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.

Saturday, May 24, 2025

Unicoi Outfitters Fishing Report - 5/24/25



Trout streams are in great shape and the cooler weather is extending our spring fishing season. Larger streams are wide, lose the shade,  and catch more midday sunshine, so they are warming into the mid-60’s and shutting down the afternoon trout bite. Hit them early or at dusk for some late season hatches and risers. All smaller trout waters are fishing well throughout the day. GAWRD has a long holiday list of stocked waters. Just be ready for the bigger weekend crowds. Go early late, or hike further from parking lots to avoid them.






River bassin’ is promising, since it’s been four days since the last big rain and our rivers have cleared. They’re still a bit high, so be careful wading or floating them. Given our cool spell, pond and lake bass fishing is still a best bet while the fish are still in the shallows.


Fresh fishing reports and tips are right here in our blog.  It’s new every Friday and will help you boost your own catch rates. (I’m late this week because our Helen shop was rockin’ yesterday !) Wes’ weekly fly list is always spot-on!

http://blog.angler.management/

(Link in bio)


Stop in either one of our two UO shops for some 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:  

(Wes said last week’s list still holds true, and our trip results support his conclusion) 

Dries:  parachute Adams, parachute light Cahill, 409 Yeager yellow, yellow stimulator, micro chubby Chernobyl, hard body ant, goober sally. 


Nymphs & Wets: 

Stockers: Squirminator, mop, slush egg, frenchie, girdle bug, psycho prince, Red tag jig.


Mountain streams: micro girdle bugs, black ant, hares ear nymph and soft hackle , soft hackle pheasant tail, improved yallar hammer. 


Streamers:

Sparkle minnows, small black and olive buggers for DH streams, mohair leeches, Jiggy Fry, mini shimmer buggers.


(Bass & stripers) Stealth bomber, boogle bug, polar changer, clouser minnow, crittermite, Thrasher, Wiggle minnow. 


Headwaters: 

They in great shape: clear and cool and flowing at or just above seasonal norms. Temps are usually running from the high 50’s in the morning to the low 60’s on sunny afternoons.  Toss your fluffy dries like anything yellow (stimmy, Yeager) or a tan caddis and enjoy the risers. Add a dropper nymph only if you want to dredge a deep pool.


Delayed Harvest Streams:

There may still be a few fish left in Georgia’s larger Delayed Harvest streams. You can give them a shot at dusk and look for rising fish during the last evening hatches. The NC streams are still under DH regulations until the first Saturday of June (7th) and are a best bet for road-trippers. It looks like the last stocking was heavy on colorful brooks and buttery browns.


Dredger followed the advice in last week’s UO fishing report (reprinted below) and had a big time on Nantahala DH Thursday night (22nd). The water was still a bit high and slightly stained from the midweek rain, but still very fishable. Stream temp was a fine 62F at 5PM.




With no bugs buzzing nor fish riding, Dredger started at 5PM with a dry/dropper search rig. He popped a few fish on the dry (Wes’s favorite, a 409 Yeager) and had no takers on a couple of nymph patterns dropped behind it. Around 6PM some tiny tan caddis hatched and fish started rising. He changed the dropper to a #18 tan elk hair caddis and was in business. A few yellow sallies also flew by and every 4th fish took his lead fly, the Yeager. At 7PM the #16 and 18 cream cahills hatched. He changed the caddis to a Cahill and did well on both dries.  




Half the fish hit the dead drift and half or more had to be enticed with a twitch or skitter. All three stocked species came to net, along with a couple small wild browns and a good handful of spunky wild bows. 






The bugs exited around 8:00 and so did the risers, but he still found four more fish by prospecting good looking runs before quitting at dark.

Here’s last week’s recipe that worked for him and also for Rabunites Nan and Rick, who hit the Nan DH last nite (23rd) for the evening hatches. Nan said: “Ohdarkthirty Magic from 7-8 pm. Just got home. Pooped but happy!”


