Unicoi Outfitters is north Georgia's premier guide service and fly fishing outfitter, located on the Chattahoochee River near alpine Helen. Look for fishing reports, gear and book reviews, and general musings here from our staff and guides.

Tuesday, February 3, 2026

We are Moving!



Unicoi Outfitters is excited to announce that we are moving our Helen store from its current city location to a new site just five minutes down the road at 2454 Highway 17 in Sautee-Nacoochee.  That’s just two miles east of the Nacoochee Indian Mound.  We will be across the road from the Old Sautee Store. 


Avoid the Helen traffic and join us in our beautiful new  White County home.  We look forward to serving you here in Sautee and in our second store, the UO General Store, still on the downtown square in Clarkesville.


We are looking forward to a great spring of new fishing memories with all of you.  Watch for the move-in date and come see us in Sautee!

Saturday, January 31, 2026

Unicoi Outfitters Fishing Report - 1/ 31/26



Greetings from the frozen tundra of north Georgia and welcome to Round 2 of our Winter Wonderland. I might pass on grilling burgers today here at home in Cleveland. Apologies for being a day late, but we had a real long, fun Friday at the Fish Hawk show.



Today’s report is similar to last week’s. You’ll do best to delay your fishing trips for a few days until the roads clear again and air and water temperatures recover from their deep freezes.



The extended forecast suggests that our region will warm back up starting about Tuesday, so aim for the end of the week to scratch your angling itch.  Remember that a lot of Forest Service back roads may still be closed due to downed trees, so check with the feds before venturing very far off the main county roads. We have the USFS link in our full report.


In the meantime, enjoy some great midwinter events on tap this week. For those of you snow-free in Atlanta, the Fish Hawk Fly Show continues today at their Buckhead Store on Miami Circle. Henry Cowen is on his way back to the show now to tie his striper flies and sell his striper book, with all proceeds going to his “adopted” Lake Lanier family needing shelter from the storms.


Wes’ great interview series returns on Tuesday. Native bass fans shouldn’t miss his Instagram live interview with redeye expert and book Author Dr. Matthew Lewis. Tune in at 7PM.


And on Saturday, the 7th, the Rabunites welcome all comers to their annual bluegrass and BBQ banquet, the Rabun Rendezvous at the county civic center in Clayton.


Ties some flies,  go to the Fish Hawk show, attend some events, and maybe even plan a reunion with your favorite waters at the end of the week. Let’s be thankful for all the power companies who restored our power, and even for this precipitation to recharge our streams. It’s mid-winter and we are weathering January as we should.  Before you know it, March will be here, stripers will chase shad in the shallows, and a few trout will rise to the first bug hatches of spring. Relax now and get ready for that. Enjoy some easy reading today via our full report, here:


http://blog.angler.management/

(Link in bio)


Stay warm and thankful for that heat. We’re a lot better off than some folks, like our Nashville friends. Our stores are closed today, but we’ll reopen as soon as the roads are safe again for y’all and our staff.


Helen: 706-878-3083. Open 8-5 daily (weather permitting).


Clarkesville: 706-754-0203. Open 8-5 from Monday thru Saturday (weather permitting).


Unicoi Outfitters: Friendly. Local. Experts.

www.unicoioutfitters.com


Wes’ Hot Fly List:  

Who are we kidding?  There are no hot flies now. Everything is cold! But some of these will work at the week-end thaw.


Dries: parachute blue wing olive, griffiths gnat, little black stone (or #18 gray elk hair caddis, and a small tan chubby or elk hair caddis as the lead fly (a strike indicator for your tiny dry dropper)


Nymphs & Wets: 

DH Stockers: twister egg, pheasant tail or Frenchie, sexy Walts worm, rainbow warrior, zebra midge, red tag.


Mountain streams:  ice auger first, the a zebra midge, soft hackles, prince nymph, frenchie or pheasant tail.


Streamers:

Black and olive woolly buggers, jig leech, UV polar Jig.


Reservoir Bass & Stripers:

Cowen’s somethin else. Gray over white clouser minnow, low fat minnow. Or a 0.6 ounce flexit spoon on conventional gear.


Headwaters:

They’re low and clear and icy and not worth hitting right now. In fact, many forest roads may still be closed due to downed trees and/or ice.  


https://waterdata.usgs.gov/nwis/uv?site_no=02330450&legacy=1


I did my weekly recon Thursday around 4PM.  Spoilcane along Hwy 75 was real low and clear and 42F.  



