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, November 14, 2025

Unicoi Outfitters Fishing Report - 11/14/25



Summary: 

Georgia headwater trout streams are still very low and clear due to a lack of rain. Temps are slowly rebounding after a snowy nose-dive to start the week. Stealth and a dry/dropper combo should score, especially after the sun warms the water.


Delayed Harvest streams are also real low and clear. They’ve had heavy fishing pressure and stockers have smartened up. Light lines and smaller flies, bumped along the bottom, are recommended. Take advantage of low water by hitting bigger streams that are typically tough to wade under normal flows.


Our private waters have fished real well, despite low water.  Our guides have the experience to put our clients on fish despite the challenging conditions. Enjoy this week’s videos!


Ponds south of us have produced decently, while Lanier has still been a yo-yo, according to Joseph.


The annual Rabun Rendezvous will be held on February 7th at the Rabun County Civic Center in Clayton. 


Catch our great fishing pics, vids, and intel here:

http://blog.angler.management/

(Link in bio)

Stop in either UO shop if we can help you out. Good luck this warm 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: Orange Stimulator, chubby Chernobyl, small parachute Adams, blue wing olive, various midges.


Nymphs & Wets: 

DH Stockers: twister egg, tungsten pheasant tail, Duracell, frenchie, root beer midge, ruby midge, micro girdle bug, pheasant tail soft hackle.


Mountain streams: small versions of hares ear, zebra midge, soft hackles, frenchie, sexy Walts.


Streamers:

Black or olive woolly buggers, mini shimmer buggers, sparkle minnow, mini leech.


Reservoir Bass & Stripers:

clouser minnow, wiggle minnow, somethin else.


River bass:

Thrasher, polar changer, crittermite, crawfish jambalaya, dead ned.


Headwaters:

They’re low and clear and thawing out after Monday’s arctic blast. 



A few of us helped some friends on a headwater stream on Monday afternoon, of all times. We were snowed upon and our guides iced up, but we still managed to hook a few fish by dredging nymphs and buggers.  Headwaters should fish well this week, especially after 10AM, as sunny, warm days are forecast.  




Throw dry/dropper rigs and hope to cut the dropper off after lunch if the fish rise for you. A tiny pheasant tail or Frenchie is a good dropper. Customers stopping by this afternoon reported midday success on dries!


Delayed Harvest:

The Georgia fish have been hammered and are extra spooky in the low flows. Stealth and small, dark bugs rolled along the bottom should work. Try stripping a small streamer, too, when afternoon water temps rise into the upper 40’s or higher. Don’t forget your stream thermometer!


The Feds just reopened for business and I doubt if the Chattooga bird has flown yet, so the middle of its DH section will be slim pickins til the bird flies and/or a big flood scatters the 11/1 SCDNR stockers. High and low will be best spots on the DH til then.


I always liked wade-fishing the Toccoa DH at low flows.  Anything under 400 cfs on its river gauge allowed for some good access over there. Give it a try while the river is low. Best wading spots are low (islands), high (canoe launch), and middle (power line).

https://gon.com/fishing/new-toccoa-river-delayed-harvest


NCWRC recently redosed its DH streams, so they can be well-worth a road trip. The best news is that NC streamflows are higher than GA’s, thanks to more frequent rains up there. There’s more fishable habitat in those creeks right now.


UO guide Sydney: “Despite snow on the ground and temps dropping significantly, my clients got on a good bit of fish at Smith DH on Tuesday.  We saw some fish rising for some bugs;  I assume they were midges since I couldn’t see them. We caught some on dries, the smallest parachutes in my box. But most trout fell for our tiny droppers: zebra midges , wd-40s , black beautys, and redneck gasoline perdigons on 6.5x - 7x tippet.”





UO buddy Mo: “Kurt and I fished the Tooga DH last Sat. We had perfect weather and water conditions. Worked our way up the trail on GA side and fished every good looking spot along the way. Fish were few and far between and spread out wide and far (some holes devoid of fish) but we found most of the eaters. We had well over a dozen fish to hand each; all cookie-cutter bows and a few skinny browns. No brookies.



