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, March 20, 2026

Unicoi Outfitters Fishing Report - 3/20/26



Welcome to the first official day of Spring, and it’s going to be a fine one.  The warm, dry weekend looks great, too.   Get out there ASAP and wet a line if you can.  Do not forget our open house tomorrow at our new store in Sautee We’ll have burgers, drinks, and some awesome free raffle prizes from 11 until 3.


On the trout front, headwaters are still extremely low and clear. The good news is that they are warming quickly with these balmy days ahead. 


Same goes for the region’s DH streams. Sunshine and warmer water means that bugs will hatch and noses will poke through the surface to sample your dries. That happened to Dredger yesterday. Private streams will fish well for folks with thin tippet and a stealthy stalk, while some GA stocker streams might be getting their inaugural doses of 2026 trout this week, and definitely next week.


Pond fishing should take off with rising water temperatures. Same goes for our reservoirs, where bass are already active while stripers are lagging behind just a bit. Stripers have already started their spring river runs just south of us, so north GA’s migrations should only be a week or so away.


As always, the specific intel is in our weekly fishing prospects, here. Click to unlock the secrets to your own Spring success:

http://blog.angler.management/


You’ve waited a long winter for this spring bloom of shallow water fishing. Here’s your chance to start the season with a bang, a free burger, and maybe an awesome raffle prize, too.  Don’t miss out on this weekend. Stop in either UO shop for your topwater supplies.


Unicoi Outfitters: Friendly. Local. Experts.

www.unicoioutfitters.com


Sautee: 706-878-3083.  Open 8-5 daily. (2454 GA Hwy 17, Sautee-Nacoochee.)


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


Wes’ Hot Fly List: 

Dries:

BWO’s, Hendrickson, Tiny Black elk hair caddis, Drymerger march brown, grey elk hair caddis, Parachute Adams, Quill Gordon, and buoyant indicator flies for dry/dropper rigs (micro chubby, stimulator).


Nymphs & Wets: 

Sexy Walts, frenchie, pheasant tail and hares ear nymph and soft hackle, psycho prince. 


Mountain streams: Parachute Adams, gray elk hair caddis, tan micro Chubby, and a Pheasant tail, prince nymph, or soft hackle partridge dropper for deeper pools.


Streamers:

UV polar jig, jiggy fry, sparkle minnow, black or olive buggers, bank robber sculpin.


Reservoir Bass & Stripers:

Cowen’s somethin else, low fat minnow, gray/white Clouser, game changer.


River bass:

Dead Ned, crittermite, clouser minnows, thrashers. 


Headwaters:

They are still drought- low and crystal clear. Residents will be piled into drought refuges, but will be hungry and competitive if you don’t spook them.  Just be aware of smoke and a few road closures due to planned USFS controlled burns. Check the appropriate Forest website for details. 


UO buddy Splatek had a big time bluelining with his two boys:

“The boys and I snuck off into the no cell signal zone. Beats the heck out of a screen any day of the week!! Older boy caught about a dozen rainbows; 5 year old caught a few more than that.”




UO buddy Weston hit IDBIS Creek, hidden high in the national forest, and reports: “We caught around 30 to 40 wild rainbows on dry/droppers. For drys we were using patriots and parachute Adams size 14 and 16. For nymphs we were using pheasant tails,hairs ears,frenchies and more in size 16 and 18. They didn’t really seem to care what was on bottom,they were gonna eat it.


Delayed Harvest:

While low and clear, the Rabunite “switch” has turned on in the region’s DH streams due to sunny skies and warming water. Hooray!


https://waterdata.usgs.gov/nwis/uv?site_no=02176930&legacy=1


Carry both a topwater game for the afternoon hatches and a dredging or streamer-stripping game when the bugs fly into the trees and the fish sink back to the bottom. Go early or late or hike far away from the lot if you’re crowd-averse.


UO buddy Mo gave us his Chattooga DH Rx: “We had a great redemption day on The River last Sat. It was a beautiful day to be out. The water temp was 48F mid am and 56F as we walked out just after 5pm. The water level and flow were perfect. The gauge showed 1.47 and falling. While the rainbows are always there to play the brookies have been elusive for us, but this day set the record for both numbers and size. The dinks were either eaten by bigger fish or didn’t want to play as we only found a handful of fish under 10in. We started out early euronymphing with perdigons and enjoyed good sport catching a ton of rainbows until lunch. The action continued in the pm when I switched to a small hare streamer/zonker and absolutely wore them out. Lots of rainbows brought to hand but the brookies were very aggressive too. Surprisingly, no browns on the streamer. They seemed to prefer the caddis dry that Kurt was drifting on top with good success. In the span of 2 hours about half a dozen browns and several rainbows ate his dry fly. We had to leave earlier than usual but I can only imagine the action on top as the shadows got long in the late pm. Also, we saw sporadic risers and a variety of flies hatching throughout the day:big drakes, stoneflies, black caddis and midges. Might have to go back with a dry fly rod as the weather and temps stabilize in the next few weeks.”







