Colorado River Colorado Fishing Report Today Podcast Por Inception Point Ai arte de portada

Colorado River Colorado Fishing Report Today

Colorado River Colorado Fishing Report Today

De: Inception Point Ai
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Join us on "Colorado River, Colorado Fishing Report Today" for expert tips, live reports, and the latest updates on fishing conditions. Perfect for anglers of all levels, our podcast dives into water temperatures, fish activity, and local weather, all geared towards helping you have a successful day on the water. Stay informed and make the most of your fishing adventures in Colorado!

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Episodios
  • Colorado River March Steelhead Run: Fresh Drops and Steady Flows from the Dam
    Mar 27 2026
    Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to guy for all things rod and reel on the Colorado River here in Colorado. It's early mornin' on this crisp March 27th, and I'm talkin' fishin' from the upper stretches down through the heart of it.

    No tides to worry 'bout in these river waters, but flows are steady at around 1750 CFS from the dam releases, per the latest gauges—keepin' things pushin' strong with some stain and 3-4 feet visibility. Weather's got a Red Flag Warning hangin' over southern stretches from the National Weather Service Pueblo, with northwest winds gustin' to 45 mph, humidity divin' to 7%, and warm temps lingerin'—hot spell's stickin' around per Denver7 reports. Sunrise hit about 6:55am, sunset 'round 7:24pm. Dress light but watch for fire danger; no sparklin' campfires, y'all.

    Fish activity's pickin' up slow but sure—steelhead are the stars right now, with fresh drop-backs and a few browns mixin' in. Recent reports from nearby runs show low to moderate success: one angler nabbed a pair of steelhead mid-section yesterday on Douglaston Salmon Run logs, others landed 30-inchers and fresh steelies on March 25. Browns lurkin' deeper, and lake trout pushin' 20lbs+ off Blue Mesa with spoons and jigs. Bass are stirrin' early season per kayak anglers on YouTube.

    Best lures? Go big and bright—chartreuse beads, pink/white/chartreuse egg sacs, squirmy worms, pink worms on bobbers. Rapalas in rainbow patterns, tube jigs, kastmasters, and spinners for rainbows early. Live bait like shrimp-mimickin' soft plastics in sexy shad if you're finesse droppin' post-wind.

    Hot spots: Hit the middle runs near Pineville gauge for steelhead hookups, or deeper pools around 20-40 feet in Blue Mesa tailwaters for browns and lakers. Wade careful with them gusts.

    Thanks for tunin' in, listeners—subscribe for more river whispers! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

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    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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    2 m
  • Low Water, High Heat: March Midge Madness on the Colorado River
    Mar 25 2026
    Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to guy for all things fishin' on the Colorado River right here in Colorado. Comin' at ya live on this scorcher of a March 25th, 2026, at 7:28 AM—man, it's already feelin' like summer with that record-breaking heat dome pushin' temps 20 to 35 degrees above normal, per Climate Central's alert from yesterday. Low snowpack and dry conditions mean river flows are down, sittin' low like in Glenwood Canyon, makin' for technical fishin' but still doable.

    No tides up here in the Rockies, but sunrise was at 7:15 AM and sunset around 7:30 PM—plenty of daylight to chase 'em. Water's clear and cold, crowds medium, best bite midday 11 AM to 2 PM when things warm a hair.

    Fish activity's steady for early spring—trout holdin' tight in seams, deeper runs, and softer edges. Recent reports from Glenwood Canyon YouTube show fly anglers pullin' trout despite low water and no bugs. Eagle River nearby (feeds into Colorado) has midges hatchin' primary, baetis secondary—folks grindin' out consistent catches on nymphs. Types? Rainbow and brown trout dominatin', with some rainbows catch-and-release only at spots like Curecanti. Numbers are modest—short drifts, not limits, but quality fish if you work it.

    Top flies per Rise Beyond Fly Fishing's March 24 report: Zebra Midge size 18-22 deep in tailouts, Black Beauty 20-24 on the bottom, RS2 gray 18-22 off bottom, Mercury or Top Secret Midge 20-24 in edges. Baetis emergers like Barr's 18-20 midday. Streamers? Mini leech black/olive size 10-12 slow near banks, or olive Woolly Bugger 8-10. For bait, skip worms—barbless hooks recommended, focus subsurface.

    Hot spots: Glenwood Canyon for low-water fly action, and Gypsum State Wildlife Area on the Eagle confluence—rated 5 stars by locals for reliable seams.

    Bundle up early, hydrate in this heat, and step light—low clear water spooks 'em quick. Tight lines!

    Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for more reports! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

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    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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    3 m
  • Early Spring Colorado River: BWOs and Browns Waking Up - March 23 Update
    Mar 23 2026
    Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to guy for all things fishin' on the Colorado River here in Colorado. It's Monday mornin', March 23, 2026, and we're kickin' off the week with some prime early spring action despite that low snowpack got folks talkin' drought. No tides up here in the Rockies, but river flows are steady—think 100-150 cfs in spots like the Dream Stream section off the South Platte system, perfect for wadin' without gettin' swept.

    Weather's lookin' golden: clear skies overnight with lows dippin' to 25-35°F, warmin' up to sunny highs in the 60s today. West winds 10-15 mph pickin' up afternoon, so bundle early and watch for gusts. Sunrise hits around 7:15 AM, sunset 'bout 7:30 PM—plenty of daylight to chase 'em.

    Fish are wakin' up! Browns and rainbows are poddin' in deeper pools and riffles, with some big residents and even Kokanee pushin' up from reservoirs. Recent reports from South Platte Fly Shop say excellent nymphin' from 11 AM-3 PM as water temps climb to high 30s°F. Hatches are poppin': heavy Blue-Winged Olives (BWOs), tiny midges, Tricos at dawn, caddis evenin'. Anglers pullin' limits—dozens of trout per outing on non-windy days. Surface risers key on midges and BWOs late afternoon.

    Best lures? Go subsurface with BWO emergers, baetis nymphs, red/black/olive midge larva, black pheasant tails, mini leeches, or San Juan worms. Trail a Rs2 or Trico spinner. Dry fly: caddis or hopper with Trico dropper. Fluorocarbon 5x-6x tippet, long leaders—technical fish right now. Live bait? Worms or salmon eggs if regs allow, but artificials rule tailwaters.

    Hot spots: Hit the Dream Stream below Spinney—fish banks, seams, deeper holes. Or try riffles near Eleven Mile Reservoir for sight fishin' those redds (step light, spawners active).

    Get out there before crowds thicken—mornin' and evenin' best. Tight lines!

    Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for daily updates! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

    Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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    2 m
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