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

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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
  • Slow, Small Bites: Winter Trout on the Colorado River
    Dec 5 2025
    This is Artificial Lure with your Colorado River fishing report, coming to you like a neighbor leaning over the tailgate at the boat ramp.

    Up here in Colorado River country, winter has its claws in the valley. Expect below-freezing starts, a light breeze funneling down the canyon, and highs scraping just above freezing for a few mid‑day hours. Sunrise is right around seven and sunset about four‑thirty, so the real bite window is that late‑morning to early‑afternoon thaw.

    There’s no true tide on this stretch, just subtle changes in flow from upstream releases. Think “hydro‑tide”: flows ease overnight, then often bump a bit late morning to midday. Fish respond the same way they do to a moving tide line—best action when the river is nudging up or down rather than dead steady.

    Trout are the main players here now: browns, rainbows, and the occasional cuttbow. Activity is classic winter mode. Early hours, they’re glued to the bottom in the softer stuff: inside bends, deeper buckets, and tailouts with walking‑pace current. As the sun warms the surface, you’ll see a light midge trickle and a small window of more aggressive feeding between about 11 and 2.

    Recent catches have mostly been solid 12–16 inch rainbows with a smattering of thicker browns pushing 18–20 inches where there’s deeper structure and less pressure. Anglers running small nymph rigs have been quietly putting half‑dozen to dozen fish days together when they slow down and really work the seams. Numbers aren’t summer silly, but the quality is there if you grind.

    Best producers right now are subtle, winter‑style offerings:
    - Tiny natural nymphs (midge and mayfly imitations in the 18–22 range) under a small indicator.
    - Egg patterns and small worms as attractors when the water has a bit of color.
    - Streamers in olive, black, or brown, stripped slow and low in the deeper slots for those heavier browns.

    If you’re spin fishing, think small and natural:
    - 1/8 oz marabou or tube jigs in brown, olive, or white, crawled along the bottom.
    - Small in‑line spinners in silver or gold with a slow retrieve in the softer edges.
    - Bait where legal: nightcrawlers pinched in half and drifted just off bottom; salmon eggs or PowerBait on still pockets and eddies.

    Two local hot spots to target:
    - The state park section around Corn Lake: easier access, slower winter flows, and plenty of deeper runs that hold pods of trout.
    - The bends and deeper shelves just upstream of town access points, where the river tightens and then spills into longer tailouts—perfect winter holding water with less foot traffic.

    Fish slow, think small, and focus on that late‑morning warmup. Keep your hands dry, your line mended, and you’ll find a few willing mouths in every good run.

    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

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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    3 m
  • Colorado River Fishing Report for December 4th, 2025
    Dec 4 2025
    # Colorado River Fishing Report – December 4th, 2025

    Hey there, I'm Artificial Lure, and welcome to today's Colorado River fishing report. We're looking at a beautiful December morning here in Colorado, with sunrise hitting around 6:53 AM and sunset coming in at 5:52 PM, giving us just under 11 hours of daylight to work with.

    **Weather and Conditions**

    We've got some light snow lingering from yesterday's system, but conditions are clearing out as we head into the afternoon. The National Weather Service is calling for that snow to wrap up by sunset, with milder conditions expected as we push through the week. It's classic winter fishing weather, so bundle up.

    **Fish Activity and Recent Catches**

    The Colorado River near Las Vegas is actively producing stripers and bass right now despite the winter conditions. Anglers have been hitting fish consistently, and there's solid action happening across multiple sections of the river. Over on the San Juan River—another premium Colorado destination—December is actually proving to be one of the most overlooked gems in Western trout fishing, with hot and consistent action happening despite the colder mornings.

    **Best Lures and Tactics**

    For stripers and bass, you'll want to bring spinnerbaits—specifically something with a small gold Colorado blade paired with a larger silver willow blade in clearer water. Chartreuse patterns have also been working well early in the day. Jerkbaits are absolutely crushing it right now, and don't sleep on soft plastics in natural colors around structure.

    **Hot Spots**

    The lower Colorado River near the Las Vegas area is firing for stripers and bass. If you're willing to drive, the San Juan River down in New Mexico is absolutely deserving of your time this month—fewer crowds and better fishing than most expect.

    **Best Times**

    Your major bite windows are hitting early morning from 1:02 AM to 3:32 AM, with another strong push from 4:53 PM to 7:23 PM. Plan accordingly.

    Thanks for tuning in to today's report! Make sure you hit that subscribe button for daily updates on your favorite fisheries.

    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
  • Colorado River Winter Fishing Report: Patience and Precision for Late-Fall Trout
    Dec 3 2025
    # Colorado River Winter Fishing Report - December 3rd, 2025

    Hey folks, Artificial Lure here with your daily Colorado River fishing report.

    We're deep into early winter conditions now, and Mother Nature's really settling in. This morning we're looking at sunrise around 7:01 AM and sunset at 4:37 PM, so you're working with a tight window—get out early if you can.

    **Weather and Water Conditions**

    Winter's officially here. A significant winter storm system moved through yesterday into last night, with snow accumulating across the central mountains and I-25 corridor. Conditions remain unstable through Wednesday and into Thursday, so use extreme caution if you're heading up to higher elevations. Down on the Colorado River, flows are low and stable with ultra-clear water—classic late-fall conditions. This means visibility is excellent for sight fishing, but stealth is absolutely everything. The colder overnight temperatures have made mornings slow until midday sun hits the water and triggers activity.

    **Fish Activity and Recent Catches**

    The action this time of year is all about patience and precision. Most trout are holding tight in slower, deeper water—they're not roaming much. Midges are absolutely running the show right now, with occasional baetis popping when cloud cover hangs over the region. Flatiron Reservoir to the north has been slowing down, with anglers picking up fish on red and white spoons and Powerbait, but your best bets on moving water like the Colorado will be nymphing-focused.

    **Best Baits and Lures**

    This is midge season. Small is beautiful right now. Light tippet and small flies are essential—we're talking size 18-22 midges in black, gray, and olive. If you're throwing hardware, small spoons work, but honestly, the real magic this time of year is in the subsurface game. V&M jigs and vibrating jigs that mimic the natural forage have been producing elsewhere in Colorado's winter fisheries, so don't sleep on them for the Colorado.

    **Hot Spots**

    The Waterton Canyon stretch of the South Platte (just outside Denver) has been showing consistent midday midge activity along the shaded canyon walls where trout are tucked tight. If you're further upstream, focus on deeper mid-channel slots where the water provides refuge. The Dream Stream near the Cattle Guard Section is another solid option with excellent clarity for sight nymphing—wide flats and subtle troughs are holding quality fish right now.

    **Final Thoughts**

    Remember, stealth wins in December. Move slowly, watch for wakes, use light tippet, and don't expect explosive action. But if you're patient and precise, you'll absolutely get shots at quality trout.

    Thanks for tuning in to the Colorado River fishing report. Make sure you subscribe for daily updates, and remember to stay safe out there with this winter system moving through.

    This has been a quiet please production—for more, check out quiet please dot 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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    3 m
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