Rabunite Dredger hit Nantahala DH yesterday afternoon.  



He got there around 130 and surveyed a favorite pool, his “strike indicator”’spot that tells him how to rig for the day. Water temp a chilly 46F, but the bright sun had some scattered BWO’s hatching and a few tiny, wild bows chasing them.


Those small wild fish are usually the first to rise to a sporadic hatch or to the start of a thick one.. He decided to stay there and rig up for dries, and was glad he did. Within 30 minutes the BWO’s poured off, and were joined by some Hendricksons and March browns.  The fish responded. He stayed in that pool for the 2.5 hours of the hatch, landing a nice handful of wild bows and two stockers that had figured out real trout chow. 




Best bugs were a tiny BWO for most fish and a March brown and Hendrickson for a couple more.



HINT: if all your parachute dries have a white post, go buy a gray Sharpie pen and color a few of them.


When the bugs left around 4, he picked pockets with a Euro rig and had success on both bugs, the sexy Walts anchor and the smaller Frencie dropper.  The colors on the wild bows were amazing.  He stayed til 7, but didn’t see any real surface action at dusk. It’s still a bit early up there for good Dark-30 action.


.






Stockers: 

GAWRD usually gets a jump on their stocking season opener by hitting some streams the third week of March. Be on the lookout for today’s weekly stocking report from the agency.



https://georgiawildlife.com/Fishing/Trout


Private Waters: 

Water temps are good, but low flows are still making our trips a bit challenging. Bring some yarn indicators and the highest quality ($$), thin tippet with you for your best scoring.  We need rain, lots of it!


Tailwaters:

UO friend Spangler:  “Hey Dredger, some intel for the Lanier Tailwater

I was able to fish (about a mile south of Settles Bridge) the tailwater during lunch for a couple hours last week.  I saw grey/brown caddis off and on and some midges too. No risers except the ones that took a shot at this indicator caddis (did hook up with one but he was net shy). Anything worked under the caddis as long as it was an olive CDC bugger! I probably could have downsized the nymph but I was having too much fun jigging it in riffles with the caddis jumping with it and either a fish would swipe at the caddis or grab the bugger (and one missed the caddis and flossed himself onto the bugger). I think I hit double digits or one short in 2 hours. The water was a bit stained from the rain and lack of generation today but I think that worked in my favor. “



Web reports suggest the Toccoa caddis action is still hot. Check with the Blue Ridge shops for the best local intel.


Warm Rivers: 

Walleye runs are usually over by now, but whites and hybrids will come on strong and a few male stripers may already be up the rivers, too.  


UO buddy JS said the reservoir stripers are migrating up the rivers to our south: “Local anglers are reporting good numbers of striped bass moving into the shoal complexes of the Chattahoochee in downtown Columbus. While fly angler Jackson Sibley located this healthy fish with a streamer, other anglers are finding success with both live and cut shad. Fish in the 10-lb range seem to be the bulk of the catch, with reports of fish up to 20-lbs reported.”



Ponds:

No recent reports, but don’t let that fact stop you. These hot days will pull bass and bream into the shallows. While the topwater action is still wetland away, try some streamers for bass and crappie and popper/nymph dropper combos for bream.


Lakes:

The lake striper and spot bite is improving with warming water. Bass are the better bet, as stripers are still scattered and finicky. Follow your electronics for deep fish and birds for breaking ones. We need a good rain to stain the creek arms, which will warm up and pull in threadfin shad and predators.


UO guide Joseph is on Lanier right now.  We’ll have to wait for his update.  Here’s a rerun of his advice from last week. “Fishing on the pond was steady last week. We’ve had some abnormally high water temps for this time of year that have had the stripers scattered. We’re seeing small groups over open water and some around main lake points. The best way to target these fish would be with an intermediate line with a 3-4 inch baitfish pattern. Somethin else’s, clousers, game changers, and a new pattern I’ve been working on dubbed the “somethin better” by Henry Cowen have all been players. 


Bass fishing has also remained good with warmer temperatures and we’re still catching some great fish up shallow, holding tight to structure. 


