring some scattered snow showers. Or not. We do know that the week ahead is forecast for much warmer afternoon temps than the week before.

Sara said correctly today the last couple years the winter has been confined to cold and wet November December months and then sometime in January…Spring!

She’s right. We’ll winter return to central Montana winters soon. After this unseasonable next couple weeks.

Lots of boat traffic on Saturday, meaning 10+, with bank anglers roaming around as well. Today will be similar with some at home for Championship Sunday.

Most of the HH staff teams have lost but there is unfortunately a Bronco’s fan around. I guess Ben Hardy is a Patriots fan. So a few dogs in the race still.

The general pink flies are working. Swingers are getting them. Clouser’s are leaving the bins rapidly. The slender streamer is pretty sexy.

Sunday Morning Fishing Report Headhunters StyleWater levels are up in the last week plus at 3300cfs. We would like  a bit more water. But that is a fantasy unless we receive more snow in the hills. Historically 4800cfs is our winter average for this time of year. Historically means nothing really for today. The past averages out but the fact remains that we need more snow on the ground.

On the right you will see that the water temps have risen to 34.5F. The fish do like that increase. It breathes life into them. Sort of.

Good catch rates reported from anglers in and out of the shop. Above we stated the pink option. That is what is coming through from anglers. Not just me, or us, spouting forth generic winter bullshit. While some of that is true, we cannot take all of the credit.

Try writing a daily report in the winter. No fly changes for 5 months. We get damn fired up over a 1 degree water temp change. Sad.

Sunday is here. Enjoy it. Stop in for your shuttle. Fly help. All the coolest stuff from SIMMS, RIO, Echo, every size in the Hatch reel line, Headhunters Logo wear including the outstanding Craiglandia line, and a long list of winter fly fishing accessories for your Missouri River journey.

Shop open daily @ 8am.

Saturday Trout Spey Rainbow

Saturday Trout Spey Rainbow

John Kirk sent us some images from he and friend Nathan last week on the Mo.

Swung up a few he said. And per usual the Kreelex was the star he said.

He’ll be back again this winter he said.

 

The Weekend weather looks pretty sweet. I don’t think we will see as much snow as the east coast though. Snow threatening along with hi’s in the upper 30’s. Was 45F Friday afternoon.

The swingers are out there bringing some fish to hand. The nymphers are doing really well. The water temp came up a degree recently and the fish do react favorably.

 

Missouri River Montana Fishing Report 1.19.16

Missouri River Montana Fishing Report 1.19.16

Sunny skies will greet us for the remainder of the week. The snow and cold visited us over the holiday weekend. MLK day was really quite nice with the air temperatures reaching well above 40F. Tuesday will lead with temps near 40F and we will flirt with sun, not much wind and no threat of snow until the middle of next week.

A great time to sneak out of the house and fish a little on your favorite winter fishery. The ice has left the river proper and the shelf ice will be waning, falling off, melting back into the river as the week moves forward.

The shop open daily with guide trips here and there this month. $400 for a nice day on the Mo. Want to improve your trout spey game? Most do and that is something that many guests inquire about when taking a winter guide trip. You can play it by on the river. Start out nymphing, stop on a good inside swinging run, and then look for those wandering midge flies. There have been some success stories in regards to the dry fly. February should bring us some entertaining and more consistent dry fly angling.

5 Tips for January

  1. Sleep in. No need to get out early. Some of the better fishing can be the hour before the sun dips. Not the hour after the sun hides behind the hills. So that 3ish time period is historically strong.
  2. Find the slow water. But, do not disregard the slow plus 1 speed water either. The fish are usually in that slow deeper water. But not always. Find your own way out there.
  3. Bring hand warmers. Put them in your shirt pockets near your heart and chest. That feels good! A couple in your chopper gloves is a good idea as well. Hand ovens is what I call them. Fish without gloves if you wish and then jam them into the hand ovens when they stop moving properly.
  4. Go with Pink nymphs.
  5. Many fish with split shot all year long. The winter angling game is pretty good without split shot. Fish a weighted fly and wait for the fly to sink. Most of the winter nymphing water is slow enough to allow the fly to sink without added weight. Try it. Feels pretty good man.

