| The Seasons
of the Trinity River
The Trinity River
is open year-round to fishing most years, but the timing
of the steelhead runs mean that certain times of year will be more
productive than others.
July, August, September
Flows begin to
drop to fishable levels by mid July on the Trinity River. At
this time there are a handful of steelhead still around in the Fly
Fishing Only Section just below Lewiston Dam, as well as healthy
numbers of immature steelhead smolt ranging from 8-14 inches and
a few half-pounder steelhead from 16-20 inches. There’s a
lot of great wade access near the town of Lewiston, and these aggressive
fish will take swung flies, nymphs, egg patterns, even dry flies.
The summer season
on the Trinity is a great time of year to target fresh Spring-run
Chinook Salmon. These powerful fish can be found in many
of the upper Trinity River’s deep pools and riffle water,
and a few of our guides have spent considerable time perfecting
techniques to catch these fish (averaging 10-20 pounds) on fly tackle.
The first of the
massive sea-run Brown Trout also begin to show in the Trinity River
in August and September. The Trinity’s sea-run browns
look and act just like the river’s steelhead, averaging 4-8
pounds and readily taking flies. While these brown trout on steroids
can be found just about anywhere in the river system, there are
a few places where they congregate and can be targeted specifically.
Summer-run steelhead,
too, begin to make their first appearances as early as August.
There are not nearly as many steelhead in the river at this early
time of year, making the steelhead fishing challenging, but rewarding.
Water temperatures are warm, so the few fish that are moving upriver
are aggressive and September and October can be the best time of
year to take steelhead on the surface with skated or waking attractor
dry flies or using traditional greased-line techniques.
October, November, December,
January, February
The bulk of the
summer run of steelhead on the Trinity River begins to arrive by
mid to late October. The weather on the Trinity River during
the fall season is as good as it gets, making October and November
the most popular – and therefore crowded – two months
of the year on the river. Steelhead are usually spread out throughout
the entire system, so there is a lot of fishable water. Moreover,
water temperatures are still moderate, so the fish will eat both
swinging flies and dead-drifted nymphs and egg patterns. This early
run of steelhead is predominantly hatchery fish headed to the Lewiston
National Fish Hatchery, and there’s always a few wild steelhead
mixed in.
The winter run
of steelhead start to show as early as Thanksgiving, with fresh
fish migrating upriver throughout the rest of the winter season.
The majority of these winter fish are wild, and the average
size of the steelhead generally gets progressively larger later
into the winter months. Water temperatures are considerably colder,
so the steelhead are less likely to move for traditional fly patterns
and dead-drifting nymphs is the preferred method for hooking Trinity
River Steelhead from November through February.
Winter weather
ranges from mid-60s to below freezing. The winter steelhead
season is not for the faint of heart, making it ideal for true steelhead
die-hards willing to brave the cold in order to catch these special
creatures. The benefit to the colder weather, however, is that it
definitely helps to keep the crowds away.
The best conditions
for fishing on the Trinity from October through February are stormy
days, or the days immediately following a storm. Wet weather
gets steelhead on the move. Fish on the move are burning calories,
more active, and more likely to eat your fly. The upper 40 miles
of the Trinity are primarily controlled by flow releases from Lewiston
Dam which remain low all winter long, so there are very few days
when the river blows out to unfishable conditions, and it will always
clear within a day or two.
March, April, May, June
Most years we
can catch steelhead on the Trinity River right up to the middle
of March. Every year right around March 15, however, the
Lewiston Hatchery releases its steelhead and salmon smolts into
the river, and though there may still be steelhead around getting
your flies through the millions of smolts can be next to impossible.
The Fly Fishing
Only Section of the Trinity opens early for the month of April,
and can bring about some fun fishing before the General Trout Opener
on the last Saturday in April. There are usually still a
few holdover adult steelhead to be found, but the real draw to the
fly-only water this time of year is dry fly fishing for the many
smolts and trout-sized immature steelhead that populate these upriver
riffles and runs.
Early May marks
the start of the purging flows on the Trinity. As part of
the Trinity River Restoration Project, Lewiston Dam begins to release
very high flows (from 5,000-12,000 cfs). These high flows are designed
to provide extra habitat for the smolts of the native salmon and
steelhead of the river, and to help push the immature fish out to
the ocean. They’re ultimately great for the river’s
anadromous fish, but they do make fishing a non-issue on the Trinity
for the months of May and June until the flows begin to drop in
mid-July.
To make a reservation,
please give us a call at 800-669-3474 during business hours
any day of the week. We can give you the answers you need or the
detailed explanations to questions you might have, or check on guide
availability and confirm your guide reservation in minutes.
If you prefer to correspond
on-line simply e-mail us at info@adventuresinflyfishing.com
and we will respond promptly.
|