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Utah - Salt Lake City Fishing Report Today

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Acerca de Utah - Salt Lake City Fishing Report Today

Tune in to the "Great Salt Lake, Utah Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from one of America's most iconic lakes. Whether you're a seasoned angler or a fishing enthusiast, our podcast offers tips, weather conditions, and the best spots for a successful fishing trip. Stay informed with the freshest insights on the Great Salt Lake's unique ecosystem and make every fishing expedition a memorable one. For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/ Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXk This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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324 episodios

episode Early and Late: Prime Trout Bites on the Wasatch Front artwork

Early and Late: Prime Trout Bites on the Wasatch Front

This is Artificial Lure with your Salt Lake City area fishing report. No tides to worry about on the Wasatch Front, so you can focus on weather and water. Overnight temps stayed in the upper 50s with a cool north breeze; this afternoon is headed for the low 80s under mostly clear skies and low humidity. Sunrise hit around 5:55 a.m., and sunset will be close to 9:00 p.m., giving you a long window for those prime low‑light bites. Mountain reservoirs and cold creeks are the stars right now. The big story is **early and late**: trout are feeding shallow at dawn and again the last hour of light, then dropping deeper as the sun gets high. Up at **Echo and Rockport**, local anglers have been putting good numbers of rainbows in the net, plus a few browns mixed in. Reports from shop counters and dock talk say typical catches run 12–16 inches, with the occasional chunky holdover pushing 18. Trolling small silver or gold spoons and size 5 floating Rapalas in brown trout or rainbow patterns has been consistent. Bank anglers are doing well with chartreuse or garlic PowerBait on a slip rig, and nightcrawlers under a clear bubble. Closer to town, **Jordanelle** is fishing steady. Kayak folks are picking up smallmouth along rocky points in 10–20 feet of water on green pumpkin tube jigs, 3-inch swimbaits in shad colors, and drop-shot rigs with natural-colored worms. A few walleye are showing on bottom bouncers with crawler harnesses at first light, but the bite slows once the sun is overhead and the ski boats fire up. If you’re chasing trout here, think deeper—small dodgers with pink or orange hoochies or wedding rings tipped with a bit of worm are taking fish 25–40 feet down. Urban ponds around Salt Lake—like community fisheries and small park lakes—have recently been stocked with catchable rainbows and a mix of bluegill and catfish. Families soaking bait are seeing quick limits in the mornings. Salmon eggs, smaller pieces of nightcrawler, and PowerBait on light line are the ticket. For panfish, toss tiny jigs or a piece of worm under a bobber tight to reeds and docks. Hot spot number one: **Weber River** between Echo and Henefer. Flows are manageable, water is clear and cool, and wade anglers are finding browns on small nymphs—think pheasant tails and hare’s ears size 16–18—trailing behind a slightly larger attractor. In the evening, be ready with a dry-dropper rig and a small caddis or PMD pattern; the hatch has been bringing fish up right before dark. Hot spot number two: the **middle Provo** below Jordanelle. It’s running a bit pushy in spots but very fishable, and the fish are healthy. Nymphing with sow bugs and midges during the day is still the bread and butter. As the sun drops behind the hill, switch to smaller caddis dries and emergers—trout have been feeding in the softer seams and tailouts. Best overall lures and baits right now: - For trout in still water: small spoons, spinners, and minnow baits in natural patterns; PowerBait in bright colors; nightcrawlers. - For river trout: beadhead nymphs, small caddis and mayfly dries, and lightweight streamers in olive or black. - For bass: green pumpkin tubes, Ned rigs, and small paddletail swimbaits along rock and structure. - For cats: cut bait, shrimp, and stink bait fished on bottom in the evening. Focus your efforts sunrise to a couple hours after, then again the last two hours before dark. Midday can still produce, but you’ll need to go deeper and lighter on your line. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

22 de jun de 2026 - 3 min
episode Early Summer Bite: Jordanelle Smallmouth and Utah Lake White Bass Heat Up artwork