These fish had no appetite for junk flies as we only managed to fool a few, but put on a small olive RBL stonefly or gasolina perdigon and they turned on. We also had some streamer action. It was a good day on the water. The river gave up some bounty and offered some beautiful scenery on a warm, sunny day in November. Can’t ask for more than that.”




UO buddy Ryan: “Last week I made it up to my favorite slice of NC with a friend.  I got to test out my new 10' 7" - 1wt and had a blast.   While some holes seemed beat to death already by angling pressure, some smaller spots in between held some nice stocked fish and a majority of wild rainbows.  Fish were hammering sz 18-20 hares ear and France flys tied on jig hooks. I threw 6.5x tippet and practiced using lighter flies to allow for a more sensitive tight lining presentation.  These wild fish can eat very subtly and it definitely helped me recognize more strikes. Natural colors like grey and brown did well.  I caught 40 and my friend caught over a dozen on his first trip up there!”




Stockers: 

There are still a few fall stockers around in the bigger streams. You can also fish downstream from DH boundaries to catch DH wash-downs after flood events.  We had a decent report from a Lumpkin stream and this one from Rabun TUer Nanette: 

“Hooked six yesterday in my favorite county stocker stream. They were lively. Used small natural nymph imitations under an indicator. Water very, very low and clear, and the fish were parked on the bottom in the narrow, deeper seams. It was pretty crowded, even later in the afternoon.”


Private Waters: 

UO guide Joseph: “The Soque fished well for my guest yesterday.  Langston told me before the trip that his personal best trout was only around 12 inches. Throughout the day we broke his PB four times and ended up with a nice 24-incher. Early in the morning small bugs like pat’s rubber legs and root beer midges were the ticket. Throughout the afternoon we also fished a streamer, swinging it slowly through deeper runs.”





UO buddy Megan brought six of her tennis teammates up to Nacoochee Bend this afternoon for their first shot at flyfishing. UO guides Wes and Sydney joined Megan to mentor the team.




All the ladies had a blast and caught fish. 






Syd said the hot flies for hefty Bend bows were small flashback nymphs, micro girdle bugs, perdigons, and soft hackle droppers.




Tailwaters:

No recent reports.


Warm Rivers: 

No recent reports. They’re not very warm up here any more.


Ponds:

UO buddy Athens Jay: “I recently purchased a “hybrid” replacement for my very old kayak and my cheap inflatable paddle board that had developed a leak I couldn’t patch. 


I had a feeling that piedmont pond fishing would be good ahead of the arctic blast that hit earlier this week. So I hit a local pond and had excellent results. I started fishing at noon and by 1:00pm I had landed 12 bass and missed a few more. Conditions were bright sunshine, strong wind, and clear water. I had tied some jig-style streamers with articulated tails and the chartreuse over white was the only fly I used all day. I fished a clear sink-tip line and slow retrieve. Most fish ate the fly in 3 to 4 feet of water. It was a good day of pond fishing for November!”









Lakes:

UO guide Joseph: “Fishing on Lanier has been tough at times and great at others. Over the past week we’ve seen a large amount of fish in groups of 3-10, feeding sporadically over open water and in the mouths of creeks. Most of these fish have been eating super-small threadfin shad, however a few have been on herring. It can be pretty difficult to feed them at first until you find the right pattern. For us the ticket was around a 1-inch long Cowen’s somethin else on an intermediate line. 



I just had two cancellations for prime moon dates on 11/28 and 11/29.  If you’re wanting to give it a try, call the Helen store at (706)-878-3083 or visit www.josephclarkflyfishing.com soon to grab those openings.”


There is a bonus helping of excellent reservoir and trout intel in this week’s GAWRD fishing report:

Fishing – Georgia Wildlife Blog


Afar:

UO buddy Athens Jay and an accomplice trekked north yesterday. On Wednesday night they checked online gauges and saw streamflows much better in NC. 



