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, April 3, 2026

Unicoi Outfitters Fishing Report - 4/3/26



Happy Easter to all.  Our region’s streams and lakes remain low and clear, but with perfect water temps for most of our preferred fish species. Dry fly action remains good whenever some trout stream bugs decide to hatch. Between those hatches, soft hackles and small euronymphs are producing very well.  Stocker streams are getting their weekly redosings and are great spots for kids and new anglers.  


We’re hoping for some Easter rain to wash the pollen away, boost streamflows slightly, and muddy some lake arms to enhance the shallow bass and striper action. Many stripers should still be up the rivers on their annual spawning attempts. River bass to the south of us are awakening, too, with warming waters.


April may be the very best month for fishing our region.  Get out there this month and enjoy great weather, abundant trout bugs, awakening river bass, and shad and stripers in the shallows.  Don’t miss our specific intel in each weekly report, here:

http://blog.angler.management/


Have a great holiday weekend with your family and friends. Let’s all welcome any raindrops heading our way to restore our waters and reduce our wildfire threat.  Stop in either UO shop for your hot April trout flies (Sautee) and latest bassin’ hardware (Clarkesville).  Good luck everyone!

 

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:

Gray and tan elk hair caddis, BWO, Parachute Adams,  para light cahill, emerger caddis, Drymerger, stimulator, micro chubby.  


Nymphs & Wets: 

Squirmies, Mops, Lightning bug, soft hackle hares ear and pheasant tail, frenchie, pink tag jig, micro girdle bugs.


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, polarchanger, clouser, sparkle yummy.


Headwaters:

They remain very, very low, so last week’s advice still holds true. This is like summer drought fishing. Stick to your classic dries (caddis, Adams) and cover a lot of water to find decent depths. Stalk quietly and cast lightly to hungry wild fish piled into those few pools.


Delayed Harvest:

Low, clear water and some hatching bugs are providing great conditions for dry/dropper and double dry rigs.


UO guide Sydney:  “Smith DH has been awesome. I caught it right after they stocked on Thursday and had a 20+ fish afternoon on a dry fly, as they were rising consistently.  Light tippet and small (#16-18) dries worked best for me.”



Two Rabunites hit the Chattooga DH on Wednesday and had a decent day, with each catching a handful of fish on dries. They said the best action was from 10AM to 1PM.


UO buddy Lumis: “I showed up to the Nantahala DH around 11:30 on Tuesday with a challenge in mind, and that was to fish the lower end. 

Was originally going to stick to Euro nymphing but from the moment I got there there were some insane gusts of wind, so I threw on an indicator.


Proceeded to catch a lot of fish, over two dozen. And what was more surprising was that a very good percentage of them were wild rainbows and even one wild Brown. Also caught two big Stocker browns. I honestly think I would have probably caught around 40 fish if the wind wasn't so bad. Quilldigon (perdigon variant) and a thread Frenchie with a fluorescent purple collar. Around size 14.





I would love to tell you I was matching some hatch but I generally just pull out my favorite nymphs and start fishing. I haven't dove into dry fly fishing yet.”


Stockers: 

Stocker season is in full swing. GAWRD has another long weekly list for us. Get your kids and trouting rookies out there soon. Whether it’s a worm on a spincast rig or a woolly bugger on a fly rod, get them on a few fish.

https://georgiawildlife.com/sites/default/files/wrd/pdf/trout/Weekly_Stocking_Report.pdf


UO guide Sydney: “I had some friends come up before my guide trips and we had fun on the upper Hooch.  My hot combo has been a micro girdle bug with a soft hackle dropper.  Found a lot of cool stream bugs and critters Sunday.”








UO buddy RSquared: “All the streams in Northwest Georgia have received the first traditional trout stocking of 2026. I was able to catch a baker’s dozen of fresh Rainbow Trout from a beautiful stream that runs through a small town 5.5 miles from my farm in AA (Almost Alabama) I started with a pink squirmy-worm stuck with it for the two hours that I fished. It’s a great time to take your kids fishing!”




Private Waters: 

Low, clear water has made it challenging, but our talented guides have put their clients on some nice fish.