This morning she added: So, our fishing started slow. Rick and I both caught a single trout on chubbies. We fished 3 spots, with mayflies very active at one. I also caught trout on a Copper John nymph below the chubby. It was slow and Action did not pick up till about 6:30 pm. We went to our favorite spot along the river and started seeing lots of Cahills. We both switched to Cahills and I left Rick near the truck and walked upstream to some promising pocket water.  I found a ton of little wild fish plus small stockers. All three trout species. It was nutso for a while, with fish hitting on every drift. I landed about 15, had hits from twice that.


Last week’s advice:

“Try going at 7PM and look for bugs and rising fish just before dark. Yellow sallies should still be strong, and some leftover cahills and tiny tan caddis may add to the evening surface action. Prospect the shady banks before dark with an Adams lead fly and griffiths gnat or black ant dropper. Add a few early, bonus risers to your head count before the venting hatch commences.


NC DH streams and the Smokies should fish really well as their streamflows subside. Due to higher elevations, western NC’s spring runs a week or two later than ours, so yellow sallies, cahills, and caddis should bring plenty of dusk surface action. LRO always has a good daily fishing report for the Smokies that applies to most streams in western NC.

https://littleriveroutfitters.com/pages/fishing/report.htm


Stockers: 

Stockers are a best bet, as GAWRD stocked heavily for the holiday weekend and the big crowds. Try going downstream from known stocking sites and picking the pockets for flood wash-downs.

https://georgiawildlife.com/Fishing/Trout


Rabunite Nan hit the upper Chattooga with her hubby on Tuesday evening. They had some dusk luck on yellow stimmies. They were part of Rabun TU’s “hot dogs at the river” crowd. Check out this TU chapter and visit with them. You’ll have fun, too, and might decide to join them.

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1C3cfTnw3A/?mibextid=wwXIfr


UO buddy Myles: “I ventured with a friend to Chattooga for my first time this past Friday. It seemed like we were fishing behind a lot of people who had beat us to the river. We picked up a few stragglers that didn't get hooked prior to our arrival. 


After we ventured another half mile or more upstream, away from where we had seen people, we found some spots where some wild and stocked trout were holding together and we ended up having a nice day of it, catching almost 40 fish between the 2 of us. Eggs and small natural nymphs worked for us. We were switching between 7 and 8x for the most part!


This past Saturday I hit the Nantahala right after it rained with some friends who were in town from Pennsylvania. The DH part of the river was high and muddy so we went upstream a ways where it was clearer. I taught my friend how to Euro Nymph and he caught on pretty quickly and caught a trout slam! Between the 4 of us we caught about 50 fish. We used 6 and 7x tippet with size 18 and 20 hares ears and pheasant tail variations.”



GAWRD’s Friday stocking lists are always here. It’s a long list this week for the holiday crowds.

https://georgiawildlife.com/Fishing/Trout


Private Waters:

Our spring guiding season is winding down with the hotter days and warmer water on our horizon. We are only fishing the mornings. Catch one of our few remaining open slots ASAP.

 https://www.unicoioutfitters.com/learn-to-fly-fish-2/


UO-Helen guide Israel: “Private water seems to have slowed down. I can’t seem to find a pattern they prefer, so I’m just picking off a few fish here and there by rotating through my fly box.”



Our two UO clients had a good morning of unguided fishing on Nacoochee Bend yesterday. It was their first time with us.  Most of their fish succumbed to dark, dredged nymphs like pheasant tails, but a few also inhaled their fluffy yellow dries. The duo won some battles and lost some to big brutes that took them up and down the river, complete with aerial acrobatics.  They said they’ll be back soon for a rematch!


UO buddy Alan from Athens went head-hunting at Nacoochee Bend. His streamer chucking resulted in an epic battle with the brute bow at the “stadium hole.”



