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 14, 2023

UO Fishing Report 4/14/23



It’s that time of the year when fish are “looking up!” Take advantage of the surface and shallow water action, from trout on top to bassin’ the shallows. The next six weeks are what most Georgia fly flingers wait all year for, so don’t miss the action.


We’re expecting some rain this afternoon, but hopefully it won’t amount to very much.  You can always check a river gauge or call our shop to confirm local stream conditions and avoid any muddy slugs.  The weather for Saturday and most of Sunday looks good, so load your vehicle tonite and hit the water this weekend.  




Trout streams have started to host bug buffets, so dry fly action is good and will only get better. Ponds are still prime, while rivers still have spawning run stripers and resident shoalies awakening from their winter hibernation.  Reservoirs have spawning bass nosing into the shallows, while wolf packs of stripers may pass by lucky boaters.

Again, our full report at blog.angler.management has all the details.


 It’s April, so go fishing now.  Cut the grass one day after work next week.  Go early for stripers and late for trout. Don’t forget your flashlight and fresh batteries.  Good luck!


Wes’ Hot Fly List:  

Dries: brown and gray elk hair caddis, stimulator, #18 yellow sally, Adams irresistible and small parachutes, parachute light cahill (#16-18).


Nymphs & Wets:

Jiggy pats rubberleg, hares ear nymph, hot-head pheasant tail, soft hackle partridge, twisted mayfly, Duracell, Le bug, 


Streamers & warm water:

Complex twist bugger, Sparkle minnow, polar changer, finesse changer, jig micro bugger.


Headwaters:

They’re in great shape up here around Helen, pushing 60 degrees, and fishing well. Bugs are hatching; just expect sparse hatches when compared to larger streams because of less groceries for munching bugs. I watched a few cahills dance at Spoilcane on Tuesday night.  




Today’s expected rain shouldn’t bump flows very much. Small caddis and cahill dries should bring lotsa looks and prevent the need for a sunken dropper, unless you wish to prospect a deep pool.


The Smokies are also experiencing a bug buffet, according to our friend Ian at R and R  Flyfishing https://instagram.com/randrflyfishing?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y=


in Townsend.   Dry/droppers are good rigs on bigger streams, while lone dries should be fine on small creeks. It’s hard to beat some form of hares ear nymph for the dropper right now, given the popping march browns and  cahills.  Watch Byron’s daily park intel here, too:


https://littleriveroutfitters.com/


Delayed Harvest:


Smith DH fished tough for the rookies I talked to this week, but the vets did well.  One dude with a good game did well on Tuesday with a peeking caddis point fly and hares ear dropper on his Euro rig. My thermometer said 57F around 3PM.


Just go light line and small bugs during the high sun, and small dries or midges on 5 or 6X as the shadows fall across Smith. Stay til dark if you can.


Rabunite buddy @troutbumtrey said:  “Our duo had a really nice weekday evening on the Chattooga DH.  We started around 6:30 with a large march brown hatch, which tapered of by 7:45. We started with some #16 March browns and, as the sun set, I switched over to #14 all seasons caddis in dark brown. We quit at 8:15.  It was a great sundown of fishing on our Rabunite home river.”




I did a recon mission to Nan DH on Wednesday and watched the ATL ShopVac brothers clean out the stream with their Euro rigs. Both Ryan and Myles are GATU Trout Camp grads and, now with another decade of experience , are deadly anglers. Don’t fish behind them. Their winning combo for nearly 80 fish was a heavy rubberlegs as the point fly and a tungsten beaded hares ear dropper. 



Ryan said: “We hit our nearest NC DH stream yesterday for some awesome nymphing action.  The day started off around 50 degrees and chilly but quickly warmed up every hour until it was in the 70's.  It was clear that multiple bugs were hatching throughout the day and with such variety the fish were happily feeding.  While not a ton of surface eating action was witnessed, the fish were happily munching on subsurface hares ear & pheasant tail jig variations drifted euro style on 5x. I finished with 32 and little brother beat me with 42 fish total!  Wild bows and browns were enjoyed along with the typical trifecta of NC stocked trout!”

