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 3, 2023

UO Fishing Report 3/3/23



7PM update:

The storm front blew through northeast GA  from 4-6 PM today. While only a half to three-quarters of an inch of rain fell, it was a brief, intense slug and (unlike a soft, steady rain) it moved some soil. As a result, the Hooch  in town and nearly all of  its headwaters in the forest (pic) were high and muddy today at 6PM. 



Thanks to the lake, Smith DH was only slightly stained.  It will host a crowd tomorrow.


Here’s a 6PM Hooch video from Nora Mill Dam:


Other regional streams are running high and likely muddy, based on USGS gauges.

 

My thoughts on your weekend trout prospects are:

1) headwaters should drop and clear enough overnight to be fishable. Smith DH already is. Try dry dropper combos in soft spots and be ready for action! Lucky Dukes reservation holders and walk-ons might enjoy a garden hackle hatch. Some stain is good! Bring a big net and a buddy with a camera.

2) medium streams like the Hooch in Helen should drop and clear fairly quickly, and be fishable by Sunday or Monday at the latest. Watch the USGS gauges and compare the CFS readings to your own notes on your safe wading flows.

3) bigger watersheds may take a few more days to drop. 


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



4) Good weekend Plan B’s are headwaters, small trout lakes, and lake bass and stripers. We hope this update helps.



How good are we at UO? We’re so good that we’ll give you a partial report now and fill in its intro and conclusion tonite after the front passes.  So stop back in here after supper to read our storm assessment and accurately aim your vehicle to fishable waters tomorrow.


How good is that? Enjoy the past week’s fish tales right now in our partial report. Stay tuned for storm assessment, as long as I don’t get flattened.


Stop in either UO store for your March supplies. Make sure you gear up for both the high/cold and low/warm stream conditions in the “Jekyll and Hyde”  weeks ahead. Good luck!


Wes’ Hot Fly List:  

Dries: Elk Hair Caddis, Parachute Adams, Humpy. 


Nymphs & Wets:

Squirmy Worm, Soft Hackle Partridge or Pheasant Tail, Micro Girdle Bug, Lightning Bug, Red Tag Jig, Diamond Midge.


Streamers & Warm Water:

Sparkle Minnow, Muddy Buddy, Polar Changer, Finesse Changer.


Headwaters:

UO guide Palmer enjoyed his off day: “ I took the pup fishing with me on Tuesday. I found several wild fish eager to take a big #12 dry:  Caddis/Stimmy/Chubby in various colors. The wary ones took the small nymph dropped off the dry.”



UO friend RSquared: “I camped & fished for four days this week on one of our storied mountain WMA's.  Off & on rain & drizzle did not seem to hurt the fishing. The wild fish were looking up & I had my best success with tandem Blue Wing Olives in sizes 18 & 20. Hold-over stocked fish liked the Pheasant Tail.”




UO buddy Splatek: “Lil homey and I put in about 3 miles of scouting for next hunting season. I wet a line a few times and caught two rainbows on a high-elevation wild stream. A gold bead nymph was the ticket.


UO young gun Ben: “Our duo hit a high Hooch trib last week. The water was a bit high, but clear, so the fish were spooky. A good stalk, light tippet, and a #16 tan, hi-vis, clueless caddis dry was the trick. We caught a bunch of spunky, 6-10 inch, wild rainbows. We saw a few early caddis and cahills hatching, too.”


Delayed Harvest:


Got Squirmies and Buggers? It’s re-dosing time! Sneak a peek at GA’s brand-new stocking report and NC’s 2023 DH schedule.  You’ll be glad you did.


https://georgiawildlife.com/Fishing/Trout


https://www.ncwildlife.org/Learning/Species/Fish/Trout/Trout-Fishing




NC:

Note, however, that most of our favorite NC/Smokies streams were blown out by yesterday’s rains and this evening’s storm just delayed their drop.  The good news is that bugs are hatching up there, too, so take your road trips as soon as those streams recede.




A warm March day is a fine time to turn on a newbie to the sport you love. Set your own fly rod aside for an hour, give them a quick lesson, and get them on a fish or two. And you’ve just invested in a carpooling buddy for the rest of your life.


UO friend Habersham MB: “Here are a few pics from Smith on Saturday after the recent stocking.  Fish liked legs and eggs, with most on the egg.  I also got a few on a prince below an egg. I was just one brown short of a trout slam.





I also got a real nice private waters bow from the prior week. It was a great end of February for me.”