UO buddy CDB is finally back in state and said: “Hi Jeff, it was good to get off the lawn and back on the water!  Had veterans out Monday on private waters. Water was high and off color in the AM, gradually clearing after the rain stopped. With the darker water we defaulted to my favorite - jig head micro streamers. A size 12 black leech with a bronze tungsten jig head rolled along the bottom was money! I will usually add an extra shot, maybe a 1 or an AB to straighten the leader and get it down fast and fish it under the indicator. Adjust the depth until you get it to tick the bottom once or twice through the run. We lost a couple jigs but the results were worth it. Gorgeous day once the sun came out. Laurels were in full bloom. Really peaceful day with some new and special friends.”

https://veteransflyfishing.org/





Tailwaters:

No recent reports. Water temps will be great, but be careful about dam releases as those lakes try to shed the extra water from recent heavy rains.


Warm Rivers:

Region rivers are finally coming down and clearing up after our heavy rains. The Hooch looked fishable when I crossed it at Highway 115 yesterday. 


UO-Helen manager Wes: “I did a shoal bass Float with UO friend Rusty this week. We enjoyed a beautiful morning on the river and Rusty caught some nice bass. Bottom-bounced black and olive patterns were the key players, as  the bass didn’t seem to wanna chase anything down that day. “




Some summer vacationers have exited the warming reservoirs and run upriver to cooler environs. Stayed tuned for our big announcement next week.



Ponds & Lakes:

Bass fishing is still great, given the cooler weather and moderate surface temperatures.   You’ll do better under the lower light of dawn and dusk, especially if you’re tossing surface bugs.


While Lanier’s birds are gone for the season , the stripers are still around.  See the GAWRD weekly fishing report for the best reservoir intel this week.

https://georgiawildlife.blog/category/fishing/


Also use the great intel in Henry’s book and you can still find stripers this month, even without those beloved gulls and loons. We just restocked his book at our stores, so pick one up before we sell out again.

https://shoponline.unicoioutfitters.com/fly-fishing-for-freshwater-striped-bass-henry-cowe.html


Afar:

UO guide Como evidently took some time off for a beach trip with family. He provided no intel and just rubbed it in by sharing this photo:



News and Events:

Athens Jay just wrapped up  his UGA field course, Fishes of Georgia, with 18 students in tow.

He said:  “We spent this week tent camping at Fort Mountain State Park. Each day we visited a different north Georgia river to sample both the Ridge Valley and Blue Ridge ecoregions. Despite some challenging weather and flows, students were able to experience the tremendous aquatic biodiversity of our state (plus a few bears along the way). A special thank you to Tiffany Penland, Georgia Department of Natural Resources aquatic biologist, and her staff for sharing information about her work. Thank you to Rodney Tumlin and Steve Westmorland from GA Council of Trout Unlimited for telling us about coldwater conservation efforts in Georgia. We also had a visit from legendary  Appalachian snorkeling guru, Casper Cox. Here are just a few photos of our adventures. At one site we collected 30 species of fish, and at another we identified 25 different species while snorkeling. “






UO buddy RSquared also commented: “Steve Westmoreland & I attended Dr. Jay Shelton’s UGA Fisheries Maymester Class today. Jay had 18 students that were excited about getting their feet wet & their hands dirty. We explained the role of Trout Unlimited & how we work with various state & federal agencies on numerous cold-water projects across Georgia. The numbers, size and diversity of fish the students caught in this tributary to the Tennessee River was amazing. Students were allowed to fish after the class was over.”





That’s the latest intel, a day late as I catch up at our Clarkesville store today.  Enjoy your long holiday weekend and some dry weather. Get in on sone of the last Dark-30 dry fly action of the spring season ASAP.  On Monday, let’s all remember those service members who sacrificed everything for the freedoms we now enjoy. Stop in either UO shop (Helen, Clarkesville Square) if we can help you out.