Spring fishing is in full swing and we only have a few more weeks of striper fishing on the pond. If you’re wanting to get in on the action call UO Sautee at (706)-878-3083 or visit my website at www.josephclarkflyfishing.com !”


Your best bet is to attend our Saturday open house and quiz Lanier striper legend Henry Cowen and his favorite student, Nate, on their current techniques. 



Afar:

LRO is always a good source for the latest Smokies fishing reports:

Little River Outfitters - Fly Fishing in the Great Smoky Mountains


UO buddy RSquared attended a TU region meeting in NC this week and shared his fish story: “On Friday, I was blessed to fish the DH section of the North Mills. When I started, the air temperature was in the 20's. With the cold weather, I assumed the trout would be hugging the bottom. I tied on a tandem rig with a Pat's Rubber leg as my top fly and I tried various fly's as for my dropper. This combination produced only one fish. Later that morning, I found a small pool that was unoccupied. I started to see an occasional trout rising to feed off of the surface. I came prepared to nymph all morning but I found one lone Parachute Adams in size 18 in my fly box. I tied that on and my 3rd drift produced a stocked Brooke Trout. For the next hour, I would sit there on an exposed rock and fished the dry fly. After a few drifts, I would pause for five or so  minutes before casting again. I wound up with four stocked Brooke’s on that lone Adams. It was good to be on the water that cold, sunny morning.”



Events:

March 21:

Join us for the UO- Sautee fly shop’s housewarming party! Don’t miss your shot at some mighty  fine raffle prizes.  Details in our flyer and here:

https://www.instagram.com/p/DVYgjY0AIO8/?igsh=a2gzOWVqOGUycnli



April 8:

Dredger takes his “Spring Dries and Droppers” program on the road for one more stop this spring:  the Atlanta Flyfishing Club on April 8.  AFFC welcomes all guests,so metro ATL folks, mark your calendars to net some fine Rabunite intel at an Atlanta Classic, Manuel’s Tavern.

https://atlantaflyfishingclub.org/


April 11:

Folks interested in flyfishing can try “Rabunite 101, a morning introduction to the sport at the Rabun County Recreation Center gym. It’s a real bargain at $25. Details:


https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1CyqVTpMY6/?mibextid=wwXIfr


https://tu.myeventscenter.com/event/Rabunite-101-Fly-Fishing-Seminar-122568

 

Enjoy this early report today. Why so early? Because I’m out the door ASAP to a favorite Rabunite stream, with high hopes of some afternoon dry fly action.  You can catch that Dredger intel by visiting us tomorrow in Sautee. There’s a burger and some BWO’s with your name on them. And maybe a 9/5 Recon, too, if you’re real lucky…

https://www.instagram.com/reel/DWCzEoukULw/?igsh=aHE0MDc4dmxlcXZs


Good luck! Stop by a UO shop soon for your spring supplies and breaking intel. Now get going. I’m outa here myself!




Unicoi Outfitters: Friendly. Local. Experts.

www.unicoioutfitters.com




Friday, March 13, 2026

Unicoi Outfitters Fishing Report - 3/13/26

 

Welcome to our annual roller coaster ride know as March weather. Be prepared to fish deep and slow in cold water and much shallower on those warmer days. The unseasonably warm weather had lots of fish on the move, but the last couple of colder days slowed them down. At least the weekend weather looks very good - -before another arctic blast hits us early next week.


Region trout waters remain pitifully low and clear.  They’re chilly one day and then hitting prime or even warm temperatures the next. 




The main factor is low water and spooky fish, so stealth and light leaders are the ticket. A few more GA DH streams received some fresh stockers this week, so pack your eggs and buggers, too.



Lake bass and stripers are warming up with each degree rise in water temps.the next 6-8 weeks will be the best time of the year to pursue those species in shallow water.


Our latest intel is detailed in our full weekly fishing report, which you can find on our new and improved website, thanks to Wes. 

Just go to our home page and click on “report.”

Good luck this week. Don’t forget our UO open house at our new home, 2454 GA Hwy 17, Sautee. Visit with us on Saturday, March 21st. You light just win an awesome door prize!

https://www.facebook.com/share/r/16avG7Rots/?mibextid=wwXIfr


Unicoi Outfitters: Friendly. Local. Experts.

www.unicoioutfitters.com


Sautee: 706-878-3083.  Open 8-5 daily. (2454 GA Hwy 17, Sautee-Nacoochee.)