Early Summer Bite: Jordanelle Smallmouth and Utah Lake White Bass Heat Up

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Salt Lake City fishing report. First off, no tides to worry about on our lakes and reservoirs, but we’ve got classic early‑summer patterns setting up. Along the Wasatch Front, overnight temps dipped into the 50s, with afternoon highs headed for the 80s under mostly clear skies and just a light breeze. Sunrise is right around 5:55 a.m., sunset close to 9:05 p.m., so you’ve got a long, workable day with the best bite at first light and the last hour of daylight. Water temps on the lowland reservoirs and community ponds are generally in the low to mid‑60s, warming into the upper 60s by late afternoon. That’s pushing trout a bit deeper by mid‑day and waking up the warm‑water fish: bass, walleye, and panfish. Up at **Jordanelle**, local reports from shop talk and marina chatter say rainbows and smallmouth have been the main story. Anglers trolling early with small dodgers and UV wedding rings tipped with nightcrawler pieces have been putting a mix of planter rainbows and a few nicer holdovers in the box, mostly 12–16 inches. Smallmouth bass are cruising rocky points and secondary ledges in 10–20 feet. Best producers have been 2.8–3.3 inch green pumpkin tubes, drop‑shot roboworms in natural shad or morning dawn, and small paddle‑tail swimbaits worked slow. A few walleye have been taken at dawn on bottom‑bouncers with crawler harnesses off deeper points, but it’s not yet a hot walleye bite. Closer to town, **Utah Lake** is still a solid multi‑species option even with fluctuating clarity. Catfish have been steady for shore anglers soaking cut carp, chub, or nightcrawlers after sunset on slip sinker rigs. Channel cats in the 2–6 pound class are common, with the occasional bigger fish. White bass schools have been pushing into shallows at dawn and dusk; small 1/16 to 1/8 ounce marabou jigs, curly tails, and tiny cranks in white or chartreuse have been filling buckets when you land on a school. A few walleye continue to come on crankbaits and jigs near rocky structure in 6–12 feet in low light. Community ponds around Salt Lake – places like **Willow Pond, Jensen Nature Park, and Bountiful Pond** – were recently stocked with catchable rainbows and a few splake and tiger trout mixed in, according to local stocking boards and shop bulletin chatter. PowerBait in garlic or chartreuse, salmon eggs, and simple nightcrawler chunks 2–3 feet under a bobber have been the ticket for kids and casual anglers. Fly anglers are doing well in the evenings with small woolly buggers and leech patterns, slow stripped. For fly folks heading up Big Cottonwood or Provo Canyon, high‑country streams are running clear enough to fish well. Midday hatches of caddis and small mayflies have browns and cutts looking up. Size 16–18 parachute Adams, elk hair caddis, and small bead‑head nymphs under an indicator are putting up decent numbers of 8–12 inch fish, with the occasional bigger brown out of deeper runs. If you’re looking for a couple hotspots to prioritize: - **Jordanelle Reservoir, rocky points on the main lake and in the arms** for smallmouth early and late, trout on the troll mid‑morning. - **Utah Lake, east‑shore access points and harbor mouths** for white bass and channel cats in low light. Best lures and baits right now: - For trout: small spoons, spinners, and trolling dodgers with wedding rings; PowerBait and worms for the ponds. - For bass: green pumpkin tubes, drop‑shot worms, Ned rigs, and small swimbaits in natural shad colors. - For cats: cut bait, shrimp, and nightcrawlers on simple bottom rigs. - For white bass: tiny jigs, micro cranks, and small spinners in white or chartreuse. Fish the low‑light windows, downsize your presentations if the sun’s high and the bite slows, and don’t be afraid to move until you mark bait and active arches on your sonar or see surface activity. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

21 de jun de 2026 - 4 min
episode Salt Lake City Fishing Report: Dawn Bite, Alpine Trout, and Basin Bass Action artwork