Both Russell Highway and Smithgall park were still closed. White county roads were open, but I saw where road crews had cut out hundreds of downed trees from them so we could pass.


Do your homework before you return to remote mountain streams. Your best bets will be waters very near paved, main roads. Watch this Chattahoochee National Forest Service page for forest road and recreation area updates:


https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=pfbid0kKYNLsusQBsnveHjaeQmxrGHuJ8m9bCbhpn8tApDCEK1ocjHzjAsWgY6uvEBMWbrl&id=100064696506428



Delayed Harvest:

Most weren’t very accessible due to icy roads and downed trees. Smith was, however, and anglers had some success, mainly on eggs/nymphs, but some on dries!


The stream was 42 F on Thursday at 4PM and slightly stained from the lake. 



I ran into new flyfisher Anthony, who said he had a stellar Wednesday on his dry/dropper rig, but found slower fishing on that Thursday.  Once he added a heavier anchor fly to sink his two-bug rig, he scored.





Smith, Ami, and the Hooch are DH streams near paved roads and should be the first to restore safe access for y’all. Get some small eggs, girdle bugs, and dark nymphs deep and you should find some success when water temps hopefully rise back into the 40’s.


Caution: Rabun County roads are steep, shaded, and curvy. Add some snow and ice and we will all slide off the side of the mountain. Same for the Toccoa in Fannin. Wait until those roads warm up, even in the shady spots, before venturing back to that county’s creeks.


Stockers: 

Stockers are slim.  Your best bets are the two tailwaters for summer/fall holdovers and  just outside the DH stream boundaries to find the wash-downs after last Saturday’s floods.


Private Waters: 

No recent reports.


Tailwaters:

UO buddy Ryan: “I had a chance to get out with my friend Greg to catch some fish right before the Ice-pocalypse a week ago. We did some tight line nymphing, and even with the cold front and pressure change we found a handful of eager feeding fish.  




Greg has paid his “Hooch Dues” over multiple trips, and I believe he’s now primed for some great days in the near future.  I even saw fish rising, well more like “sipping” some kind of bug from the surface film.  I assume they were midges or blue winged olives since I didn’t see any insects flying.  These holdovers and “trout in the classroom” survivors seemed to be well fed, with round bellies on most of them.


So what is a Trout in the Classroom “survivor”??  For approximately a decade now, my local Upper Chattahoochee Chapter of Trout Unlimited has partnered with ~20 schools in setting up fish tanks and then delivering rainbow trout eggs for students to raise in classrooms, learning along the way.  Once these fish reach about an inch in length, the classes take a field trip to the river.  Our TU chapter gets a stocking permit from GAWRD so we can release those fish into the Tailwater.  Riverside Stations are waiting for the groups of students, with local TU volunteers teaching knot tying, stream ecology, insects of the river, fly casting and more.  Then everyone gets to release their own fingerling by hand into the river.  




Over the years, the number of fingerlings that have survived has noticeably increased.  These fish look wild with perfect white-tipped fins, fight wild, and are unmistakable in comparison to a stocked trout!  



I was lucky to join for my first release day earlier this week and it was a blast!”


Warm Bass Rivers: 

No news, other than they aren’t very warm and those fish probably aren’t very hungry. Bring a tipup and go ice fishing.,,,


Don’t miss Tuesday night’s interview with Matt Lewis! Details below.


Ponds:

No news. Bring your skates.


Lakes:

No news. Most fly folks have stayed off the lake since the fish have gone deep.  Striper book author Henry Cowen shared a great midwinter tip today while driving back down to his tying booth at Fish Hawk show. He said to carry a full sink fly outfit just in case you find a shallow school. But the money rig will be a spoon on spinning or conventional gear. Get some 0.6 ounce flexit spoons and bend them slightly at midpoint. Use your electronics to locate those deep schools of shad and stripers in 40-60 feet of water.  