Jay hadn’t been north in a while and decide to hit the park.  They first watched a few midge sippers in the clear, icy water  (42F) at noon, 



and decided to leave them for faster water upstream. They scouted for “rainbow water” (as described in last week’s report) and hi-sticked dry/long dropper rigs through those spots.




Cooler water had the fish less active than past weeks, but they managed a nice handful of bows. Size compensated for numbers. 






None came up to the dry, but it served well as a distant, stealthy  strike indicator. All liked the #16 frenchie, dropped 3 feet under the micro chubby dry. Both silver and copper beads worked.  They quit at 4pm as the sun set (water temp 46F).  The abundant elk on the drive out were icing on the cake.



Here’s an extra scoop of park intel, courtesy of our friends at https://randrflyfishing.com/


Fishing Report | R and R Fly Fishing


Events:

From the Rabunites: ”Mark your calendars for Saturday, February 7th. It’s our annual shindig, the Rabun Rendezvous! We’ll have it once again at the Rabun County Civic Center in downtown Clayton. Barbecue, live bluegrass, fish tales, raffle and auction prizes- don’t miss this annual event celebrating clean, cold trout waters!”

The Rabun Rendezvous – The Rabun Chapter of Trout Unlimited


Get outside soon and enjoy this bonus week of warmth. You might even find some rising trout on sunny afternoons or breaking stripers in the dawn shadows. Take advantage of this unexpected mild weather before December’s chill drives fish deep and sends us fishing for warm winter coats. Stop by either UO store for your fall and winter fishing supplies and holiday gifts.  Have a flippin’ great week!


Unicoi Outfitters: Friendly. Local. Experts.

www.unicoioutfitters.com






Friday, November 7, 2025

Unicoi Outfitters Fishing Report - 11/7/25



Summary: 

Region trout streams are still real low and clear. Tonite’s rain might boost flows a bit if we get enough, but they’ll probably drop back quickly to skinny water .  Check the river gauges in the morning for any bumps in streamflows and match your bugs to the flows (low and clear water equals light line and small bugs; big water equals bigger and brighter bugs).




Consider taking two game plans with you this week.  Retain your fall plan for those warmer days and skinny water this weekend and possibly next.  Dry/dropper rigs are still a good bet on smaller streams. Also pack your winter dredging game for the  cold days and icy water on Monday and beyond. Indicator and Euro rigs will get your bugs on the bottom, where trout will sulk when water temps take a nose-dive. Let your stream thermometer dictate your technique.


Lake bass and stripers are a decent bet. It’s all about right place/right time, but one ten pound striper will let you forget several skunkings. Carry both fly and conventional gear for them.


Don’t miss Trout Tunes in Athens on November 9th! UGA event leader Emery said: “We had a blast last year, and can't wait to be back at Athentic Brewing Co. On November 9, at 6 p.m! We are so excited to have Dire Wolf jamming some Grateful Dead tunes all night, and some amazing items to raffle off! Tickets are $10 now, and $12 at the door, which each come with two raffle tickets. Don't miss out! Get your tickets now: Venmo @tu5riversuga with your name and # of tickets! 

Check out @5riversfishing_uga on instagram for updates.”



Catch all the fishing and event intel here:

http://blog.angler.management/

(Link in bio)

Stop in either UO shop if we can help you out.


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: Orange Stimulator, chubby Chernobyl, parachute Adams, blue wing olive, various midges.


Nymphs & Wets: 

DH Stockers: twister egg, tungsten pheasant tail, Duracell, psycho prince, root beer midge, ruby midge, micro mayfly.


Mountain streams: hares ear, zebra midge, soft hackle, prince nymph, crazy leg stone.


Streamers:

Mini shimmer buggers, sparkle minnow, Jiggy fry.


Reservoir Bass & Stripers:

clouser minnow, wiggle minnow, somethin else.


River bass:

Thrasher, polar changer, crittermite, crawfish jambalaya, dead ned.