UO friend Andres:

“This is Andres. I’m the guy you showed how to twitch the Woolly Bugger at Smith Creek. Well, I have to say that method worked wonderfully and I hooked 2 within a few minutes of you leaving. Ended up catching my first brook trout ever on the woolly bugger. 


(Editor’s gift to y’all:  http://blog.angler.management/2021/03/untangling-trout.html)


Earlier that day around noon I landed a rainbow on a Pheasant Tail. It was a good day on Smith.



The previous day was a good day of fishing as well. The Toccoa River had a hatch going on and I landed my first fish on a dry fly. It was a small brown but it still counted!


I do love trout but my first love is stripers.  It was a pretty slow day on Lanier yesterday but I did land my personal best on a sinking line. “



Jake guided a long-time client on Smith DH and he had a banner half-day trip, with 20 rainbows and brooks to 16 inches brought to hand. They short-line nymphed thru pools and riffles, with small eggs, soft hackles, and Diamond Midges being the hot patterns.


UO buddy CDB: “Having gotten wet enough for today, I can now send you something a little more substantial this week.  It’s springtime, things are looking up and the streak is over!


Fished 2 different DH waters and some wild and scenic water this week. The water is warming up and there is a lot of activity in and on the water.  The trout are active and moving - which means they are looking up and you should adjust your tactics accordingly. Your sweet spot is going to be about 12-18 inches above the bottom in runs less than 4’ deep. In pools and runs deeper than that, figure the feeding zone is going to be about 2-4’ deep.  Buggy patterns were strong all week. Size 16 Flashback Hares Ear and 18 Rainbow Warriors were good on the sunnier days, similar sized Pheasant Tails and darker Copper Johns worked on the overcast and rainy days. Squirmy Worms in pink and red continue to produce consistently especially during it after rains. Size 10-12 Rubber Legs worked very well all week. Patterns with contrasting body and legs performed best. 



Streamers were great all week and clearly showed how active the fish have become. “Dangling” wasn’t nearly as effective as stripping the streamer - the fish are moving aggressively and want to see movement and want to chase. One of the things that makes streamer fishing such fun is you have a front-row seat to see the chase in the strike on many of the retrieves. We had a number of fish we could see travel a couple yards to grab the streamers. One very nice brown put in a show complete with a wake, big boil, and splash on the surface while menacing a large sculpin pattern. Keep an eye on your streamer, not the end of your fly line, and remember to keep that rod tip down!  Be ready to strip when the streamer hits the water - sometimes the fish hits the streamer immediately or on the first strip. 


Wednesday was the best day of the week, which brings me to the topic of “the streak”.  I’ve lived in Georgia for 5 years now and you may recall I’ve yet to put a Brook Trout in the net in the state of Georgia. I think a couple people have started a GoFundMe so they could stop hearing me talking about it. 30 minutes into the day I already had a couple browns and rainbows in the net using mostly Woolly Bugger and Bow Bugger patterns. Literally every color except yellow resulted in hookups. Olive and Thin Mint were top producers. By 2:00 PM, after a steady day of catching both species, it was starting to look like my “0 for Georgia” streak would stay intact.  I switched to a large tan articulated fathead sculpin and on the second strip the pretty char inhaled it. Streak over!  I’m still 0 for Rhode Island…but that streak won’t be ending anytime time soon. 




I hit some private waters the previous week and landed this really pretty bow.


A final note. If you aren’t using sinking line, you need to put some weight on non-beadhead patterns. Especially deer hair. It’s very buoyant. You don’t need to be on the bottom but you do want to be at least a foot or more under the surface.”


UO guide Devin: “My friend Nate from Cherry Street Brewing Company and I went to smith creek one afternoon this week. We did  well on #18-20 Parachute Adams, Black Stoneflies, and Purple Perdigons.”



Tailwaters:

UO Buddy “Skilz”: “We hit the river last Saturday with some overcast conditions and high, stained water.  We walked out to an immediate hatch of caddis and plenty of visible surface action as well.  Fish were picky, but a few fell for a Hares Ear pattern swinging mid-level in the water column to get the attention of those surface feeders.  My 5.5x tippet and #14 Hares Ear fooled a few. Im now tying some caddis emergers to take advantage of any more March caddis days that might be had!”





Private Waters:

UO guide Caleb: “We had a great trip to Rainbow Point on the Soque last weekend. The water was high and a little stained, which spread the fish out quite a bit. We had some success on a Squirmito but most fish were caught pulling small streamers.”



Jake’s Nacoochee Bend clients, Chandler and Landon, caught a nice batch of rainbows by dredging small eggs, Diamond Midges, and Rainbow Warriors in the higher water.