Salt Lake City Fishing Report: Dawn Bite, Alpine Trout, and Basin Bass Action

This is Artificial Lure with your Salt Lake City fishing report. We don’t worry about tides up here along the Wasatch Front—these are stillwaters and rivers—so let’s talk conditions. The National Weather Service is calling for a warm, mostly clear day around the valley, light winds in the morning with a typical afternoon breeze picking up. Air temps are running from the upper 50s at first light into the upper 80s later, so plan on a cool dawn bite and a slower mid‑day lull. Sunrise is right around 5:55 a.m., sunset near 9:05 p.m., giving you a long low‑light window to work. Water levels on the local creeks and rivers are settling down from runoff but still a bit pushy in spots. That stain is actually helping the trout: they’re less spooky and hugging soft edges, seams, and undercut banks. Up on the alpine reservoirs and community ponds, clarity is decent to good, with a light algae tint in the shallows as the water warms. Recent reports from local shops and DWR creel checks say anglers are putting good numbers of **rainbow trout** and **cutthroats** in the net on the Weber and the middle Provo, with a mix of **browns** in the deeper runs. Around the valley ponds—places like Willow, Bountiful Lake, and Jensen—folks are catching **rainbows**, **bluegill**, **largemouth bass**, and the occasional **channel catfish**. Jordanelle and Deer Creek have been giving up **smallmouth bass** and **walleye**, plus planter bows along the banks. Fish activity has been best early and late. On the rivers, a mix of caddis and PMDs is in play, with fish rising in the softer water as the sun stays low. Mid‑day, nymphing is the ticket. On the stillwaters and ponds, bass and bluegill are tight to structure—reeds, rocks, docks—and cruising the first drop‑off. Trout are cruising shorelines and inlets, especially where a little cold water is trickling in. Best lures and baits right now: - For trout on rivers: small **Euro‑style nymphs**, pheasant tails, and tungsten perdigons under an indicator, plus elk‑hair caddis and small parachute PMDs in the evenings. Spin anglers should run **1/8‑oz Panther Martins, Rooster Tails**, or small silver Kastmasters in the seams. - For trout in ponds and reservoirs: **PowerBait in chartreuse or garlic**, nightcrawlers under a bobber, and small silver or gold spoons and in‑line spinners worked slow along the bank. - For bass and panfish: **2–3 inch soft‑plastic swimbaits**, curly‑tail grubs, and Ned rigs in green pumpkin, or small **topwater poppers** and frogs at first and last light. For kids and relaxed fishing, you can’t beat a piece of worm under a small float around cover. A couple of hot spots to circle: - **Community ponds north of town**: Bountiful Lake and Jensen Nature Park Pond have been steady producers for stocked trout and panfish, with cats showing after dark on cut bait and shrimp. - **Deer Creek and Jordanelle Reservoirs**: Work rocky points and shorelines for smallmouth with tube jigs and dropshots, and troll or cast small crankbaits and spoons for trout and the occasional walleye when the light is low. Hit it early, hydrate, and be mindful of afternoon winds building chop on the big reservoirs. Wherever you go, pack out your trash and give other anglers a little elbow room—the fish will move, and so can we. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

20 de jun de 2026 - 3 min
episode Wasatch Front Fishing: Early Bites and Deep Summer Trout on the Salt Lake City Waters artwork

Wasatch Front Fishing: Early Bites and Deep Summer Trout on the Salt Lake City Waters

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Wasatch Front fishing rundown for the Salt Lake City area. First off, no tides to worry about on our freshwater around here, but water levels and clarity are the real story. The recent warm spell has pushed temps up and dropped flows a bit, so fish are sliding deeper and getting a little more selective. Around Salt Lake City, expect a cool, clear morning warming fast into the 80s by afternoon, with light winds early and a bit more breeze by mid‑day. Skies are mostly clear to partly cloudy. Sunrise hits a little after 5:50 a.m., sunset just before 9:00 p.m., which means a long low‑light window for morning and evening bites. Trout activity on the local reservoirs and rivers has been best in the first and last two hours of light. Midday they’re tucking into deeper runs, undercuts, and anything shaded. Warmwater species like bass and walleye are moving shallower at dusk and after dark. Reports from local anglers this week around the valley have been solid: rainbows and cutthroat running in the 12–18 inch class with a few bigger fish mixed in, plus scattered browns on the rivers. Panfish and smallmouth action has been picking up on nearby waters, with decent numbers of 10–14 inch bass and hand‑size bluegill. Carp are thick and cruising the shallows if you’re into bowfishing or just want to tug on something big. Best lures right now: - For trout: small silver or gold spinners, 1/8 oz Kastmasters in silver/blue, and 2–3 inch white or olive tube jigs or marabou jigs. On fly tackle, size 16–20 midges, small PMD patterns, and pheasant tail nymphs under an indicator are doing work. - For bass and walleye: 3–4 inch soft plastics in green pumpkin or shad colors, Ned rigs, small swimbaits, and jerkbaits fished slow. Evening topwater with poppers or walking baits can be surprisingly good when the wind lays down. Best bait: - Trout: nightcrawlers threaded on a small hook with just enough weight to get down, chartreuse or rainbow PowerBait on still water, and salmon eggs in moving water where allowed. - Warmwater species: nightcrawlers, leeches if you can get them, and cut bait for walleye and catfish. Couple of hot spots to keep on your radar: - **Jordan River through the valley**: Not pretty, but it holds fish. Work slower pools, bridge pilings, and outside bends. Use small jigs, in‑line spinners, or worms under a float. Expect carp, catfish, and the occasional bass or trout where cooler water comes in. - **Mountain reservoirs and lakes east of town in the Wasatch**: Cooler, clearer, and fishing better than the valley lowlands. Focus on points, inlets, and drop‑offs. Cast spoons and spinners from shore in the morning, then switch to bait or deeper presentations as the sun gets high. Timing is everything today: hit it early, sneak back out for the last light, and don’t be afraid to downsize your tackle if the bite gets finicky. Clear water and bright skies mean light line, smaller hooks, and natural colors will out‑fish the heavy stuff. That’s your local rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