Ryan’s full report is on his IG page, which is worth a follow:





https://instagram.com/madfishinskillz?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y=


They were focused on a numbers competition, while I was looking for risers.  The river was slightly high and very slightly stained, and warned up to 60 degrees.  Adult bugs were sparse all afternoon and even at dark, so risers were sparse, too. Fish were looking up, however, and a spry 77-year old angler from Waynesville said he had a good afternoon on a parachute dry with a yellow body. In declining order of abundance, the flying bugs I saw were tiny black caddis, #16 gray caddis, #20 yellow sally stones, and a smattering of #16 cahill duns.  Dry/droppers should be deadly now, and cahills will come off thicker in the weeks ahead. Don’t forget my recent cahill tips:



http://blog.angler.management/2023/04/the-evening-dance-is-back.html


Our Rabunite buddy, Nan, checked in:  “We hit our favorite DH stream in western North Carolina on Wednesday. Dry flies were the ticket, especially starting in mid-afternoon. Trout were aggressively taking Light Cahills and Chubby Chernobyl patterns in light tan colors. Caught mostly browns and rainbows up to 15 inches, in all water depths from deep pools to shallow riffles.”




Stocker Streams:

The trout trucks are running and it’s a great time to introduce friends to flyfishing.  Have them drift a squirmy or strip a small black bugger in a heavily stocked stream.  They’ll be hooked for life. The WRD blog said 30K stockers hit the water this week. The new list should pop up by 4PM:


https://georgiawildlife.com/Fishing/Trout


Got a tent, some bacon grease, and a frying pan? Where to pitch it? Research here:


https://www.fs.usda.gov/main/conf/maps-pubs


Private Waters:

Our private stretches on the Hooch and Soque have continued to fish well for our clients, both guided and unguided (Nacoochee Bend). They matched technique to water conditions: dirty water = streamers; high sun = nymph and soft hackle dredging the depths; low light and hatching bugs = dry/droppers with Wes’ suggested patterns.


UO guide Israel said his clients had a great day stripping streamers through the riffles of a slightly stained Soque this week.


Rivers: 

Stripers are up there and shoalies are waking up, too. UO buddy Landon: “Some stripers were around, but flyfishing for them was slow.  I had my plan B ready and tossed a white in-line spinner on my spinning rod. Buzzing it fast through the riffles got me some nice bass from the Lanier tributary.”




Ponds:

Athens Jay: “Bank fishing is good in ponds and lakes since bass are active in the shallows. Light colored streamers were the ticket.”




Reservoirs:

HenryC: “Lanier is fishing well "IF" you fish for what it gives you on that particular day. If you are one of those anglers who goes out and only wants to catch a striper, then you might get disappointed. The lake stripers are so hit and miss right now. BUT if you are one of those anglers that wants to simply pull on fish, then this is a great time to go fishing! Spotted and largemouth bass are fairly easy to catch and the stripers are mixed into your daily catches. If you want to catch numbers of fish then bring a 6 or 7 wt rod with an intermediate line and fish the clay banks and points. If you happen upon a 10+ lb striper then you'll be taken for a ride...  Our favorite Falcon, LB Nate Landman, landed a hefty striper on the fly this week. Enjoy the pic.