Drop the spoon down to them and then “flick and flutter.”  Take 2-3 reel turns to flick the spoon up a few feet, then free spool it back to the bottom. The light, bent spoon will slowly flutter back down.  This method will get you some stripers and spots while you wait for warmer water and shallower schools.


https://www.captmacks.com/store/product/berrys-flex-it-spoon/


Stop in the Fish Hawk show today and talk to Henry. He’s tying striper flies and selling them and his book, with all weekend proceeds going to his “adopted” Lanier family. Donations still welcome and appreciated!



https://www.gofundme.com/f/help-the-demagistris-family-find-shelter?attribution_id=sl:83ce3ac0-8b34-49c1-87c5-8a059d7391a8&lang=en_US&ts=1769468912&utm_campaign=fp_sharesheet&utm_content=amp17_control&utm_medium=customer&utm_source=facebook&fbclid=IwRlRTSAPrC-FleHRuA2FlbQIxMQBzcnRjBmFwcF9pZAo2NjI4NTY4Mzc5AAEeeW9d1pfzGz45EktvLNPIFOnciPpBTkCOM3ImwjnhKJqFVg3KKmeZDWNbdlo_aem__i-hybHq-Q49PGRrIZAZtQ


Events:


Today is Day 2 of the Fish Hawk fly fishing show on Miami Circle in Buckhead.

https://www.thefishhawk.com/service/events/






Wes’ “Unicoi Undercurrents” continues each Tuesday night.

Next up is native bass fan and book author, Dr Matthew Lewis. If you like chasing summer river bass, then don’t miss this program and your chance to ask Matt some questions.



https://www.instagram.com/p/DUGPVVJgKYW/?igsh=c3lnMTgzNTJhd2lh


Reminder: the Rabun Rendezvous is next weekend.. That annual bluegrass and BBQ banquet is on February 7th at the Rabun County Civic Center in downtown Clayton. I’m Save a few bucks by purchasing your banquet tickets online now, before the extended Feb 2 cutoff.



https://tu.myeventscenter.com/event/Rabun-Rendezvous-2026-119556


The second batch of prize photos is now online:

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1DUmEUNUwU/?mibextid=wwXIfr


Enjoy the snow and our restored power and warmth, thanks to all of the GA Power, EMC, and visiting company heroes.   Good luck when the roads and rivers eventually thaw out. Stop by and see us.





Unicoi Outfitters: Friendly. Local. Experts.

www.unicoioutfitters.com

Friday, January 23, 2026

Unicoi Outfitters Fishing Report - 1/ 23 /26



Briefly, stay home and weather the storm. Enjoy our fresh trout and striper stories, but most of this intel will be obsolete when the weather changes drastically by the beginning of the week. Hopefully our roads will clear and we can revisit our favorite waters by the end of next week.  Note sone great events happening as early as Tuesday, so make sure you read the Events section of our full report. As always, that full report is here:


http://blog.angler.management/

(Link in bio)


For now, get ready to hunker down and ride out the impending ice storm. We’ll see you on the other side.


Helen: 706-878-3083. Open 8-5 daily.


Clarkesville: 706-754-0203. Open 8-5 from Monday thru Saturday.


Unicoi Outfitters: Friendly. Local. Experts.

www.unicoioutfitters.com


Wes’ Hot Fly List:  

Dries: parachute blue wing olive, griffiths gnat, little black stone (or #18 gray elk hair caddis, and a small tan chubby or elk hair caddis as the lead fly (a strike indicator for your tiny dry dropper)


Nymphs & Wets: 

DH Stockers: twister egg, pheasant tail or Frenchie, sexy Walts worm, rainbow warrior, zebra midge, Duracell, micro girdle bug.


Mountain streams: zebra midge, soft hackles, prince nymph, frenchie or pheasant tail.


Streamers:

Black and olive woolly buggers, jig leech, UV polar Jig.


Reservoir Bass & Stripers:

Cowen’s somethin else. Gray over white clouser minnow, low fat minnow.


Headwaters:

They’re low and clear and warmed up slightly over the last few days. Flows are skinny once again. These conditions will change with the coming storm, so wait for next week’s intel for accurate conditions.  Stay away for a while.  Between icy roads and fallen trees, give the national forest roads time to recover from the storm. You don’t want to get stuck up here.




Delayed Harvest:

They fished well this past week, thanks primarily to better flows. A few extra degrees of water temperature helped, too.


Flyfishing rookies Christopher and wife Eliza gave Smith DH a try last Saturday.  They were adopted by a creek regular, who  gave them brief lessons on roll casting and the drag free drift. And they both scored their first trout on a tan squirmy worm.




UO guide Sydney hit Smith DH yesterday (22nd) and had a good time. She said: “Yesterday the hot flies were egg patterns, midges, and pats rubber legs.  Despite the cool water temps, fish were fairly active and I even saw a few fish rising!”




Dredger hit the Chattooga DH on Monday afternoon. Flows were good and, despite chilly 42F water, he found a nice handful of bows and browns. About two-thirds hit his frenchie dropper, while the rest preferred his heavier, Sexy Walts anchor fly.