Unicoi Outfitters: Friendly. Local. Experts.

www.unicoioutfitters.com

Friday, May 16, 2025

Unicoi Outfitters Fishing Report - 5/16/25



We are finally drying out and heating up after last week’s cool weather and repeated storm fronts that dropped a total of four inches of rain on the region.  Headwater trout streams have cleared and dropped significantly, while bigger streams are still pushing a lot of water. All trout streams should be fishable by the weekend. Just be careful wading in the high water. 





Given the hot week ahead, mornings will fish better than afternoons, which boost trout stream temps into the upper 60’s and kill the midday bite. Higher elevation streams will also be cooler.  Stocked streams should fish well, while Delayed Harvest streams are now open to harvest and their trout populations are dwindling. NC’s DH streams will be a better bet.



River bassin’ is a weekend washout, while pond and lake bass fishing is still a best bet while the fish are still in the shallows.


Fresh fishing reports and tips are right here in our blog.  It’s new every Friday and will help you boost your own catch rates. Wes’ weekly fly list is always spot-on!

http://blog.angler.management/

(Link in bio)


Stop in either one of our two UO shops for some 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 Adams, parachute light Cahill, 409 Yeager yellow, yellow stimulator, micro chubby Chernobyl, hard body ant, goober sally. 


Nymphs & Wets: 

Stockers: Squirminator, mop, slush egg, frenchie, girdle bug, psycho prince, Red tag jig.


Mountain streams: micro girdle bugs, black ant, hares ear nymph and soft hackle , soft hackle pheasant tail, improved yallar hammer. 


Streamers:

Sparkle minnows, small black and olive buggers for DH streams, mohair leeches, Jiggy Fry, mini shimmer buggers.


(Bass & stripers) Stealth bomber, boogle bug, polar changer, clouser minnow, crittermite, Thrasher, Wiggle minnow. 


Headwaters: 

Headwater streams really raged after this week’s rains, but have slowly dropped back into their banks and down  to fishable levels. Bluelines are in great shape for your weekend trips.  Spoilcane was back in its banks and 62F at 10AM today, 



while Smith DH was 66F.  



The Soque was high and stained, but fishable for careful waders chucking squirmy worms and big rubberleg stones today.   



Just find the slower pockets and edges that are flood refuges. And if the topwater bite is a bit off due to high water, add that dropper!


That’s what Dredger did yesterday afternoon (15th) high above Helen. The small headwater creek was still raging and just slightly stained, while the water temp was perfect (60F at 3PM).  



He landed a nice bunch of small, colorful wild bows. The key was covering ground, reading water, and hi-sticking his bugs thru softer flows behind obstructions, on inside bends, and against the bank. 



The high water had him add a two foot dropper, which doubled his catch. 



His winning combo was “big and yellow:” a #14 stimmy on top and a #14 tellico below it, four inches behind a #6 dinsmore shot.  A wading staff helped him navigate the strong flows.



Delayed Harvest Streams:

Georgia’s DH season ended on the 15th, so harvesters are now working the DH streams hard. You can still find some leftovers in them during the next week or two. Avoid midday fishing, especially if the forecasted hot week ahead boosts water temps into the high 60’s. Most trout will sulk on the bottom until the sun sets and bugs dance.


Try going at 7PM and look for bugs and rising fish just before dark. Yellow sallies should still be strong, and some leftover cahills and tiny tan caddis may add to the evening surface action. Prospect the shady banks before dark with an Adams lead fly and griffiths gnat or black ant dropper. Add a few early, bonus risers to your head count before the evening hatch commences.


NC DH streams should fish really well as their streamflows subside. Due to higher elevations, western NC’s spring runs a week or two later than ours, so yellow sallies, cahills, and caddis should bring plenty of dusk surface action. 



LRO always has a good daily fishing report for the Smokies that applies to most streams in western NC.

https://littleriveroutfitters.com/pages/fishing/report.htm


Stockers: 

The GA stocking program is still going strong. Hit a heavily stocked stream with your kids and a bucket of red wigglers. Or introduce a new flyfisher to the sport by teaching them how to drift a squirmy worm or strip a small black woolly bugger. Soon they’ll graduate to wild fish on dries.


