Artificial Lure here with your Monday, October 27th Salt Lake City area fishing report. We’re waking up to classic late-October weather: crisp and chilly, with early morning temps in the low 40s and a high expected around 61 by late afternoon. The skies are mostly clear, with a touch of haze. Sunrise rolled in at 7:49 AM and sunset drops at 6:35 PM, so plan your session with that daylight clock in mind.
No tides to speak of here along the Wasatch Front, but the lunar calendar says it’s a “Fair Evening” for fishing, with tomorrow evening and later days scoring even better according to the Farmers’ Almanac. Early birds and just-before-dusk anglers will have the best shot at action today.
Let’s talk fish activity: On local rivers—the Weber, Provo, and Jordan—flows are slightly below average but plenty fishable. Water’s cooling but trout are moving, especially with spawning ramps picking up for browns. Reports over the weekend saw several healthy brown trout landed on the Middle Provo and Weber—most ranging 12-16 inches, with a few pushing the 18 mark. Rainbows have also been active near the mouths of tributaries and in current seams. At Lower Gooseberry Reservoir, trout are still hitting spinners and small midge patterns. Electric Lake’s been producing some quality cutthroat and rainbows, just off the weed edges and deeper drop-offs.
As for techniques: Spin anglers have been finding success with silver and gold spinners, Panther Martins, and Rooster Tails, especially in the Provo and Weber. Fly folks have been doing well with nymph rigs—think pheasant tails, zebra midges, and olive or black woolly buggers. Dry fly action is spotty but afternoons may still get a blue-winged olive hatch if we get some clouds. For bait—nightcrawlers and salmon eggs are reliable for stockers in reservoirs, though in artificial-only sections stick with the lures and flies.
On the bucket report, word from the local shops is limits of planters at East Canyon Reservoir on PowerBait and chartreuse sparkle eggs, with some lucky souls landing 3+ pound holdovers trolling orange Rapalas or Kastmasters. If you’re after the challenge, Big Cottonwood Creek is low and clear but yields beautiful wild browns, just stealth is a must. No recent catfish bonanzas reported out of the Jordan River, but cut bait or stink baits are always the ticket.
For hot spots:
- **Middle Provo River** below Jordanelle—look for riffles and tailouts, especially after lunchtime as water warms a tick.
- **Electric Lake** near the dam and south shorelines—both bank and boaters picking up fish, especially early afternoon.
A reminder: dress in layers, keep an eye for spawning beds (let these fish do their thing), and always check the latest regs—artificials only on some stretches this month.
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