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, August 15, 2025

Unicoi Outfitters Fishing Report - 8/15/25



Summary:

That cool spell sure was fun while it lasted!  Did you catch some cool air and cooperative fish? But it’s over now, so deal with the heat by reverting back to your mid-summer techniques. Headwater trouting will be good at real high elevations and on north slopes. Streams are clearing and dropping from Wednesday’s 3 inches of rain, so dry flies will work well, as Syd says.  




Stockers are still good thru the day on attractor flies and bait. Check today’s brand new WRD stocking list in our report.  Tailwaters are still icy and resident bows and browns are cooperating.  Pond and lake bass and bream are still cooperating, while river bass are waiting for the water to clear before turning back on.  That action should pick up over the weekend. Again this week, we have some great reports from friends in distant lands, from NC north to MI and west to the Great Basin. Enjoy those tales and pics!  Fishy reports and advice are in our blog. It’s new every Friday and will help you boost your own catch rates. 

http://blog.angler.management/

(Link in bio)


Stop in either UO shop for intel, supplies, air conditioning, and story-swapping. 


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:  purple haze, tan elk hair caddis, parachute ant, foam ant, micro chubby Chernobyl, royal humpy, Drymerger. 


Nymphs & Wets: 

Stockers: red squirmy worm, peach egg, micro girdle bug, black woolly bugger, tan and olive mops, pink tag jig.


Mountain streams: hares ear, drowned ant, pheasant tail nymph and soft hackle, UV green weenie, prince nymph.


Streamers:

small black and olive buggers, bank robber sculpin, micro dungeon. 


(Bass & stripers) two tone stealth bomber (the olive/tan color has been deadly lately for river bass) Supernatural peanut, sparkle minnow, stealth jig.


(Panfish) mini stealth bomber, Boogle popper #8, brim reaper, girdle bug.


(Carp) squirmy hybrid, carp bitters, identity crisis.


Headwaters: 

They’ve got decent flows and were still slightly stained yesterday after the midweek rain.  They’ll drop and clear quickly. Water temps are rising, however, with the return of these steamy August days, so early morning trips to high elevations and north slopes are again in order. On Thursday upper Smith was already 67F at 830 AM 



and a high Hooch trib was 66F at 10AM. Go early and go high!



UO guide Sydney: “This past week I did some headwaters fishing, some stocker fishing, and then played on the lake with some boogle bugs.  

The wild rainbows fell for parachute adams, parachute ants and 409 Yeager dry flies.



  The Hooch WMA stockers preferred cdc flies, ant patterns and hothead pheasant tails. 



And the lake bream can’t resist a boogle bug or stealth bomber for bigger fish and a parachute ant for smaller ones.



Stockers: 

Stocker fishing is still good in streams still receiving fish.  I watched folks having success at the Hooch WMA yesterday despite 72 degree water at 6PM.  GAWRD  provided a fresh list today. Remember to take those summer stockers home for dinner, as the double whammy of warm water and angling stress will do most of them in.

https://georgiawildlife.com/Fishing/Trout



Private Waters:

“Broken record:” We remain shut down for summer. Feel free to call our shop ASAP to reserve those prime fall weekend dates after October 15, when we reopen those cooled-off streams for business. 


Reminder:

We are still offering flyfishing-only striper trips at Nacoochee Bend.  Call the Helen shop at 706-878-3083 for details and to make your reservation. Aim for the day after a forecast for significant rain. You need stained water to fool them with feathers.


UO guide Joseph: “I didn’t get any pictures but river striper fishing Wednesday night at the Bend was okay. The off color and better flow offered good fishing. We got a decent amount of bites from mostly smaller fish and a few better ones. The ticket for us was a white game changer fished on an intermediate line in the faster whitewater. As fall creeps closer the fish will make their way back down to reservoirs so, time is limited for linesiders in the rivers.”



Tailwaters:

They’re rockin’ along.

UO buddy Myles: “It's been a steady morning today (15th) on the Lanier tailwater. Fish are eating small nymphs on small tippet! My friend and I are close to 30 fish in about 2.5 hours so far.  Once the fog cleared up, we could see better and the fishing turned on!”



