Artificial Lure here with your Sunday, November 2nd, 2025, fishing report for the Salt Lake City area. It’s a classic November morning along the Wasatch Front—dew on the grass, temps hovering around the high 30s at dawn, but expect a mellow warm-up into the low 50s by afternoon, skies mostly clear with just a hint of breeze. Sunrise was at 7:08 AM, and expect sunset right at 5:17 PM, so there’s a tight window for chasing those late-fall biters.
Fish activity today is right in the “fair” range according to the Farmers’ Almanac and local solunar predictions. Things look best during this morning’s major bite period, which ran from about 6:40 to 8:40 AM, with another solid window coming at dusk from roughly 7 to 9 PM. As is typical this time of year, fish can be stubborn midday—making early and late outings your best bet.
With the first quarter moon peeking overhead and the water cooling off, local anglers have recently pulled a mixed bag from area waters. There’s still some aggressive brown trout hitting jerkbaits and spinners in the Jordan River, especially up near the Old River Channel and right around the bridges downtown. Panfish continue to cooperate at Baileys Lake—look for bluegill and crappie schooling up, and reports of a few chunky largemouths being taken on slow-rolled plastics near the reeds.
Mountain Dell and Little Dell Reservoirs have been giving up good numbers of rainbows and cutthroat, mostly on smaller spoons, silver spinners, and classic nightcrawlers on the bottom. If you’re bank fishing, try Right Fork Mill Creek or Church Fork up the canyon—small nymphs and woolly buggers under indicators have been turning trout over where the water's deeper and slow.
No tidal action to report, since we’re all freshwater here, but watch those cold fronts and swings in barometric pressure; that always stirs up a bite, especially for predator species like smallmouth and wiper. Local bait shops say the hot lures right now are smaller jerkbaits in natural patterns, chartreuse or firetiger cranks, and 1/8- to 1/4-ounce jigs tipped with soft plastics for bass or panfish. Bait anglers are still producing with nightcrawlers and wax worms—especially effective for trout and bluegill as the water chills.
For bank anglers or families, Baileys Lake and Mountain Dell Dam are user-friendly hot spots, while more adventurous types can hit Pine Fork or Kenney Creek for a good hike-and-cast session in solitude. The Jordan River’s Old Channel is a perennial favorite for multispecies action.
Waders, remember water temps are dropping fast—take care and layer up if you venture out early. A little patience and a slow retrieve seem to be the ticket this weekend. Whatever your target, strike early, aim for structure, and don’t be afraid to downsize your presentation.
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