UO Sautee manager Wes had a trip yesterday and reported: “I did a half day on the Soque with young anglers Ben & William. The water is low but with a good drift and stealth the fish the fish will still be cooperative. Emergers were the deal! We saw most fish going after bugs in the top third of the water column. Our top flies were the emerger caddis and Drymerger March brown.”





UO guide Sydney: “Private waters have been good to my clients over the last two weeks.  I’ve been using a pats rubberlegs as my first fly and soft hackle wet as the dropper fly on light tippet. That dropper has scored the most.






Tailwaters:

No recent reports. Fresh stocker bows are suckers for stripped buggers and drifted squirmies and eggs.


Warm Rivers: UO buddy Jay: “A friend invited me to float a Piedmont river with him in search of bass. Water was low and fairly clear but we had success throwing weighted, articulated streamers tied on jig hooks.”




Ponds:

They should still be a best bet for shallow spring bass, bream, and crappie. If the surface action is still a bit slow, try some streamers for bass and crappie and a small rubberleg stone or sunken ant on a dropper under your bream popper.


Here’s a late report from RSquared:

https://www.instagram.com/p/DWq-7xTlWnR/?igsh=anhtZWU5cGZ4MTRk


Lakes:

Reservoir stripers should still be up the tributary rivers on their spring spawning runs. Try the upper ends of lakes for any fish still down low. If we get some decent runoff from Sunday’s rains, then try the stained lake water in the creek arms.


UO buddy Jay: “Last week we went in search of golden bonefish on the Piedmont flats. We found a few but it was not easy to get them to eat. I did have a big surprise when I cast to a carp and the fly was intercepted by a big crappie!”




Afar:

Ian just posted a fresh Smokies trout report:

https://randrflyfishing.com/2026/04/02/spring-has-arrived-in-the-smoky-mountains/


Events:

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

 

April 11:

It’s the Hoot on the Hooch in Helen, the annual fundraiser by the GA Foothills  TU chapter. C’mon up for good food, good tunes, and y’all fish tales. You ight even hear your name called as a winner of one of the GATU Dream Trip prizes, assuming you’ve bought a few raffle tix.



It’s April!  Nuff said. Let the grass grow and get on the water soon. You’ll be glad you did. Stop in either UO store to share fish tales and restock your boxes. Good luck on your Easter eggs hunts, too.


Unicoi Outfitters: Friendly. Local. Experts.

www.unicoioutfitters.com





Friday, March 27, 2026

Unicoi Outfitters Fishing Report - 3/27/26



Is this August? We’re in the 80’s, suffering through a serious drought, and under a red flag warning for outdoor fire danger. Pass up the campfires for now!


Enough of the bad news. How about the good stuff? First, it’s the traditional opening week of GA’s trout stocking season. All waters on the WRD master list got dosed. Second, stream temps rising into the 50’s and 60’s have kicked off our spring bug hatches. Toss some dries into your favorite DH and wild trout streams. Third, lake stripers are on their spring runs up the rivers.


That’s enough good news to get us past the lack of rainfall. Check out our specific intel ASAP to enhance your own Spring success:

http://blog.angler.management/


Come by either UO store for your spring supplies. Have fun!


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:

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: 

Squirmies, Mops, Lightning bug, pink tag jig, girdle bugs.


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, polarchanger, thrashers. 


Headwaters:

Darn, these streams are skinny! This is like summer drought fishing. Stick to your classic dries (caddis, Adams) and cover a lot of water to find decent depths. Stalk quietly and cast lightly to hungry wild fish piled into those few pools.



UO buddy RSquared: “Saturday, after the GATU quarterly meeting and a visit to Unicoi Outfitters open house, council treasurer, Cathy V. and I drove several miles up a rough, dusty, dirt road to reach a small, high elevation stream. Another angler had already beat us to this location. It was too late to travel somewhere else,  so we were forced to fish behind him. We managed to bring a few of these Appalachian Jewels to hand but we had to work hard for them. I had my best luck with a dry/dropper rig. I used an orange stimulator for my top fly and a size 16 Tellico nymph as my dropper.”