Warm Rivers: 

Flows are receding from the three inches of midweek rain, but rivers are still stained. The Hooch at Highway 115 was still too muddy this morning for a decent shot at river bass. It may clear enough for some opportunities tomorrow if you use big and/or flashy streamers and plugs.





7PM UPDATE: Hooch bassin’ is out for this weekend. It’s ripping red mud at Highway 115 tonite due to a strong storm at 6PM.


UO buddy Ryan: “I figured that the flathead catfish river run only lasted through the spring, but we’ve found a few late fish.  This spot has been hit or miss, and last year I didn't land any flatheads.  This year we've caught 3, making that 5 total in 3 years.  This is the largest landed for the year from our crew. The thought of a 20+lb fish has me coming back to sit on the river bank!”




Ponds:

They’re still a good bet, especially at first and last light. Paddle a canoe or yak around the perimeter and toss poppers under the bankside tree limbs.



UO buddy CDB: “When the rain stopped and the sun came out , we headed out to one of the local neighborhood lakes.  The water was muddy, but there was still plenty of action.  We used a damselfly nymph imitation - rubber legged dragon - stripped slow in little one or two-inch increments. The sunfish were all over it as well as a couple of hungry blue cats. 

Fun afternoon on the water, but I sure am looking forward to the weather cooling down.”





Lakes:

UO guide Joseph: “Fishing on Lanier remains steady. With the “lower” water temps last week the bite has picked back up slightly. 

Most of the schooling fish I’ve seen have been on main lake humps, points, and over open water. For flies game changers, clousers and various other baitfish patterns on intermediate lines should be good options. For conventional tackle topwater walking baits, sebilles, and flukes will work. Fishing should be picking up on the pond as cool fall weather approaches. I also still have  a few prime fall and winter dates available for striper fishing however, they are going quickly. If you’re interested on getting out there give the Helen shop a call at (706)-878-3083 or check my website out at www.josephclarkflyfishing.com



Afar:

Once again we have some fine fish tales from friends all over the country.


UO’s own Dredger took advantage of the tail end of the  cool spell and jumped north of the border last Monday.  His favorite park stream was a nice 62F at 8AM and rose to only 64F at his 4PM departure.  After a slow morning start, he did well Euronymphing a bunch of cookie-cutter bows all thru the afternoon. Two-thirds hit his sexy Walts anchor fly and the rest fell for his sunken black ant dropper. Some brief wildlife watching added to a fun day in the Smokies.








He left early in hopes of finding a few river smallies “on top” before dark. Luckily, the river had cleared enough and a few small fish were chasing blue dragonflies.  He topped off his marathon Monday with a handful of fish, all but one falling for his floating Mr Wiggly.  The two best were 14 and 15 inches and a fair fight on his 6-weight outfit.






UO Helen manager Wes: “Atticus and I took a road trip up to the Mitt AKA Michigan last week. We had a couple of great days of river fishing for smallmouth bass. All of our river bass got caught on plopped and drifted stealth bombers. The flows were low and clear so a long cast out in front of the boat and drifting the bombers (not popping them) was the key to getting bites. Most of the fish came up and sipped our foam bugs. 







We also did a Great Lakes flats sight fishing trip with guide Dave Hurley. It was an incredible experience fishing to a variety of different species in clear blue water. We fished for Smallmouth, carp, bowfin, and freshwater drum. What a unique and beautiful fishery Dave has dialed in up there. If you like sight fishing this trip is worth putting on your bucket list!”


UO buddy Will returned home from FL for a brief vacation.  He had a productive lake boat ride and a fun river float this week on his home waters in Michigan. Enjoy his pics.






UGA Five Rivers grad Matt: “Hey Jeff, Greetings from Great Basin National Park!  Been able to catch a few western trout this summer. My first ever tiger trout, Snake River cutthroat and bonnneville cutthroat. The fishing is great out here! “






Kudos:

The Athens TU chapter hosts a very popular monthly fly tying session. Our buddy Jay said: “Oconee River TU had a full house for our monthly fly tying night at Athentic Brewing Company. 



This event brings together a wide range of folks - from teenagers to guys that make me feel young! Athentic has been a great supporter of our conservation efforts. If you’re ever in Athens on the 2nd Monday of the month, please join us!”

