Fall River Fish Report for 6-24-2022
Nymphing remains the most consistent method
Fall River - La Pine, OR (Deschutes County)
by Fly and Field Outfitters
6-24-2022
Website
The Fall river continues to fish well. Nymphing remains the most consistent method for picking up fish but dry fly opportunities have been around some days as well. Caddis and PMD’s will be getting more and more active with this warmer weather. Green drakes should start to show up as well. There are lots of beetles/ants on the timber around the fall and we like running dry-dropper setups with a black micro chubby to mimic these. Streamers can also be a good way to entice some larger fish on the fall. The river has a good number of fish in it and is fishing well so get out there and give it a shot!
Suggested Dries: March Brown #12-14, Purple Haze #16-20, Sparkle Dun BWO #16-20, Hackle Stacker BWO #16-20, Olive Haze #16-18, Tilt Wing BWO #16-18, Parachute Adams #16-20
Suggested Nymphs: Black or Red Zebra Midge #18-22, Black or Red Winkers Midge #18-22, Black or Olive Tailwater Tiny #18-22, Black or Red Rainbow Warrior #18-20, Olive Micro May #18-20, FB Pheasant Tail #16-20, Olive or HE Anato-May #16-20
More Reports
Fly and Field Outfitters LLC Reports
for Friday, June 24th, 2022Deschutes River- Lower: The Lower Deschutes is fishing well
Deschutes River- Upper: Mixed bag of reports from the Upper Deschutes
Fly and Field Outfitters LLC Reports
for Friday, June 17th, 2022Deschutes River- Lower: Salmon Flies are coming to a close
Deschutes River- Upper: Dry fly action should continue to improve as summer moves along
Crooked River: The Crooked is fishing decent but the flows are low right now
Fall River: Nymphing remains the most consistent method
Crane Prairie Reservoir: Crane Prairie is still hit and miss but seems to be coming around a bit
: Hearing good reports from both the twin lakes
Website Hosting and Design provided by TECK.net