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.

Friday, December 5, 2025

Unicoi Outfitters Fishing Report - 12/5/25



December has rolled into our region with some mighty cold nights and chilly days. Despite that challenging weather, the fishing has been pretty darn good.  Just dress (warmly) for your success.


Trout streams are cold and clear, and low once again, dropping quickly after each rain.  We’ll need a lot more rainfall to boost their base flows.  Headwaters are icy in the mornings, so hit them at lunchtime with dry/dropper combos and make sure your dropper gets down to fish-eye level via a tungsten bead or a small tin shot a few inches above it.


Delayed Harvest fishing has been pretty good. You just have to hunt the pods and then figure out the hot technique of the day. We did.


Same goes for trophy waters. Syd has figured them out and shares her secrets in today’s full-length report.


Joseph and Hank the Yank have been cashing in on the Lanier shallow striper action.  Itsy-bitsy bugs have bought the most bites. 


We’re still collecting used flyfishing gear for Georgia college clubs. Feel free to donate! And the Rabun Rendezvous is 2/7/26 at the county civic center.


Catch all the details of our successful trips here:

http://blog.angler.management/

(Link in bio)


They’ll help YOU to catch more fish this weekend and thru the week ahead.  Don’t forget your hand warmers and a spare pair of dry gloves. Stop in either UO shop if we can help you out with flies, supplies, and advice.


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, Drymerger, tan elk hair caddis, tiny tan chubby, RS2, parachute Adams. 


Nymphs & Wets: 

DH Stockers: squirminator, Frenchdipity, lighting bug, CDC pheasant tail, slush egg, Ruby midge. 


Mountain streams: zebra midge, soft hackles, micro mayfly, prince nymph, hares ear.


Streamers:

Black and olive woolly buggers, Sparkle minnow, barely legal, UV polar Jig, mini gulp sculp. 


Reservoir Bass & Stripers:

clouser minnow, low fat minnow, somethin else, micro Cowen’s baitfish.


River bass:

Thrasher, dead Ned, sweet baby cray, clouser minnow.


Headwaters:

They remain low, clear, and icy due to our recent, freezing nights. You’ll do better once the afternoon sun warms the water a bit. Try a dry, but definitely add a small nymph or wet fly dropper below it. You might even slowly dredge the bigger pools for sluggish fish that have retreated to their winter refuges.


https://waterdata.usgs.gov/ga/nwis/uv?site_no=02330450


Our friend Ian at R&R Flyfishing shared a fresh park fishing report that applies perfectly to our north GA headwaters, too:

https://randrflyfishing.com/2025/12/02/winter-fly-fishing-season-arrives-in-the-smokies/


Delayed Harvest:

The region’s DH streams have had a Jekyll and Hyde personality for our anglers. Jekyll gives up fish to experienced fly tossers who approach clear, flat water with great stealth, land their flies softly, and figure out which pattern and technique works on the day at hand.


Mr Hyde has pitched a shutout to newer fly anglers who don’t yet have the skills of vets, as described above. Rookies just need to keep practicing and their success will increase with time on the water- and reading about the vets’ successful recipes.


Folks to the shop this week had mixed results at Smith. We are still recommending light tippets and small bugs. If tiny pheasant tails, Duracells, and midges don’t work, try sinking a soft hackle deep and swing, then twitch it back upstream to you.


The big surprise of the week was one angler who had success on dries. Here’s a secret: the park volunteers feed the DH  section a couple times per week to discourage migration and maintain their weight.  So, a fluffy, dark tan caddis or micro chubby might be a good Purina hatch-matcher.


Rabunites Bluejay and Dredger hit Tooga DH for the first time this season on Tuesday. Water temp at their noon ford crossing was an icy 43F as a bald eagle flew past them. It didn’t rise much during their four-hour trip and the fish started out sluggish, as expected:


https://waterdata.usgs.gov/monitoring-location/USGS-02176930/


Nothing on a variety of dredged, drifted bugs. But they scored on twitched and stripped buggers: olive or black, it didn’t matter. 