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


We are inching closer to fall.  Tough out these last few weeks in the August oven and things should really pick up. When you see our nighttime temps dropping back into the 60’s, grab that bass or trout rod and drive up with lotsa hope. In the meantime, hit these waters when the hot sun isn’t on them and you’ll still have fun. Stop in either shop and we’ll prepare you for success on any day you visit!


Unicoi Outfitters: Friendly. Local. Experts.

www.unicoioutfitters.com


Friday, August 8, 2025

Unicoi Outfitters Fishing Report - 8/8/25



Summary:

Cool weather is still hanging on, so the better trout bite will continue through the weekend. The river bass bite remains decent when those waters are clear between storms. Ponds are still good, and reservoir bassing is still decent for this time of year.  Folks traveling afar have shared some fine fish tales, too. Get out there ASAP before those cooler days disappear for another month.  Details are in our blog. It’s new every Friday and will help you boost your own catch rates. 

http://blog.angler.management/

(Link in bio)


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:  

(It’s still good for a third week)


Dries:  purple haze, tan elk hair caddis, parachute and hard body ants, micro chubby Chernobyl, Royal Wulff. 


Nymphs & Wets: 

Stockers: red squirmy worm, peach egg, micro girdle bug, black woolly bugger, tan and olive mops, pink tag jig.


Mountain streams: hares ear, drowned ant, pheasant tail nymph and soft hackle, UV green weenie, prince nymph.


Streamers:

small black and olive buggers, bank robber sculpin, micro dungeon. 


(Bass & stripers) two tone stealth bomber, crawfish jambalaya, dead ned. Supernatural peanut, sweet baby cray.


(Panfish) mini stealth bomber, Boogle popper #8, brim reaper, girdle bug.


(Carp) squirmy hybrid, carp bitters, identity crisis.


Headwaters: 

They are low and clear, but cooler due to some nice cloud cover during the last week. 


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


At 4PM yesterday Spoilcane ran 68F 



and a high Hooch headwater was a comfortable 65F so late in the day. 



We still have several cooler days ahead, so take advantage of these opportunities to go bluelining before real hot August weather returns.


Stockers: 

GAWRD  provided a fresh list today. The continuing cool spell will allow good stocker fishing throughout the entire day, rather than just the mornings.  Remember to take those summer stockers home for dinner, as the double whammy of warm water and angling stress will do most of them in.

https://georgiawildlife.com/Fishing/Trout



Private Waters:

 We remain shut down for summer. Feel free to call our shop now to reserve your prime fall weekend dates after October 15, a rough estimate for our reopening of private trout water opportunities.


Reminder:

We are still offering flyfishing-only striper trips at Nacoochee Bend.  Call the Helen shop at 706-878-3083 for details and to make your reservation. Aim for the day after a forecast for significant rain. You need stained water to fool them with feathers.


Tailwaters:

They remain a summer best bet due to cold winter waters discharged from reservoir depths.  Both tailwaters got stocked this week.  Toss streamers and junk flies (eggs, squirmies) for freshly stocked bows, and zebra midges and tiny black stones for resident browns that aren’t big enough yet to eat stockers and little browns.


UO buddy Myles: “This past weekend, I hit the hooch tailwaters with a couple friends. Though we had a slow start to the morning, after the sun rose and the fog cleared, the fish started to cooperate for us. I ended up with 39 fish, and after a slow start for my friend, I gave him a few tips to get more natural drifts and he ended up with 28. We were using 7x and size 20 nymphs. Hares ears and pheasant tail variations have done the trick once again! “




Warm Rivers: 

They’re still fishing well whenever they’re not chocolate milk after a heavy rain. Just watch for clear water between these PM storm surges. Watch the USGS Hooch (Leaf) and Chestatee gauges for storm surges before deciding to go. Did you catch Wes’ tip this week for sinking your bass streamers?

https://www.instagram.com/reel/DM_qjtKp3bz/?igsh=MTFvbDYxOXpnNnVuYw==


UO owner Jimmy: “Fishing yesterday wasn’t gangbusters but enough Shoalies ate to keep me interested. Maybe the full Moon is affecting them. The Bomber Bugger got all the attention. Nothing on a Boogle Bug even though I did have one Shoalie attack the Bugger as soon as it plopped down on the water.  Looks promising for the weekend. You’ll likely find me back out on the river again!”