19 de jun de 2026 - 3 min
episode Salt Lake City Fishing: Clear Skies and Spooky Fish - Early Morning and Evening Bites artwork

Salt Lake City Fishing: Clear Skies and Spooky Fish - Early Morning and Evening Bites

This is Artificial Lure with your Salt Lake City area fishing report. We don’t worry about tides up here in the Wasatch Front—everything’s freshwater—so your main drivers today are **weather, light, and runoff**. Around the valley, the National Weather Service calls for a mild early start in the low 60s, warming into the upper 80s this afternoon, light winds under about 10 mph, mostly clear skies, and very low chance of rain. That means **clear water and spooky fish** on the smaller lakes and community ponds. Sunrise was right around 5:55 a.m. and sunset will be close to 9:00 p.m., giving you a long window, but the best bite should be **first light to about 10 a.m.** and again from **7 p.m. to dark**. Community ponds like **Sugarhouse Park Pond, Fairmont, and Bountiful Lake** have been stocked recently with **rainbow trout** and **channel cats**, with a mix of **bluegill** and a few **largemouth bass** showing up. Anglers this past week have reported easy limits of smaller rainbows on **PowerBait in chartreuse or rainbow glitter**, and on **nightcrawlers** fished 2–3 feet under a bobber. Bass are cruising shallow early; folks are picking up fish in the 1–3 pound range. For **lures**, keep it simple: - For stocked trout: small **silver or gold spinners** (Panther Martin, Rooster Tail), **1/16 oz spoons**, and **#1–#2 inline spinners** worked slow and steady. - For bass: **green pumpkin or black/blue finesse worms**, wacky-rigged or Texas-rigged; small **white or shad-colored swimbaits**; and in the low-light hours, a **black buzzbait or small popper** around cattails and docks. - For panfish: tiny **1/32–1/64 oz jigs** tipped with a piece of worm under a float. If you’re heading a bit up the canyon, local reports say **Little Dell** and **Millcreek-area streams** are running clear enough to fish but still have some push from runoff. Best action has been on **small brown and rainbow trout** using **size 16–20 nymphs** (pheasant tails, hare’s ears) under an indicator, or **small gold spinners** in the slightly stained pockets. Ultralight spin gear with 4 lb test and a single barbless hook will keep you out of trouble with regs. Two **hot spots** to circle for today: 1. **Bountiful Lake** - Easy access, lots of bank space, and it’s been fishing well for **rainbows and channel catfish**. - Morning: cast **silver spinners** for trout along the windblown shore. - Evening: soak **cut bait or nightcrawlers** on the bottom for cats; most reports mention steady action on fish in the 1–4 lb range right at dusk. 2. **Sugarhouse Park Pond** - Perfect quick-hit urban spot. Recently stocked trout are still close to shore. - Fish a **small marabou jig or 1/16 oz spoon** on light line, slow retrieve. - Families are doing well with **PowerBait off the bottom** and simple **worm-and-bobber** rigs for kids. Overall **fish activity**: - **Trout**: good in the early cool hours, slowing midday in the bright sun. - **Bass**: fair to good, with better quality fish tight to shade and structure—trees, docks, and reed lines. - **Catfish**: best right at sunset into dark on **stinky baits**, cut chub or carp, and chicken liver. Best bet: Hit the water early with **spinners for trout** or **topwater for bass**, take a break through the hottest, brightest part of the day, then come back with **baits on the bottom** and **slow plastics** as the sun drops behind the Oquirrhs. That’s your Salt Lake City area fishing update from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more local fishing reports and tips. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

18 de jun de 2026 - 3 min
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
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