Headwaters: Low, clear, and cool. Flows might spike if we get a significant shower. Start with a dry/dropper and make sure the dropper sinks to fish-eye level. Try a tungsten nymph or a tiny tin shot four inches above an unweighted nymph or soft hackle.


Delayed Harvest:

The GA streams got doses last Saturday and the Hooch DH got some more stockers this week. I’m sure the fish have been pounded with eggs and squirmies, so be ready to try dead drifting some small nymphs like lightning bugs, frenchies, and bright perdigons behind a small egg fly.


Stockers: 

Wait til March, or fish downstream from DH boundaries to catch DH wash-downs after flood events.


UO buddy Nanette hit the Tallulah  today:”Spent a couple hours solo on the Tallulah this afternoon. Still a few stockers hanging on, plus wild bows. Caught on dry-dropper rigs. Most ate the nymph dropper but a few went for the dry. The best part was having the river completely to myself! That was a first and I absolutely loved the solitude. The fall colors were outstanding too.”







Private Waters: 

UO-Helen manager Wes: “I did a couple of private water trips on the Soque this week. The fishing was quite good! The key to success was lighter tippet and midge patterns. Almost all of our fish either ate a size #18 Root beer or Ruby midge.”




UO buddy CDB: “On private water with Veterans flyfishing just after the rain.  Water was up a little and nicely off-color. The fish were active, so just about any on the standard fly patterns, presented properly in the zone, would produce a fish. Bead Head Black Pat’s Rubber legs produced very well, but the top producers were smaller flies (size 16-18) such as wet hackle pheasant tail, frenchies, blow torch and Walt’s Worms. Your offering should be dragging as close to the bottom as possible right now. If fishing a double rig, that point fly should be bouncing off the bottom. Make sure you finish the drift if you have a wet hackle - sometimes that swing at the end of the drift is irresistible. “





Tailwaters:

No recent reports.


Warm Rivers: 

No recent reports.


Ponds: no recent reports.


Lakes:

UO guide Joseph: “We’re starting to see some good signs on Lanier.  Stripers are still slightly inconsistent. Over the past week we’ve seen some good groups pop up in open water and stay up for a good amount of time. The majority of schools have been scattered over open water. Most fish I’ve seen have been feeding on small threadfins ranging from 2-3 inches in length. For flies somethin else’s, small clousers, and polar fibre minnows are the best bet. 



With this front moving in the beginning of next week will probably be slow fishing, but as the pressure stabilizes once again the fish should wake back up. 


I have a few last minute openings for the rest of November and December,  so if you want to get on an amazing topwater bite now is the time to book! 


To book or inquire call the Helen store at (706)-878-3083 or visit my website at www.josephclarkflyfishing.com


The UO duo of Jimmy and Dredger hit Lanier last Saturday morning. It was slow and they only found one striper school on top, briefly. No hookups. They would have had better luck casting for buck deer…



At mid morning they met up with UO guide Joseph, out on a recon mission. Their chat was interrupted by Joseph, who spotted diving gulls. Both boats raced toward the action and Jimmy managed to boat a nice 6 pound striper on a Sebile before the school sounded.



Afar:

UGA 5 Rivers duo Sawyer and Adam went south to the coastal marshes:  “It was a great trip though, we found a creek immediately that had some of the wildest fish activity I’ve ever seen. We were chasing packs of 30 inch redfish up and down the creek. The fish were busting up shrimp so hard they were beaching themselves. However, as every fisherman can attest, just because we saw a ton of fish doesn’t mean it was easy fishing. Hard to get the fish to eat your fly when they had thousands of real shrimp to eat. Adam and I finally got a couple to eat, and after some of the wildest fights on a fly rod we’ve ever had, we got them to the boat. Adam was throwing a black and purple creature fly with a purple zonker tail and I threw a flashy craft fur shrimp.”




UGA 5 Rivers gal Anna went north to NC and reported: “I had a wonderful weekend  brook trout fishing and thought you might enjoy hearing about! 