Or how about this option: the south end of Lanier is producing a lot of BIG spotted bass. Go toss a fly with 4 lb tippet and obey the IGFA rules and catch yourself a line class world record! La Orr already owns 2 of the 7 line class records and the 4 lb tippet with a 4 lb fish will land you in the record books!”

www.henrycowenflyfishing.com



UO staffer Joseph:

“Fishing on Lanier this past week has been on fire. Lots of bait coming up shallow and lots of fish chasing it. Over the week I’ve caught lots of stripers with a good mix of spotted bass. For technique, try fishing main lake points with a sinking line off the deeper ends and an intermediate line off of the shallow end. For flies Henry’s somethin else or a clouser minnow have worked best for me. “



Last, the GAWRD weekly fishing report just popped up in my In box. It’s chock-full of timely trout, striper, hybrid, and bass intel. Electrofishing doesn’t lie. Check out the biologists’ hot intel before deciding which stream or lake to hit this weekend. Remember the agency’s brand-new Trout Slam contest, too.


https://georgiawildlife.blog/2023/04/14/georgia-fishing-report-april-14-2023/


It’s April, so… it’s all good! Pack your vehicle, stop in a UO store for hot flies and supplies, and hit your favorite haunts ASAP. The lawncare can wait. Good luck!


Unicoi Outfitters: Friendly. Local. Experts.

www.unicoioutfitters.com

706-878-3083

Thursday, April 13, 2023

Spring’s Abundant Gifts (A Bunch of Bears!)



While you’re enjoying this great spring weather and the mighty fine fishing, don’t forget to pause and take in all that is around you.  Enjoy the sights, sounds, and scents of spring. The fish will be there when you resume your casting.


If I hadn’t hadn’t had my head up, I might have missed one my best spring memories ever. It’s worth a “rerun” today for y’all.  While hiking down the lower Smith Creek DH trail on 4/9/21, I spotted a patch of black between the trail and creek.  So I froze and studied the patch that seemed out of place among the greens and browns.


And watched a true NatGeo moment as a set of triplets heeded Momma Bear’s instructions. Each of them waited their turn on Smoky’s Uber Service for a dry creek crossing.  I don’t reminder how many trout I caught that day, but I will always remember the bruin quartet. 



Take time yourselves to pause and look around.  Enjoy the abundant spring riches that our north Georgia forests and streams provide.  Good luck and have fun!


Unicoi Outfitters: Friendly. Local. Experts.

www.unicoioutfitters.com


Wednesday, April 12, 2023

The Evening Dance is Back!

The Evening Dance is back!   I shot these videos yesterday (11th) from 7-8PM on the Hooch and its  trib on the WMA.  Enjoy the egg-dropping dance of some cahill spinners and a guest appearance or two from some smaller duns that just popped up.



It’s time to check your flashlights’ batteries and your supply of #14-18 light cahill dries, hares ear nymph droppers, and maybe a few emergers, too, for evening festivities.



Here are some tips for you tyers. First, tie some cahills with dun posts and add to your supply of the white post bugs. And for your spinners, add a little orange or ginger dubbing to your cream dubbing for the abdomens.  For an easy emerger, try my recipe: cream thread, short trailing shuck of brown z-Lon or Antron, hares ear-dubbed abdomen, light cahill-dubbed thorax, and a swept wing of one or two dun cdc feathers. Dunk in a good dessicant like the products we have at our shops and trail it on two feet of 6X behind your dry (the strike indicator you can spot in the dying light).



Enjoy the start of this year’s Dark30 action. Go in the afternoon and fish your normal daytime favorites: double nymphs in depths, dry/droppers in skinnier water, or streamers to cover lotsa ground . As the sun falls, BOLO bugs and match the hatch. Right now, you might just luck into some cahills.  


Then walk out with the aid of the moon and a good headlamp.  Always have a backup flashlight in your vest or sling (don’t ask me how I learned this lesson). And maybe a coveted granola bar or Snickers.


Good luck. Stop in either UO store if we can supply you with the right stuff to celebrate spring. Hopefully you’ll be lucky enough to experience an Evening Dance or three!



Unicoi Outfitters: Friendly. Local. Experts.

www.unicoioutfitters.com

Tuesday, April 11, 2023

New Georgia Trout Slam


Will you slam this spring?

The Georgia TroutSlam, of course!