New stockers were looking for movement. 



They finally caught a few bonus fish on slush eggs, only after extra shot were added to get them right on the bottom. 



A bunch of bows, a few browns, and one nice brookie were fondled.




Hint: find the deeper, slower water that provides cover from eagles and ospreys. The rest of the river is too darn shallow right now to hold fish. Locate the pods with a bugger and then sink legs and eggs thru that pool when the bugger bite turns off.


Stockers: 

There may still a few fall stockers around in the bigger GA streams, especially the two tailwaters. You can also fish downstream from DH boundaries to catch DH wash-downs after flood events. 


UO buddy Ryan: “The day after Thanksgiving, we brought our Pensacola cousin Jeffrey up to the mountains,  with plans of getting him on his first-ever fish on the fly.  Some fresh stockers were willing to play, and egg patterns were all that was needed to get into some quick action.  He landed no less than 4-5 fish, getting his close-quarters water haul cast dialed in after a brief casting demo.   After showing him how subtle a bite can appear on an indicator, he got more trigger happy with his hooksets and fish were hooked for the remainder of the evening!”



Private Waters: 

UO guide Sydney has been unlocking the secret combination to Nacoochee Bend success. Her clients have scored big this week by dredging small bugs on light tippet. Her best bugs have been “Eggs, perdigons, CDCs, and hares ears with a good bit of split shot to get the flies down,  since fish have been sitting real low. 





My newly tied egg pattern got my clients on some good fish today. Thanks to the Rabunites for the tying tips.”



Tailwaters:

Nothing recent.


Warm Rivers: 

UO buddy Jay: 

“My very old kayak started developing some cracks and leaks, so I treated myself to an upgrade. I headed down south to the land of limestone and much warmer weather for a shakedown river float. Flows were very low and water crystal clear. Our target was shoal bass from the southernly extent of the range for that species. I had a lot of fun, and a substantial amount of luck in catching some real beauties.  All my fish came on a large, articulated black streamer tied with lots of rabbit fur. I use a jig hook, tungsten football bead attached on a pin below the hook shank to balance the fly.  I’m very happy with the new boat and can’t wait to go again!”





Ponds:

No reports.


Lakes:

UO guide Joseph; “Fishing on the big pond over the past week has been good but tricky.  Here’s a nice 16 pounder to round off an 8-fish outing on Monday! All the fish we’ve been catching have been eating teeny threadfin shad near the surface. 



There are some good groups to be found, however we’re seeing lots of singles. We’ve seen fish around channel swings, mouths of creeks and in the back of main lake pockets. Another aid this time of year is looking for bird activity. We’ve had to burn a lot of gas to track down these scattered Lanier schools, but the scouting time has paid off.


All of our fish have been caught on intermediate lines on an array of different flies and retrieves. Henry’s somethin else, polar fiber minnows, small game changers and various other patterns will work. 



I still have some available dates for the end of this month and we are starting to fill up for prime dates in January-March.  To book a trip with me, visit www.josephclarkflyfishing.com or call the Helen store at (706)-878-3083”


UO buddy Jay:  “This winter weather has me thinking a lot about stripers, and thankfully my recent conversations with the good folks at Unicoi Outfitters resulted in a trip to “The Pond” as our dear friend Henry Cowen calls it. It was a cold, windy day with intermittent rain (in other words – miserable unless you’re a striped bass). Presentation and fly selection were critical, but Unicoi’s Joseph Clark really knows his stuff! He learned from the guru (Henry), and we even had the pleasure of visiting with Mr. Cowen (aka the Mayor of Lake Lanier) while running around.  

Fly Fishing for Freshwater Striped Bass - Henry Cowen - Unicoi Outfitters



I put five fish in the boat!   I can’t wait to do it again!”




Events:

The Rabunites said their annual Rabun Rendezvous will be on Feb 7 at the Rabun County Civic Center. Details forthcoming. If you like BBQ, live bluegrass, bucket raffles, silent auctions, and trout tales, then mark your calendars for 2/7/26.