I ventured up to the mountains of North Carolina and hiked up a beautiful creek.  We started off with a dry:dropper but the fishing started off slow.  We had a few hits in the beginning but no luck landing fish. After a couple hours of fishing we found ourselves at a beautiful pool.  On the first cast I caught my personal best wild brookie. That pool produced a couple more fish and the luck continued as we headed upstream. We ended the day with over half a dozen fish caught on both dries and nymphs!”



Rabunites Nanette and Dredger took a midweek trek up to the Smokies. They found a pod of sipping bows in a flat, cold (46F) pool 

around their lunchtime arrival and tried to figure them out.


https://www.instagram.com/reel/DQsdp17EZF8/?igsh=MTN1MzY5eXAzbDhiMQ==


 To no avail. Nan cast while Dredge seined bugs. 

Both struck out. Those midges had to be small!  Nan managed one wild bow on a small caddis and had several eats on a real small pheasant tail dropper. After an hour, they admitted defeat and went to some faster water, where Nan practiced her Euro technique. A sexy Walts brought several bows to hand. 





The highlights of the trip were the abundant elk herds and the beautiful leaf colors in the afternoon sun.





Today (7th) Dredger returned for a rematch. He got there early( 9am)  to catch the start of the midge hatch and figure it out. Water temp was a decent 48F and he had high hopes. Alas, the hatch was sparse and rises were spotty in the long, slow pool.  He managed one dink rainbow on his BWO lead dry.  He did catch a few bugs and found out that they were half the size of his #28 cream midge dropper, so he quit trying to match the hatch after an hour of flailing.


He went upstream and tossed a dry/dropper into pockets and runs and did well. Nothing hit the October caddis dry, but a good bunch of bows, including a hefty reservation migrant, 






liked his #16 copper Frenchie, dropped 3 feet under the dry.  





A lone brown nailed the dropper on his last cast at 4PM, as the shadows fell and the water warmed to 54F. The key was covering a lot of ground (I.e. skipping over shallow riffles and big, deep pools) and finding the “right” rainbow water: slower boulder pockets and long runs with 2-4 feet of depth (indicated by a green hue) to provide cover for the fish. 


He had plenty of company along his long upstream wade today. It started with a mink around 9, 



then a herd of thirsty elk sneaking along the bank behind him around 3, 



and ended with a flock of turkeys on his hike back to the truck. It was another great day in the national park!




Supper hint: Haywood Smokehouse!




Events:

Don’t miss Trout Tunes in Athens on November 9th! UGA event leader Emery said: “It is almost time for Trout Tunes 2025! This is an event to support  5Rivers at UGA, a collegiate chapter of Trout Unlimited in partnership with Costa, focused on fly fishing and conservation. We had a blast last year, and can't wait to be back at Athentic Brewing Co. On November 9, at 6 p.m! We are so excited to have Dire Wolf jamming some Grateful Dead tunes all night, and some amazing items to raffle off! (Day trip for two on Nacoochee Bend, anyone?) This is an evening you do not want to miss! Tickets are $10 now, and $12 at the door, which each come with two raffle tickets. This is going to be a great evening to come together and support 5Rivers at UGA, to make fly fishing more accessible for everyone and aid our conservation efforts. Don't miss out! Get your tickets now: Venmo @tu5riversuga with your name and # of tickets! 

Check out @5riversfishing_uga on instagram for updates.”


From the Rabunites: ”mark your calendars for Saturday, February 7th. It’s our annual shindig, the Rabun Rendezvous! We’ll have it once again at the Rabun County Civic Center in downtown Clayton. Barbecue, live bluegrass, fish tales, raffle and auction prizes- don’t miss this annual event celebrating clean, cold trout waters!”

The Rabun Rendezvous – The Rabun Chapter of Trout Unlimited


 That’s the latest in this late report.   I couldn’t pass up one more warm fall day in the park and a pit stop at Haywood on the ride home.  We hope your weekend is equally eventful. Don’t forget a raincoat, a stream thermometer, and both your fall and winter fishing games.  Good luck!


Unicoi Outfitters: Friendly. Local. Experts.

www.unicoioutfitters.com