Rivers:

Athens Jay: “All area waters, flowing and still, are warming rapidly. Bass are on the move and looking for a meal. Don’t be afraid to go big with your streamer selection. Large articulated streamers, either weighted or cast on a sink tip line, are working really well. Cast and strip once, pause… repeat. Eats have been extremely aggressive. “




Lakes:

UO buddy Athens MD: “Here in the Athens area things are heating up and bass and crappie are moving shallow and getting active. I've had luck in local lakes that have threadfin shad by throwing mottled gray feather Gamechangers on sinking lines to obvious schools of shad and to actively feeding bass. Crappie are very close to shore in spots and it pays to risk it and cast under branches to reach surprisingly big ones in shallow water. I've had great luck with black "euro-jig" style streamers with marabou tails dropped off big Chubby Chernobyls (with a few overzealous crappie hitting the Chubby). Brown and burnt orange Rubber-Legged Dragons with bead chain eyes are working well, too. I predict the crappie will truly be on fire in the coming week.”




UO informant RonW finally got back on the water: “I fished Lake Arrowhead with my cousin last weekend. We managed to catch half a dozen or more each despite the crappy weather that followed us all over the lake.  White and chartreuse spinnerbaits ruled the weekend. I even churned up a 5.5# largemouth. It was great to get out on the water after such a long sabbatical from fishing.”





Reservoirs:

W2 fans, spring has sprung. We’re not talking taxes; we’re talking walleyes and whites! Don’t miss GAWRD’s timely, “shocking”

intel that just came out today:


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



UO regular reporter Landon: “I did some nighttime jigging on bridge pilings with a buddy in his Jonboat a couple nights ago. The crappie were slow on numbers but good on size!”



HenryC: "Fishing is still a hit or miss prospect as we wait for the striped bass pre-spawn to begin and they eventually head upriver for their annual spawn. Good fishing can be had if you can predict what part of the day the fish will feed. If you can do that, then we will rename you "Merlin". Stay out all day and you will find the fish feeding at some point. 


The bass however are starting to come shallow, so opportunities exist to catch fish on the fly on Lanier. It's just not a slam dunk just yet. I suspect over the next week, with a little settling weather and the full moon approaching, fishing will get a little more consistent. Fish are scattered all over the lake but there are big groups out there to be found. Again, striper size on Lanier is outstanding.”


www.henrycowenflyfishing.com


Yellowstone Dream Trip

Don’t forget your raffle tix. Time is running out. Show some luv to my Rabun 522 chapter and credit us for your splurge. Thank me later, after you win something awesome.

https://georgiatu.org/




Summary:

Go hit the headwaters, bass ponds, and striper lakes tomorrow. Watch the stream gauges and get back on those bigger trout waters as soon as they drop to your safe wading levels in the days to come.  Strip some streamers in the stain, then be ready for good dry/dropper action as they clear. Use your submerged toes to gauge visibility  and to determine what to throw.  Good luck. Call our Helen shop for daily updates. And don’t forget those squirmy worms.


Unicoi Outfitters: Friendly. Local. Experts.

www.unicoioutfitters.com

Thursday, March 2, 2023

March’s Two Personalities

 



Trouters, are you ready for this month?

We can help with tips for both faces of the month that you’ll likely encounter. Check out our column in this month’s edition of the Angler Magazine, here:

https://coastalanglermag.com/e-magazine/atlanta/


Just look for that awesome, red-striped Dukes Creek rainbow that Jimmy landed and you’ll “land” on the right page yourselves. 

Whether it’s deep dredging or dry/droppers, we’ll get you in the game this March. 

Good luck!


Unicoi Outfitters: Friendly. Local. Experts.

www.unicoioutfitters.com




Sunday, February 26, 2023

Timely Casting Tips



Since we are on the verge of topwater season, this nice article might help many of you to perfect your casting game.




https://www.themeateater.com/fish/general/5-easy-ways-to-improve-your-fly-cast


I especially like the tip on a roll-cast startup.  With more line left outside the rod tip, fewer false casts are needed to reach your target.  I’ve been using that technique for decades to limit false casts and spend more time fishing instead of casting.


Special thanks to the late, great RocketRoy Lowe, who taught me the “backwards drift” technique at an NGTO fling years ago. Try the “heavy load” tip in this article and cast farther toward those breaking Lanier stripers.


As dry/dropper season “springs”upon us, give some of these tips a try. You just might find a few more fish on the end of your line this spring.