About Rabun TU – The Rabun Chapter of Trout Unlimited


We’re still collecting used flyfishing and camping gear from fellow anglers and giving it to new fly anglers with the North Paulding HS, UGA,  and GA Tech 5 Rivers flyfishing clubs. If you’d like to donate any gear or supplies (leaders, Indi’s, tippet, flies) feel free to drop them off at our Helen shop.  We’ll get your goodies to the club leaders.

TU Costa 5 Rivers College Clubs - Trout Unlimited



The forecast is for slightly warmer and a whole lot drier days ahead. The fish don’t mind the cold and neither should you. Just dress like an Eskimo and give it a go. We’re sure glad we did, right Jay and Bluejay?


Stop in either UO shop for supplies, intel, gifts, and the always popular UO gift certificates. Good luck!


PS: Go Dawgs!!! 

Unicoi Outfitters: Friendly. Local. Experts.

www.unicoioutfitters.com

Friday, November 28, 2025

Unicoi Outfitters Fishing Report - 11/28/25



Welcome to winter! It was a chilly 28 degrees when I opened the Helen shop at 730 this morning.  Area trout streams have already drained off the 1.5 inches of early week rains and are now running low and clear once again.



And cold! 



 It’s that time of year once again to sleep in, eat a big breakfast, dress warmly, and hop in your favorite trout stream around 11AM. Let that midday sun warm the water and turn on trout that have frozen overnite. Headwater fish will hit more droppers than dries, while Delayed Harvest stockers will be hugging bottom and choosing between a bright lead bug (for fresh stockers) and a small, dull nymph dropper (for early stockers).


Lake striper fishing is heating up as reservoir temperatures fall.  A few spots are mixed in with the stripers. Smaller is better in terms of fly patterns.


We’re still collecting used flyfishing gear for Georgia college clubs. Feel free to donate!


Catch all the details here:

http://blog.angler.management/

(Link in bio)

Stop in either UO shop if we can help you out. Grab some of our Black Friday weekend deals,too. Good luck this warm holiday week!


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, Drymerger, small elk hair caddis’s, RS2, parachute Adams. 


Nymphs & Wets: 

DH Stockers: squirminator, Frenchdipity, lighting bug, CDC pheasant tail, twister egg, Ruby midge, small wooly buggers.


Mountain streams: zebra midge, soft hackles, micro mayfly, prince nymph, hares ear.


Streamers:

Sparkle minnow, barely legal, UV polar Jig, mini gulp sculp. 


Reservoir Bass & Stripers:

clouser minnow, low fat minnow, somethin else.


River bass:

Thrasher, dead Ned, sweet baby cray, clouser minnow.


Headwaters:

They’re low, clear, and icy due to our recent, freezing nights. The 1.5 inches of rain we received earlier in the week is long gone. You’ll do better once the afternoon sun warms the water a bit. Try a dry, but definitely add a small nymph or wet fly dropper below it. You might even slowly dredge the bigger pools for sluggish fish that retreated to their winter refuges.


UO buddy Gayland: “Happy Thanksgiving to you fine UO folks!  Yesterday I enjoyed fly fishing at Duke’s Creek with my friend Jackson Sibley.  A beautiful day on the stream!”




The GA Women Flyfishers teamed up with more than a dozen new ladies from the UGA 5 Rivers club for a weekend of camping and fishing in the upper Hooch watershed. 



The vets mentored the new college fly fishers and everyone had a big time. UO guide Sydney joined in the fun and helped a couple of gals to catch their first trout on the fly.

https://www.georgiawomenflyfishing.com/











Delayed Harvest:

This is the best of times on DH streams. Why? You now have fresh stockers deposited for this holiday weekend, and also the “experienced” fish that were released at the start of DH season.