UO friend RSquared: “Work on my 2025 Georgia Bass Slam continued in NW Georgia with Coosa Redeyes this past week. The creek I was fishing is known for 12”+ Redeyes However, none came out to play. We did manage several that were over 9”. Small minnow imitations were the trick.”




Ponds: Recent Retiree Athens Jay said: “Piedmont lakes and ponds are a great summer option, especially when big rains keep you off the rivers. This week, fishing early and late, and being prepared to suddenly shift gears has presented opportunities for a diverse range of target species. It really helps to take your time and observe fish behavior in summer when fish tend to be looking up for food. It might be difficult to resist the urge to jump in and start casting your favorite fly, but taking your time will pay off.”





UO buddy Gayland: “Hi Jeff,

I started fly fishing at daybreak with a yellow and a blue #6 Boogle Bug at Rocky Mountain PFA. Redbreast, bluegill, and red ear were working my bug over!

This beautiful largemouth hit the blue Boogle bug and jumped clear out of the water on the take!   He jumped three or four times before I was able to land him.   It was a great morning fly fishing for warm water species at Rocky Mountain!”



Lakes:

UO guide Joseph: “Fishing on the pond has slowed slightly with rising water temperatures. Last outing we were able to catch a few fish before the wind and the rain ended up running us off. All these Lanier fish we caught were on serpentine swimbaits around humps or points littered with brush. 



Fall will be here before you know it and the fish will be happy once again. We are still booking fall and winter striper trips. I have prime moon dates still available however they are going fast. To book call the Helen store at (706)-878-3083 or visit www.josephclarkflyfishing.com.



Proud papa RSquared shared his son’s reservoir bass report here:

https://gon.com/fishing-reports/allatoona-bass-fishing-report-aug-8-2025


Afar:

UO guide Israel had an invite from a buddy up north of Georgia and had a big time with Smallies rising to surface bugs. He said: “Few more from up north. Top water all day!!! Boogle bug, stealth bombers, and wiggle minnow were the preferred snacks.”





My DNR buddy, “Deadly” Damer, summarized his annual MT trek with dad and brother: “Got back on Saturday.  Another great trip.  No absolute monsters this year, but lots of good fish caught.  Surprising, the Missouri stunk for me.  I had a few opportunities, but managed to land ZERO fish on the big MO.  But the Big Hole was awesome.  Spruce moths and tricos together had the fish looking up along the banks.  A 14” grayling on the Big Hole was the trip highlight for me!  Smaller spring creeks were good too.  Some good action on hoppers, but it may have been on the early side for them.  Foam beetles were the ticket when hopper action was slow.”







UO buddy Mo: “Hey Jeff. 

Here’s a sample of some cookie cutter stockies from a well managed C&R section on the LaÅ¡va River in Central Bosnia. These brownies are up and feeding on top in the afternoons as the river is very rich in aquatic insect life. They’re not easy to fool but a well-placed ant imitation or a small emerger will bag a few. When they’re not snacking on top Euronymphing a single fly finds them lacking more often than not. A very productive day with great numbers. Enjoy a cold drink after some great dry fly action in the afternoon. This was the last river I fished on my Balkan travels. Now I’m looking to hit the Hooch soon, I can already feel the shakes coming on.”






Kudos:

Congrats to our two Dawson County high school bass fishing teams. Hank the Yank said they finished 4th and 5th out of 250 teams fishing the BASS national high school fishing championship. One angler is Carter Cunningham, the son of our friend, Lanier fishing guide Clay Cunningham (@catchingnotfishing). Great job, guys!




You still have a few days of cooler August weather to enjoy, so get out there soon before it gets hotter than a Hoochie Coochie once again.   Stop in either UO shop for advice and hot flies and lures. Good luck!


Unicoi Outfitters: Friendly. Local. Experts.

www.unicoioutfitters.com


https://www.instagram.com/reel/DKnul0DxCIW/?igsh=MTl5OXNnNDdvZzIzMQ==