Come on by the shop to try one or two of our many, 20+, trout spey rods  on the river. We have a ton of demo lines for you to match with your rod. Headhunters is the Trout Spey Headquarters in Montana. We love to talk about the two handed rod. We have a vast selection of swinging flies as well. Rods, lines, tips, and leaders for all your spey needs in Craig Montana.

Check out yesterday’s post about the Gould/McCune Spey Clinics coming in April. Filling fast for sure. Headhunters is your education source for all things trout on Montana’s Missouri River.

Tomorrow the Headhunters 2016 Calendar.

Missouri River Weekend Fishing Outlook

Missouri River Weekend Fishing Outlook

Missouri River Weekend Fishing Outlook

The weather has turned for the better. Way better. Or warmer. Some wind attached to the warmer temperatures as well. Pretty normal. We get a few spells like this every winter and the local anglers take advantage of the opportunity.

If you check out the ned several days it looks like snow will be occasionally falling from our Montana skies. Not much, but threatening daily. High temps in the 20’s and low 30’s. Certainly fishable. Yesterday a bundle of wade anglers on the water with more than a handful of boats above Craig. Even a few below town too.

Swingers and nymphers alike. About half and half. Curious trout spey anglers in the store taking advantage of the demo rods and full line of trout spey gear on hand in downtown Craig. Look us up if you have any questions about anything spey related.

Firebead is  the hot fly. Tailwater sows holding their own. Foxy Clousers, small leech patterns, and traditional streamer patterns are reputed to bring winter trout to hand.

A guide trip or two on the water this weekend as some are experiencing cabin fever. If you need a way out…we can help. Demo your Adipose Boat at Headhunters this winter too. Interested in getting one of those hot Montana skiffs in your driveway? Stop in for any info in regards to the Adipose Flow.

Successful fly tying night last evening at the store. The regular crew was there in force tying and bullshitting. Streamers, bobber flies, and some techy small summer flies were tied. Fun times. Next Fly Tying Night in America Wednesday January 27 6pm.

Still some cool stuff on the sale rack. Always new and updated fly lines, terminal tackle, winter wear including a bevy of gloves and hats. Your Missouri River SIMMS dealer with Howler Bros, Orvis, and tons of cool Headhunters Logo Wear.

Open daily 8-6pm for shuttles, winter discounted lodging at Craig Trout Camp, and all things trout…

 

Missouri River Montana Fishing Report

Missouri River Montana Fishing Report 1.12.16

Missouri River Montana Fishing Report 1.12.16

A break in the cold weather yesterday led some anglers to creep into the cool winter waters. Central Montana’a Missouri River never closes. It does become un-fishable a few times a year, but these periods are often short.

The air temps this week will reach the mid and upper 30’s and may even creek into the 40F range. Oh so nice a break like this in January. Sun, then clouds, then snow as she will turn for the worse and dip towards chilliness again.

Today at the shop we are counting flies. Fly inventory day. A short 3-4 hour period with all hands on deck will take care of this annual task.  We generally handle north of 100K flies. Quick work for nimble counters.

As the slush has left the waters for the week we enjoy a few opportunities to fish. May get out in the boat later this week. The snow day on Thursday looks really quite nice. Fish anywhere to Mid Canon with ease. I’d take a look at the boat ramp, the ending boat ramp before I launched the boat. Just for kicks. 4WD is probably a must for any boat ramp with pitch to it.

Wade anywhere as well but watch the shelf ice. Most of the river has some sort of shelf issues. Be very careful if you choose to winter fish.

A feller was in yesterday that had hooked a few on a cluster midge. That is cool. That time is coming. By February there will be more dry fly opportunities.

Slow water is the key. Get the fly near the bottom and let it ride. Albeit slowly. Patience is good for a winter angler. Use split if you have to. Most of the time in those slower water zones you can get away without the weight.

Winter flavors shine. Headhunters as your Winter Fishing HQ has your back. We have a wide selection of pink patterns. We got bobbers too.

The swingers are out there too. Less ice in the guides for both the single and double handers this week will bring both sets out. The swingers are getting some action in the tail end of the swing. Not as much on the big front end swing. But still moving the fly is a good idea. Or letting it be still can sometimes work too.

Smaller trout spey flies like the traditional bugger, Clousers, Marabou patterns, Skiddish Smolts, and your good ‘ol home brews!

Give us a shout or stop in any day 8-6. We are here in Craig MT daily.

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