Delayed Harvest:

Rabunites Dredger and Boomerang hit Chattooga DH last Friday afternoon.  Water temp 50F at 1PM, and Hendricksons and BWO’s had the fish looking up from 1 til about 4. Dredger stayed til dark, but the bugs did not show up. It’s still a bit early for good sunset action. Their trip details are here:

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




Rabunites Rick and Nanette hit Nantahala DH last Wednesday afternoon, after the sun warmed the waters a bit.  Bug hatches were sparse, but enough fish were looking up to make them throw double-dry rigs. The two best patterns were a small para-Adams, trailed by a tiny gray caddis.



Stockers: 

Every waterbody on the master list is stocked for the GA season opener. Expect big crowds, especially in Helen for the city’s annual trout tournament. GAWRD’s longest stocking list of the year is here:


https://georgiawildlife.com/sites/default/files/wrd/pdf/trout/Weekly_Stocking_Report.pdf


Private Waters: 

UO manager/guide Jake: “The upper Soque fished really well earlier this week. The water is lower than normal for this time of year, but the fishing has been really good. We caught fish on a variety of dry/dropper rigs, squirmy worms, and smaller soft hackles. “






Tailwaters:

UO friend Spangler:  “Hey Dredger, Some Lanier tailwater intel: 2 hours after work till right before the 6 pm release, the upper river fished well. The water was absolutely crystal clear, with no hatching bugs to note.  I tried my usually search rig of a jig olive CDC bugger under a black and brown indicator caddis.  I did get one swipe at the caddis and missed one on the bugger. When I switched to the little size 18 hares ear (the one Ryan Hartley suggests) with a really heavy bead under the caddis, things picked up. I hooked into at least 10 in 2 hours and got 6-7 to the net. In fact a couple of the little bitty 3” browns were rising.  I picked them off sight fishing, but they were so little that  I had trouble casting forward

due to extra weight on my fly. The highlight was this big bow, which thought it was a steelhead in fast current.”




Warm Rivers: 

On Monday UO buddy JB said: “Mornin! Some intel for you from the river. Joseph C and I got out to check on the bass. No stripers yet. The  shoal bass were shy but we managed to trick a few. Water was low and cold. White game changer did the trick.


Ponds:

No recent reports, but GAWRD has some great intel in its well blog, below.  Ponds are red-hot right now!


Lakes:

The GAWRD shocking crews said that stripers are in the upper ends of lakes and running up the rivers in the their annual spawning attempts:

https://georgiawildlife.blog/2026/03/27/georgia-fishing-report-march-27-2026/


Wanna know how GA walleye fisheries are created?

https://www.instagram.com/reel/DWZbBP3gpjN/?igsh=azZ4MHo3ZWtvNzh1


UO buddy Ryan: “The Hooch Tailwater has been oddly “off” for the last few weeks.  I’ve been entertained by chasing some lake-run warmwater species around Cherokee County.”




Afar:

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

Little River Outfitters - Fly Fishing in the Great Smoky Mountains


UO guide Israel: Wes and I went to Denver for a manufacturer meeting, but we stuck around for a few extra days of recreation.  We hit a nice hatch of BWOs in the Black Canyon of the Gunnison River. Then we popped up to a high mountain lake and got some Tigers on streamers and chironomids.”




Athens Jay just returned from his bucket list trip: “I just returned from 21 days and nights on the Colorado River, rafting 226 miles through the Grand Canyon. 



It was an incredible experience and I even got to do some fishing along the way. I managed to catch some real pretty wild trout.  I fished a brown articulated streamer in the main flow of the Colorado, and fished CDC beadhead pheasants tails in the small tributaries. The fish were  just an added bonus to the scenery!”







Events:

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

 

April 11:

It’s the Hoot on the Hooch in Helen, the annual fundraiser by the GA Foothills  TU chapter. C’mon up for good food, good tunes, and y’all fish tales. You ight even hear your name called as a winner of one of the GATU Dream Trip prizes, assuming you’ve bought a few raffle tix.



https://go.tulocalevents.org/e3e934/Campaign/Details


Go and enjoy some great spring (summer?) weather this week. You might have to outwalk the weekend crowds, or bring your own rock to stand on in the most popular stocker streams, but quality time on the water will make it worth your efforts. Just pass up your campfires for now.  Let’s keep those trees intact and shading our precious trout waters!  Good luck.  Stop by a UO shop soon for your spring supplies.


Unicoi Outfitters: Friendly. Local. Experts.

www.unicoioutfitters.com