Try some rubber leg stones or junk food (eggs, squirmies) for fresh fish and then small, dark bugs (Euronymphs, zebra midges, pheasant tails, etc) on real light tippet for the educated fish. Slow roll them on the bottom in softer water for best results when our water temps are now closer to 40F than 50.


UO buddy RSquared:

“Members of the North Paulding  High School Fly Fishing & Cold-Water Conservation Club used 5 gallon buckets to stock the DH section of Amicalola Creek on Tuesday. It was a cool rainy day, but the young anglers were able to catch trout after the work of stocking was completed. Big shout out to teacher-sponsors, TU volunteers, & Ga. DNR!”



Tooga DH tale:

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1BjxnE48QH/?mibextid=wwXIfr


Stockers: 

There are still a few fall stockers around in the bigger GA streams. You can also fish downstream from DH boundaries to catch DH wash-downs after flood events. 


Private Waters: 

UO-Helen manager Wes: “Israel and I guided a private water trip during a very rainy Tuesday. We caught some really nice fish but still had to work for the bites we got even in the off color water. The best patterns for me were twister eggs, Duracells, and small dead drifted wooly buggers.”




UO guide Joseph: “Private water trouting remains good, but not great, due to low, clear water. We’re still getting lots of bites on small flies such as root beer midges, Duracells, unweighted pheasant tails and small stoneflies fished under yarn indicators. We’ve also caught a few fish on sparkle minnows by swinging them in heavy current.”




Tailwaters:

UO buddy Ryan: “This past weekend I hit the Hooch tailwater with 2 of my friends from our local pickup lacrosse group.  Each of them fought & "long distance released" a fish along with bringing one to hand each.  I landed 3 in between picking out tangles , tying on flies, and rigging up.  Fish were eating eggs, stoneflies, and hares ear patterns.  It was a warm evening, probably near the 70 degrees.  Dozens of caddis were hatching as the sun set, although rising fish were spotted. “






Warm Rivers: 

No recent reports.


Ponds:

Our friend, UGA 5Rivers clubber Emery checked in: “My dad and I were fishing at Pursell Farms in Alabama on one of their notorious bass ponds. We had only had a bite or two for the day so I switched my flashy fly out for a white wooly bugger. We were just chatting when I felt a bite. Set the hook and landed the fish.  I had myself a 5-6 lb bass!! Best catch of the day, with about 15 between the two of us!”





Lakes:

UO guide Joseph; “Striper fishing on Lanier has really picked up in the past week or so. We’re seeing some good groups of fish that are staying on top for longer durations.  They are being a bit picky as far as fly and presentation. For flies, small somethin else’s with beadchain and lead eyes fished on a slow sinking intermediate line have been best. 



I still have some availability for December and we are now booking January through March. If you can bear the cold, this time of year is one of my favorites! To book or inquire call the Helen store at (706)878-3083 or visit my website at www.josephclarkflyfishing.com


Afar:

UO buddy Megan migrated south for the holiday: “South wind off the Gulf coast near Perdido Key — and wet wading in November is always a good idea. Sight-fishing for redfish on the lagoon side of Johnson Beach with a trusty grey and white EP fly. Had two eats and landed this guy, which made the four mile pre-Thanksgiving walk well worth it.”





Events:

We’ve been collecting used flyfishing and camping gear from our TU buddies and giving it to new fly anglers with the UGA and GA Tech 5 Rivers flyfishing clubs. If you’d like to donate any gear or supplies (leaders, Indi’s, tippet, flies) feel free to drop them off at our Helen shop.  We’ll get your goodies to the club leaders.


Congrats to Dawg fans and condolences to Jacket backers. Both of y’all, try some hydrotherapy soon.    Bundle up in warm clothing and get outside this weekend to burn off your extra Thanksgiving calories. Follow the sun and fish the warm afternoons for your best “early winter “ action this week. Stop in either UO store for Wes’ hot flies and our Black Friday deals. Warm up before or after your chilly trips afield. We’ll leave the heat on for y’all.



Unicoi Outfitters: Friendly. Local. Experts.

www.unicoioutfitters.com