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


Wes’ Hot Fly List: 

(Wes said last week’s list is still solid)


Dries:

Tiny Black elk hair caddis, grey elk hair caddis, BWO, Parachute Adams, Quill Gordon, Drymerger march brown, and buoyant indicator flies for dry/dropper rigs (micro chubby, stimulator)


Nymphs & Wets: 

Mops, sexy Walts, red tag jig, micro girdle bug, soft hackle pheasant tail, soft hackle hares ear, psycho prince. 


Mountain streams: Pheasant tail, killer may, prince nymph, soft hackle partridge. 


Streamers:

UV polar jig, jiggy fry, sparkle minnow, bank robber sculpin.


Reservoir Bass & Stripers:

Cowen’s somethin else, low fat minnow. 


River bass:

Dead Ned, crittermite, clouser minnows, thrashers. 


Headwaters:

They are skinny and clear. Recent rains run off in a matter of just a few hours. Water temps are good, especially in the afternoons, so throw your favorite dry/dropper combos and hope you can cut the dropper off quickly to enjoy the risers.


Delayed Harvest:

They’re fishing decently, thanks mainly to sone recent agency stockings. Just find the drought refuges and fish then in the shade for your best action. Go esrky or late on hot, sunny days, and in the afternoons on chilly days. Check the USGS stream gauges (Hooch, Tooga) and let those water temps guide you.


UO buddy JeffS : I hit Smith creek on Tuesday.  Caught a couple on San Juan worms but they just weren’t that interested in junk flies. Tied on a mop fly with a pheasant tail dropper and it was on. Caught 6-7 with that setup and decided to take the mop fly off and add a prince instead. This combination caught NOTHING. I took the prince off and put the tan mop fly back on with the pheasant tail dropper and, first cast, caught another fish. Something about the mop fly that got the fish’s attention to bite the bottom fly. Even went to the heavy fished culvert hole and caught fish on this combo. I didn’t realize the top fly was that important.”




Rabunites Rick and Dredger hit Nantahala DH on Monday. Flows were real low and clear.  It was a slow but steady pick through the day. They had to cover a lot of water and found willing fish in about half of the good pools and pockets. Best bugs for recent stockers were sexy Walts and mops, while a small frenchie dropper enticed the wild bows. One doubleheader showed their respective preferences.  Rick took off at 3PM, but Dredger stayed in hopes of sunset topwater action. It was sparse, as the hatching bugs (caddis, stones, BWO’s, and Hendricksons) were also sparse. He picked off a few risers on a parachute Adams, but caught twice as many on that frenchie dropper below his dry. We are still a week or two away from heavier hatches and more risers.






Rabunites Dredger and Bluejay hit the Chattooga DH on Wednesday afternoon. Water temp rose to a balmy 64F and the water was skinny and clear.  They had to skip long reaches of shallows to find deeper water and a few willing trout. They picked off a few trout and a bunch of redbreast during an early hatch of tiny caddis. 



The sun came out at midafternoon, the caddis disappeared into the trees, and the fish hunkered down. Jay finally managed a nice handful of recent stockers on an apricot egg.  They were buzzed by a big, immature bald eagle that crushed down the river channel.  The duo had to leave early at 6PM and missed the better action at sunset, when the caddis would return.  Moral of the story: fish the early and late shadows right now while these waters are darn low and clear. Fish like it’s May instead of March on hot, sunny days when trout are taking their midday siesta. 






Stockers: 

Stockers remain slim, but we’re only a week or so away from the start of stocker season.  

Trout Fishing | Department Of Natural Resources Division


Your best bets remain the two tailwaters for summer/fall holdovers and  just outside the DH stream boundaries to find the wash-downs.  Fishing public waters above or below private trophy waters might fetch you a straying brute or two.


Private Waters: 

Water temps are good, but low flows are making our trips a bit challenging. We need rain, lots of it!


UO-Helen manager Wes: “We had a good 1/2 day this morning on the Soque. The fish were slightly sluggish early with the cool morning, but by 9:30 the activity really picked up. Size 12 Girdle bugs were the star of the show this morning!”




UO guide Syd: “We saw some hatching bugs on Smith DH yesterday , so I started with some dries. The topwater  action was slow, however, so we switched to streamers (sparkle minnow) and got fish to chase them.



My Soque clients today did well by dredging a squirmy/girdle bug combo.”



Tailwaters:

No recent reports.