Special thanks to midcurrent.com for the story lead.


Unicoi Outfitters: Friendly. Local. Experts.

www.unicoioutfitters.com

Friday, February 24, 2023

Win a Yellowstone Flyfishing Trip



 Fly flingers, check this out!




A $10 raffle ticket will get you a shot at a five-day Yellowstone fishing vacation with a friend (plus rods, reels, flies, and $500 in travel money) and 11 great consolation prizes.




Raffle proceeds  will help send lucky teenagers to GATU’s annual trout fishing and conservation camp!

https://georgiatu.org/education/about-trout-camp/trout_camp_application/


What a deal! Get your tickets here before the March 12 deadline. Check out the consolation prizes, too.  Good luck!

https://georgiatu.org/


PS: please consider crediting my Rabun 522 chapter during your purchase. The chapter receives a small rebate for each ticket sold, which will help our local trout stream conservation and education efforts.  Thanks!

UO Fishing Report 2/24/23



Wake up!  This week’s theme is “Wakeup Call.”  The warm weather has awakened a lot of fish and even a few trout stream bugs.   Area streams are clear, with normal seasonal flows and water temps unseasonably warm- in the fifties.  


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


That’s prime for trout! Some of the early spring bug hatches are also getting a head start. It may still be too early for heavy hatches, but you might find a few fish that are now willing to “look up,” especially in the headwaters. Dry/dropper combos with a couple of Wes’ hot fly patterns will be great search rigs.



Lake fish are stirring, too. Stripers are still a run-and-gun game, but bass are getting more active in the warming water. Again, size is compensating for numbers. Match the hatch with your streamers. It seems like a small threadfin game right now. Let the diving birds and flashing sonar screens guide you to the predators.


While March may still turn wintery on us, this weekend will be a great time to wet a line. Just take a light raincoat to fend off a possible shower or two. So “wake up” yourselves from your winter naps and get outside while April pays us a brief visit.  


See our full report via our home page (link in bio) and come by either UO store for your early spring supplies. Good luck!



Wes’ Hot Fly List:  

Dries: elk hair caddis, parachute Adams.  Add some quill gordons, blue quills, and hendricksons to your box for the weeks to come.


Nymphs & Wets:

Chartreuse egg, pink egg, red tag jig, lightning bug, CJ controller, CDC pheasant tail, hares ear nymph and soft hackle, brown girdle bug.


Streamers & warm water:

sparkle minnow, muddy buddy, finesse changer, Clouser minnow. Cowen’s Somethin Else.


Headwaters:

They’re prime!   Start with an elk hair caddis or parachute adams and see if they’ll rise. If they’re sluggish or if you reach a deep pool, add a small pheasant tail dropper and watch your dry as your strike indicator.  A tungsten beaded fly will get the dropper down. We have some pretty ones in our shop bins. For unweighted nymphs, add a #8 or 6 tin shot four inches above your bug.



Foothillsbilly Bob:

“Pine Squirrel leech was the ticket today. Size 8. The bigger one took a size 18 egg. Dukes flows were up, but decent and clear. Fish were on the edges in feeding lanes off of drop offs into winter pools. Nothing really in the shallows right now. 6x mandatory. I didn’t get to Smithgall until 1:30, so I only had 3 hours. 5 fish to hand. 1 small one, a couple 14” and these two bigger ones.”








The Smokies are also in great shape, with a few bugs popping. Byron provides a dose of optimism in todays LRO report.

https://littleriveroutfitters.com/


UO buddy Ryan:

“MadFishinSkillz and crew headed north to the waters near Bryson City for a fantastic overnight camping trip filled with wild trout.  Despite the high water from recent rains nearly blowing out nearby delayed harvest sections, luckily there were a few smaller streams which cleared up nicely to give up some really pretty wild fish! Euro-style hares ears size 14-18 fooled a good bit of fish thrown on 5.5x tippet.”




Delayed Harvest:

They should fish well for anglers with the right bugs and a good drift. 

Some streams got a lot of pressure last week and recent stockers have already smartened up. If action is slow on your buggers and squirmies, be ready to change to lighter tippet (5 and 6X), smaller nymphs and midges, and smaller, softer strike indicators like yarn, bushy dries, or the smallest Airlock Indi’s.  It often takes stockers several weeks to recognize adult flies as food, so DH dry fly action may still be a bit slow. Your droppers will get more attention.