GAWRD’s Friday stocking lists are always here. Today’s list just got posted:

https://georgiawildlife.com/Fishing/Trout



Private Waters:

Our spring guiding season is winding down with the hotter days and warmer water on our horizon. We’re now sticking to morning sessions, for the most part.  It’s still a great time to book our Gilligan Special and give flyfishing a try. The weather is great for new anglers to get in the river! Catch one of our few remaining open slots ASAP.

 https://www.unicoioutfitters.com/learn-to-fly-fish-2/


UO-Helen guide Israel: “the Soque fished decently before the rainouts. The bite seems to be slowing down with rising water temperatures, so we’ve focused on the morning carton.  A size 12 green drake scored some nice rainbows for my clients this week.”



Tailwaters:

UO buddy Myles : “On Tuesday I fished Buford Dam for a few hours with a friend. We managed to catch about 60 fish collectively in a few hours with many being wild browns! Though it was pretty windy, we were having success throwing some size 18s and 20s with 3mm beads on 7x and 8x. We used small hares ear variations and some eggs for the stocker pods. We even got to watch an osprey dive and catch a small trout out of the water! The weather has been getting nicer and the fish and other wildlife have been getting more and more active!”



Warm Rivers:

Region rivers are still high and muddy after this week’s rains. The Hooch was blown out at both Highway 115 and Duncan Bridge Road when I crossed it today.  It’s gonna take several more days for most rivers to clear enough for decent bass and bream fishing.


Ponds & Lakes:

UO guide Joseph: “Had the privilege of hopping on the boat with Henry Cowen early this week to chase bass and pursue the possibility of a striper. We fished several types of structure throughout the morning including sea walls, humps, and points. All the fish we caught were early on sea walls. Although we did mark several fish throughout the morning they wouldn’t come up to our presentations. For flies, game changers were the ticket. For conventional lures, any walk-the-dog type topwater plug was best. This pattern should only get better over the next several weeks, so if you’re interested in getting in on the action give the Helen shop a call at (706)-878-3083!”



While the birds are gone for the season , the stripers are still around. Substitute the great intel in Henry’s book and you can still find stripers this month, even without those beloved gulls and loons. We just restocked his book at our stores, so pick one up before we sell out again. Grab one at the shop or order online here:

https://shoponline.unicoioutfitters.com/fly-fishing-for-freshwater-striped-bass-henry-cowe.html



Afar:

UO guide Sydney took a break and vacationed at the beach with her family. Of course,  she wet a line. Syd said: “Hung out at Port St Joe and caught speckled trout and a few reds here and there.  Tried to catch a break from the wind to get out my fly rod, but didn’t get that chance. It was still fun with conventional tackle. “



News and Events:

Athens Jay ditched his fly rod and picked up a minnow seine last week. It was Week 1 of his UGA field course, Fishes of Georgia. Eighteen students will traverse the entire state over the next few weeks to sample and identify Georgia’s diverse fish community.




More news on public land sales. At least this time it’s a bit better news. Stay informed and stay engaged if you care about the fate of your public lands!

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/19J3qzKhn6/?mibextid=wwXIfr



Enjoy some dry weather for a change. We may still have to dodge a morning shower this weekend, but shouldn’t get run off the river by flood flows. Just bring your sunscreen and bug spray, and fish around that midday heat for your best success. And be ready for a nice, cool break again in another week!



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


Stop in either UO store for your yellow May trout flies and your colorful bass Boogle Bugs. And some timely intel at no extra charge! Right, Todd?

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/17rxGs4PUB/?mibextid=wwXIfr


Good luck this week, folks.


Unicoi Outfitters: Friendly. Local. Experts.

www.unicoioutfitters.com