Check out GAWRD’s new contest, here:


https://georgiawildlife.com/triple-your-catch-georgia-trout-slam


https://georgiawildlife.com/trout-slam



Good luck winning your own sticker and possibly the grand prize, too!



Unicoi Outfitters: Friendly. Local. Experts.

www.unicoioutfitters.com

Saturday, April 8, 2023

Suspenders




Check out the Nan DH “suspenders” that I spotted last week. How many can you count?



May this video brighten up our dreary day and give us hope for some great spring action when we warm up and dry out.

Like UO buddy CDB reminded us last week, be careful not to drift your flies too deep this spring. Dry/dropper combos will beat deep dredging during the prime spring days of aquatic bug abundance.

For more hot tips on April dry/dropper rigs, glance back at last April’s UO column in The Angler magazine:

https://issuu.com/coastalanglermagazine/docs/atl_2c68f3dd0ab38b

Don’t wash away this weekend. Better days are just ahead!

Unicoi Outfitters: Friendly. Local. Experts.

www.unicoioutfitters.com


Friday, April 7, 2023

UO Fishing Report 4/7/23

 



Happy holidays, everyone! Given our soggy weather report, you’ll have plenty of time to celebrate them with family and friends - indoors. The forecast suggests we’ll get 1-2 inches of rain up here, so all but the smallest streams will likely be blown out for the weekend.

https://www.fox5atlanta.com/weather


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


The good news about the weather is that we need these rains to recharge our streams, and next week’s daily forecasts are awesome. Flex your schedules if you can and take advantage of those sunny April days for some awesome spring fishing.


Headwaters will drain quickly and again fish well on dry/dropper rigs. Wait out the floods on big waters, then catch the flows when dropping and still stained and toss streamers and big stoneflies. Once they clear, resume your dry/dropper prospecting. Gray is still around, but tan is due any day.


Ponds are always fantastic in April and they’re rainproof. Keep them in mind while your rivers are blown out.


Reservoir bass are heading shallow to spawn, while stripers will head upriver for their romantic runs. Stripers like the low light of rainy days, so keep that option in mind if it’s just rain and not thunderstorms.


We have many more pics and timely tips in our full report, here:

http://blog.angler.management/


For example, our guides are tuned in daily, so “borrow” their intel for your own trips. Don’t miss this month’s great fishing, so work around the weather if you can and enjoy hot April angling.


Wes’ Hot Fly List:  

Dries: elk hair caddis (#16 tan, #18 black or gray) parachute BWO, March Brown, dark Hendrickson, quill Gordon, parachute Adams (#14-18), Stimulator (#12-16).


Nymphs & Wets:

Mop fly, sexy Walt’s, Duracell, soft hackle partridge, flexi girdle bug, ice pupa, hot head pheasant tail.


Streamers & warm water:

Complex twist bugger, Sparkle minnow, polar changer, finesse changer, jig micro bugger.


Headwaters:

Headwaters were a bit low and clear, with highs in the high fifties, before today’s storm front. They should continue to fish really well. Try dry/dropper rigs when they’re high and then your favorite dry once their flows subside.



UO regular Landon:  “ We hit one of my favorite headwaters this week. The natives were a little off today and kept refusing our flies, even when we downsized.  We still caught enough to keep it interesting. It was another great spring day in the mountains.”



UO regular RSquared:  “Last Friday, Nathan, Max, & I did some bluelining on one of the tributaries of a very well known wild trout stream in the North Ga. Mountains. We had an awesome day catching trout on dries and droppers. Elk Hair Caddis, Parachute Adams, Thunderheads, & Purple Adams were hot dries, while Sheep Flies, Pheasant Tails, & small midges produced fish on the droppers.”




Delayed Harvest:

I did some recons this week and found that our local DH streams were a tad low and clear before the storms.