All DH waters except the Toccoa look inviting.  The Toccoa drains a big watershed, so its flows may still be too high for safe wading.  Consider floating it.


https://waterdata.usgs.gov/monitoring-location/03558000


New Rabunite KenK:”Nice to see fresh trout in Smith Creek.  I brought a friend, Jack, and we landed about 20. The infamous mop was the hot bug.”





UGA 5Rivers dude Connor:

“Hey, we ended up going to XXX on unnamed border river last Saturday and it went better than expected. We ended up catching 4 today and a majority of them were wild. We were fishing something like a caddis down to a stone fly nymph!”


Hatch Chart:

It’s time to start paying attention to these. Save and use this one to help you stock your spring boxes and match the hatches at hand.


http://www.ngatu692.com/Hatch_Charts.html




Tailwaters:

UO buddy Ryan checked in with a Hooch report: “MadFishinSkillz and new fishing friend Mati hit the Hooch Tailwater this past Saturday for a day of euronymphing! The water was very clear, and the temps warmed to the mid 50’s around lunch, which was right about the time that the fish were biting well.  Mati had never euronymphed, but quickly caught on after MFS brought 2 browns to the net with a few demo casts in the first pocket.  Tight-line rookie Mati proceeded to net 4 nice browns, with MFS finishing with half a dozen, all mostly landed on a size 18 hares ear pattern in a light tan shade, tossed on 5.5x tippet.”



UO’s Casting for Recovery buddy Kitty: “My son and I had a blast helping GAWRD stock the Hooch DH at Paces Mill!”





Private Waters:

They’ve fished real well this week!


UO Helen manager Wes: “our private waters fished well this week with the warm weather. Small afternoon hatches made swinging unweighted soft hackles successful. Girdle bugs, pheasant tails, and streamers were good options as well.”






UO guide Como put his clients on some real nice Soque River fish.  Most were dredged up with either a rubberlegged stone or some of his hot midge patterns.



UO buddy Megan:  “Hi! Hope this comes through in case you need any pics! Took a friend who needed some hydrotherapy to Nacoochee Bend.  It was her first time fishing with anything other than a kids’ rod/reel in the late 70s. She hooked into plenty of nice fish, and we landed 8 in half a day on the water. It was exactly what we both needed!  Rainbow warriors, zebra midges, and squirmies were popular menu items. 



I went and fished Dukes solo. The duck butt fly that my hubs tied up before the weekend fished low/slow was super attractive to those good lookin’ rainbows.  Had some dry fly action to round out the day before the rains began!”



Reservoirs:

HenryC: The spring pre-spawn is definitely on. Fish are feeding both early and late. You just have to ride to find them. No one part of the lake is any better than the other as fish are both north and south. Warmer weather has shifted the bite. It feels like March for the past 8-10 days and water temps are already pushing 53-55 all over the lake. Even the bass are waking up, making for a nice mixed bag on the fly. You'll need both slow sinking intermediate line as well as a fast-sink line, too. We are starting to see stripers of all sizes mixed in the catch now. Fish from 10" up to 32" are now being caught.”

www.henrycowenflyfishing.com



UO owner Jimmy got out on Lanier Wednesday afternoon.   He had high hopes as he soon spotted some diving gulls. Alas, as he crept up to the flock with his trolling motor, the fish and birds took off. He had no more luck finding action, and chalked it up as a nice boat ride. We all win some and lose some. But you can’t win if you don’t play.


Yakkin’ Landon couldn’t catch up to the stripers this week, but got some nice consolation bass: “ Had to drag a shaky head in dirty water to get my line stretched this morning.”




And at UO, we don’t embellish the bite. We’ll tell you when it’s hot and when it’s not. Despite our historic moniker of The Liars Club, we’re gonna give you accurate intel. Even when we’re humbled ourselves. Let’s why they call it “fishing.”


GAWRD has fired up its boat generators and is on the hunt for spring walleye. Watch their river reports and other hot intel (including trout) in their weekly blog, which is refreshed every Friday afternoon:

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


Remember that several small lakes were stocked with trout earlier this month, so give Vogel, Black Rock, or Nancytown a try if you don’t wanna wade. I’ll bet a fresh stocking report will be posted today:


https://georgiawildlife.com/Fishing/Trout


There’s your wake-up call. Load your fishing stuff and raincoat tonight, check the USGS gauges, and make a plan. Get out that door early tomorrow and make some fine memories on the water. Stop in either shop on your way to destination X.


PS: don’t forget to net a few Dream Trip tix, too. When trouting dies here next summer, you just might headed to Trout Nirvana:


https://georgiatu.org/



Unicoi Outfitters: Friendly. Local. Experts.

www.unicoioutfitters.com