Trip highlight was meeting two Clemson 5 Rivers clubbers, Evan and Rhett. They got a handful of bugs and a quick instream lesson on the drag-free drift. Both scored, also.




Rabunite Bluejay hit Chattooga DH last Wednesday and had a big time, with over three dozen fish fondled. He shared a pic of his hot bug.




Caution: Rabun County roads are steep and curvy. Add some ice and we will all slide off the side of the mountain. Wait until those roads warm up, even in the shady spots, before venturing back to that county’s creeks.


Athens Jay and a SC buddy hit the Chauga DH and did decently by deep drifting nymphs and eggs in the 45F water. He said: “Cold water, sluggish fish but an egg and a small jig style Frenchie worked well. “





Stockers: 

Stockers are slim.  Your best bets are the two tailwaters for summer/fall holdovers and  just outside the DH stream boundaries to find the wash-downs after last Saturday’s floods.


Private Waters: 

No recent reports.


Tailwaters:

UO buddy Ryan: “Last weekend I made it the Hooch with just an hour before both darkness and the dam release would run me out.  I netted 2 fish and bounced 2 browns in very shallow water.  I was tight line nymphing size 20 hares ears with 6.5x tippet.  The nice rainbow ate my fly as I patiently let it swing and rise at the end of my drift.  Looking forward to getting out there with more time soon!”




Warm Bass Rivers: 

No news, other than they aren’t very warm and those fish probably aren’t very hungry.


Ponds:

No news.


Lakes:

The Book on the Boat!


The Unicoi Guru and Dredger had a distinct advantage this morning (23rd). We had an audio-book guiding us!  Inland striper book author Henry Cowen hopped aboard and steered skipper Jimmy to some promised waters on the upper half of Lanier.  Hank landed a real chunky striper and Dredger connected with a brute that tried to tow the boat. Both tossed Henry’s Somethin Else streamer on full sink lines while Jimmy followed the birds to success.



The author is also a great videographer! Hop aboard Jimmy’s boat and take today’s trip with us, courtesy of Hank:


https://www.instagram.com/p/DT3RboyEcrU/?img_index=5&igsh=ZG4wcG5pOHhrNGFp


PS: BUY HENRY’S BOOK!

You won’t get fooled again.



https://shoponline.unicoioutfitters.com/fly-fishing-for-freshwater-striped-bass-henry-cowe.html


UO guide Joseph is on the lake this afternoon.  No report yet.   His reminder:  “Although January can be tricky with cold fronts, it is usually one of the best months on the pond. I still have some availability for trips towards the latter half of the month. To book or inquire call UO Helen at (706)878-3083 or visit www.josephclarkflyfishing.com”


Events:

Wes’ “Unicoi Undercurrents” continues each Tuesday night. If you missed Bert’s talk on the Okeefenokee, catch his recorded interview on our Instagram page.


https://www.instagram.com/reel/DTwUtfKkdUV/?igsh=NGZydnNpZHh5d2hs


Next up is  middle Georgia  river guide and fly designer extraordinaire Fletcher Sams.  If you want to learn how to tie big stream for big shoalies and stripers, tune in.  Set your phone alarms for Tuesdays at 645PM to click on the UO Instagram page by 7.


https://www.instagram.com/p/DTxnsMtALzB/?igsh=YjZyajBwYTk4bGo4


UO staffers Sydney and Dredger will staff the UO booth at next weekend’s (30,31st) Fish Hawk Fly Fishing Show.  Stop by that Buckhead store and enjoy Gabe and Kelly’s festivities. We appreciate the invitation!


https://www.facebook.com/share/p/17haopo8eJ/?mibextid=wwXIfr


Reminder: the Rabun Rendezvous is on the horizon. That annual bluegrass and BBQ banquet is on February 7th at the Rabun County Civic Center in downtown Clayton. Save a few bucks by purchasing your banquet tickets online now.

The first batch of prize photos are now online:


https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1SbCAPpwdH/?mibextid=wwXIfr


There you go: a few fine, fresh fish stories to read while you’re huddled up at home during this ice storm. We sure hope everyone stays safe, warm, and dry while our EMC’s and GA Power folks work hard to restore and maintain our power.  We will likely close our stores for a day or two while our roads are bad, so call us before coming up -when it’s safe again, so take your time next week!



Unicoi Outfitters: Friendly. Local. Experts.

www.unicoioutfitters.com