Trout were often suspended mid-column as they intercepted nymphs and emergers in the flow and an occasional adult floating above them.  Our reporters say that dry/dropper action has been good, especially on soft hackle droppers. Tiny black caddis buzzed the Chattooga’s streamside bushes.


Those same caddis were also common on Nan DH, which had higher flow and even hit 60 degrees in late afternoon.  

https://waterdata.usgs.gov/monitoring-location/03504000/





You can see their pebble cases on streamside rocks, with (Glossosoma?) pupae percolating in them. 



Sporadic risers sipped emergers (maybe the caddis) thru the afternoon.  There were a few larger gray caddis and a stray Hendrickson, too. When stormflows pass, try tossing a double dry combo of a #16 para-Adams and #18-20  gray caddis into the soft pockets along both stream edges. 


I’ll repeat last week’s advice.  Try dredging or streamer stripping in the mornings and when the water is muddy. On warm afternoons, switch to dry/dropper rigs and keep your eyes open for risers. Also stock up on tan bugs for this month. Soon tan caddis and light Cahills will start popping (I saw my first cahills at Nacoochee Bend last nite) so have some cahill emergers and duns and Caddis pupae and adults ready as the spring hatch color switches from gray to tan. For more hatch info, go to RabunTU.org and click on Tightlines. Monthly hatch charts are in each newsletter.


UO buddy MikeB: “By the way, I did make it up to Chattooga DH. A few others had the same idea; a bit surprising for a Tuesday but I had good day anyway.  Really nice area, good flow, cooperative fish, mix of rainbows and brooks.  No particular fly seemed to be the trick - some on each of pats rubber leg, pheasant tail, hairs ear, squirmy worm.”




Our Rabunite buddy, Nan, checked in:  “Fishing was fairly slow at Fires Creek DH but we caught at least one of each of the Bs (browns, brookies and bows), all on dries. My husband and I had fun!”


Stocker Streams:

The trout trucks are running and it’s a great time to introduce friends to flyfishing.  Have them drift a squirmy or strip a small black bugger in a heavily stocked stream.  They’ll be hooked for life.

https://georgiawildlife.com/Fishing/Trout


UO buddy RSquared:”. Cathy & Mark of the Georgia Council of Trout Unlimited & I fished a northwest GA WMA creek that’s heavily stocked.  Most of this water is very shallow and is perfect for dry-droppers. Cathy took us to school on her home waters, catching trout in the double digits while I struggled to get just a few. Most fish came on droppers that had either blue or purple hot-spots.”





Tailwaters:

No recent reports. Our regular, Ryan, was too busy tangling with big channel cats.


https://instagram.com/madfishinskillz?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y=


Private Waters:

UO guide Israel:”My client had a great day at  Soque Camp. Fish were still hesitant to rise to our dries, but were eager to inhale a variety of small nymph patterns drifted past their noses.”



UO guide Caleb: “We had a very productive day at The Bend yesterday (6th).  The fish were quite happy and the most effective strategy was drifting a small pheasant tail underneath a larger attractor pattern.”





UO guide Ben was busy this week. His father/daughter client duo had a great day at Rainbow Point on the Soque.  They fished dry/dropper rigs. The chubby Chernobyl dry was simply a strike indicator for the more effective droppers: tan and march brown soft hackles dead-drifted and then swung.





Ben’s next set of clients also had a productive day at the Soque Camp property.  Stripped streamers and dead-drifted and swung pheasant tails and olive zebra midges were most effective.  A massive brown was fought and lost, and a rematch was vowed. 






Rivers:

Watch for stripers when rivers drop and clear just a bit. Hit the pools below shoals and in the shady outside riverbends at dawn.