Warm Rivers: 

Target walleye and whites and you might find a few early-run male stripers up there, too.


https://georgiawildlife.blog/2026/03/13/georgia-fishing-report-march-13-2026/


UO buddy RSquared:  “White Bass & Crappie are still spread out through NW Georgia’s Coosa River drainage. However, reports of random schooling fish are starting to circulate. It should be on like “Donkey Kong” in a couple of weeks”


Ponds:

Jimmy’s grandson, Crosby, has started lighting up the largemouths in the warming shallows of his Alpharetta  subdivision lake.

https://www.youtube.com/shorts/m2epqQglY6s


UO buddy Athens MD: “It’s been a pretty fishy week in and around Athens. My wife and I hit the road early in the week with our new Hiker camping trailer in tow and set up camp on the shore of a big GA lake. 20 yards from our campsite 10 inch shellcracker on a 3wt made for a great evening. On Monday Oconee River Chapter of TU had our monthly (since 2021!) fly tying table at Athentic Brewing in Athens—tying up some chironomid patterns with some of our regular participants. Finally, the time change now allows more time for an after work “re-set”, and shallow bass were eager for small streamers—in this case a gray composite loop zonker pattern that Athens-area fish go crazy for this time of year.”






Lakes:

The lake striper and spot bite is improving with warming water.


UO guide Israel: “Bass were chewing on glide baits shallow on Tuesday.”



UO guide Joseph’s Lanier report: Fishing on the pond was steady last week. We’ve had some abnormally high water temps for this time of year that have had the stripers scattered. We’re seeing small groups over open water and some around main lake points. The best way to target these fish would be with an intermediate line with a 3-4 inch baitfish pattern. Somethin else’s, clousers, game changers, and a new pattern I’ve been working on dubbed the “somethin better” by Henry Cowen have all been players. 




Bass fishing has also remained good with warmer temperatures and we’re still catching some great fish up shallow, holding tight to structure. 



Spring fishing is in full swing and we only have a few more weeks of striper fishing on the pond. If you’re wanting to get in on the action call UO Sautee at (706)-878-3083 or visit my website at www.josephclarkflyfishing.com !”


Let’s root for UO manager/guide Jake, who is competing in the Cabelas Big Bass Classic on Clark Hill Lake this weekend!

https://www.facebook.com/reel/3968856540082240



UO buddy and striper book author HenryC’s latest Lanier video intel: https://www.instagram.com/p/DVwch2TmeZh/?igsh=MWpwcDVjeHhncXR4Ng==




Afar:

UO buddy Myles: “I was able to sneak away for a few days to a salty coast. We went out for a deep sea trip and after years of targeting them, I caught my first red grouper! On the inshore quests, I caught a handful of redfish and one very nice sheepshead!  Between the inshore and offshore action, we had a heck of a time!”





Outreach Kudos:

RSquared said: “This past week, Georgia Trout Unlimited, Georgia Wildlife Federation, & Georgia DNR hosted 17 of our state legislators to a fly-fishing excursion & fish Fry. Trout Unlimited members served as guides for our lawmakers.Georgia Wildlife Federation organized all of our lawmakers, & Wildlife Resources Division - Georgia DNR provided stocked trout, and the fish Fry.  Retired Director of Wildlife Resources, Ted Will, served as head cook! It was the second year that we held this event. GATU has had a long & beneficial relationship with GWF & Ga. DNR for many years as we work to conserve and protect trout waters.”





Events:


March 21:

Register early and give UO owner Jimmy a hand with his Hooch-Helen sweep. Then he’ll feed you a free burger at our afternoon open house:



https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1B5fjNMyaL/?mibextid=wwXIfr


March 21:

Join us for the UO- Sautee fly shop’s housewarming party! Don’t miss your shot at some mighty  fine raffle prizes.  Details in our flyer and here:

https://www.instagram.com/p/DVYgjY0AIO8/?igsh=a2gzOWVqOGUycnli



April 8.

Dredger takes his “Spring Dries and Droppers” program on the road for one more stop this spring:  the Atlanta Flyfishing Club on April 8.  AFFC welcomes all guests,so metro ATL folks, mark your calendars to net some fine Rabunite intel at an Atlanta Classic, Manuel’s Tavern.

https://atlantaflyfishingclub.org/


April 11:

Folks interested in flyfishing can try “Rabunite 101, a morning introduction to the sport at the Rabun County Recreation Center gym. It’s a real bargain at $25. Details:


https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1CyqVTpMY6/?mibextid=wwXIfr


https://tu.myeventscenter.com/event/Rabunite-101-Fly-Fishing-Seminar-122568

 

That’s the latest from our own rollercoaster rides up here. Bring both your cold and warmwater games up here and strap in for your own March action. Stop in either of our UO shops and we’ll give you the breaking intel for each day. Come see us in Sautee next Saturday (21st) and you just might be the lucky guest waking home with that new Recon!



Unicoi Outfitters: Friendly. Local. Experts.