Watch for WRD’s Friday update here: https://georgiawildlife.blog/category/fishing/


Lakes:

Athens Jay: “With stormy weather on the way, and the arrival of the April full moon, I got on my paddleboard for the first time this year. Surprisingly, I didn’t fall off, and managed to test out my bamboo rod on some noble savages. When the wild azaleas are blooming in the Piedmont, it’s time to grab a few brown beadhead Pat’s Rubberlegs and go bream fishing. The shellcracker were more abundant than the bluegill, but both were extremely tight to the bank seeking a warm place to bed. The smell of the azaleas, the full moon rising, and the deep bend those ferocious fish put in my bamboo rod combined for an incredibly evening.



My office buddy, Marty, has enjoyed spring break with some family pond fishing. He shared a photo of his clan in action.”



Reservoirs:

HenryC just called in this report from the lake. He said the bass were up shallow (3-4 ft) a couple days ago, but have since backed off to 10-12 feet of water. They’ve been more cooperative when the sun is shining.  Stripers have been AWOL on the lake right now. Their river runs are a higher percentage bet at the moment. 



UO staffer Joseph:

“We traveled down to West Point and caught lots of spotted bass, along with a good mix of stripers and white bass. We focused a lot on the shad spawn and schooling fish. The water is still really dirty but the fish were super shallow and readily eating. We caught many fish on smaller kitech swim baits and I even managed a few on a small crease fly. Overall fishing is super good and will only get better as the week goes on.”


Important rerun from last week:  We offer two tips for you striper fans. First, aim for the reservoir headwaters and, if not too muddy, the rivers during the next two weeks.  Stripers head upstream during the first 2-3 weeks of April every year as they try to spawn.


Second, hit the lake “mudlines.”They’re the tea-colored transition zones between chocolate milk and clear lake water.  Shad will pack into muddy water, which catches sunlight and warms up. Stripers will be in slightly clearer water just outside the mud, where they are hidden by the stain and can ambush shad. In a prior life, my cohorts and I had great “shocking” success in those mudlines.


There’s your pre-monsoon intel. Work around the rain and cash in some vacation days when the sun shines and the water clears. May all of you have a happy Easter and Passover with your families. We sure appreciate your friendship - and your fish stories!



Unicoi Outfitters: Friendly. Local. Experts.

www.unicoioutfitters.com

Monday, April 3, 2023

Two Vital Dry Techniques



Are you ready for spring dry fly action? Do you have all the right patterns AND all the right techniques? 




Well, UO is here to help y’all once again. Check out our column on page ATL-5 in the new April edition of The Angler magazine.


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


Don’t miss those two nuggets of wisdom (T&S) that will bring you more strikes this month as we celebrate the return of topwater action. Stop by either UO store in Clarkesville and Helen to stock up on Wes’ hot fly patterns and some fresh leaders for your April adventures. Good luck. Send us your pics!


Unicoi Outfitters: Friendly. Local. Experts.

www.unicoioutfitters.com

Saturday, April 1, 2023

Stormflows and Fishing



No joke!

Don’t you just love these USGS stream gauges?  Why?  Here’s a quick lesson. The main storm front has just passed us in White County.  We can compare today’s rainfall and streamflow to a couple of past storm events. 


Notice how quickly the Hooch in Helen recovers from a sudden storm that dumps a half-inch of rain. We can look at the x-axis of the flow graph, where each day is 24 hours, and see that riverflow drops quickly right after a brief storm and returns to a slightly elevated base flow within about 12 hours.

Of course, heavier rains will boost flows higher and lengthen the river’s recovery time. 

https://waterdata.usgs.gov/nwis/uv?site_no=02330450&legacy=1

Fish like a Rabunite and use a net- the internet.  Take a look at USGS gauges on or near your favorite trout streams.  Use the gauge data to help plan your trip timing and technique.  Be ready with squirmies, rubberlegs, and streamers for high, stained water. Anticipate when that stream will clear and fish will again look up for your dry flies. 

https://issuu.com/coastalanglermagazine/docs/atllr

Good luck and be safe. If you’re heading out today, watch out for the winds this afternoon.


Unicoi Outfitters: Friendly. Local. Experts.

www.unicoioutfitters.com