Time: 10:30AM – 4:00PM
Location: Eagle, CO to Gypsum, CO
Eagle River 05/19/2026 Photo Album
The Eagle River once again yielded a best of 2026 experience. This spring has produced several exceptionally fine days of fly fishing on the Eagle River, and Tuesday, May 19, 2026 was no exception. In fact, it was probably the best.
As I documented on this blog previously, I choose a couple dates each year to join my friend, Dave G,, on guided float trips in Colorado with guide Reed Ryan through Cutthroat Anglers. Tuesday was the first such outing, and what it day it was!
I stayed at Dave G.’s house on Monday night, and we drove to the Eagle fairgrounds on Tuesday morning to meet our guide. Reed tested a new shuttle methodology, as he unloaded the raft into the river at the launch ramp and left us by the boat, while he drove his SUV and trailer to the takeout. He scheduled an Uber, so after twenty minutes, an Uber driver arrived and unloaded Reed. I was surprised there were Ubers in Eagle, CO.
We launched and began fishing by 10:30AM. It was quite chilly at the outset, so I wore my fleece and light down, and Reed provided fingerless gloves. The gloves stayed on for a half hour or so, before they were removed. We shed one layer in the late morning, but clouds rolled in, and the wind kicked up in the early afternoon, and we pulled our jackets back on. The weather was actually quite ideal with an overcast sky and cool temperatures, and the wind was reasonable for most of the day.
I provided my Sage One five weight and Scott six weight for the outing. Reed rigged the five weight with a double dry set up that included a purple craze and a size 18 blue wing olive imitation. By the midday time frame we spotted a couple rises, so we gave the dry flies a test in a relatively wide pool section that looked ideal for dry flies. Dave G. generated a look, but otherwise the tactic was unsuccessful.
The workhorse set up for the day was the six weight rigged with a large royal chubby Chernobyl and trailing two Pat’s rubber legs. The top nymph was a medium olive color, and the bottom nymph was black. The fish loved the rubber legs. We tossed the ugly chenille bugs all day long, and we never suffered through a lull in action. I landed twenty-six gorgeous trout on the day, and a ridiculous number were in the fourteen to eighteen inch range. In my case, all but one were rainbow trout, and they were fresh and energetic and put up great battles.
Reed did his usual yeoman job of positioning the boat and keeping pace with the river to allow long drag free drifts. He expertly directed our casts, as we sought green water which indicated depth. The river was rolling along at close to 500 CFS and exhibited excellent clarity for the early stages of run off, assuming that the low snow pack will actually deliver snow melt. The places that produced trout were typically deeper than those that yielded at higher flows, when the fish are pushed closer to the banks.
What a day it was! I was dumbfounded by the willingness of the Eagle River trout to inhale the Pat’s rubber legs. Reed released most of the fish, but I noted that the trout that I released were grabbing the olive and black in roughly equal proportions, so that was likely the case overall. I plan to tie some of the medium olives (brown and yellow) and blacks for my own wade fishing adventures. The quality of these fish was unsurpassed. It seems that the Eagle River is going through a cycle of large healthy fish, and I was a beneficiary. Hopefully the trout are not adversely affected by the low flows anticipated from the low snow pack this summer.
Fish Landed: 26

The Launch Site
Large Royal Chubby
Brown-Yellow Pat’s Rubber Leg
Black Pat’s Rubber Legs
Fairly Typical Catch
Another Prize Rainbow
Edna Being Patient
Bringing Up the Rear
Nice Deep Run Near the Start
Looks Fishy
Fish Rose Just Above the Last Point on the Right
First Fish
One of Two
Home to a Trout
Productive Area
Amazing Girth
Tail Droop
Lots of Troughs in This Area
Another Model Rainbow
Promising
Workhorse Perdigon
Perfect Fish Home
Big Flipper
Pretty Fish
Found It 18 Days Later!
First Fish Landed
Caddis Eat in This Area
Rare Brook Trout from Clear Creek
Brook Trout Came from the Slick above the Whitewater Near the Far Bank
Some Heft to This One
Skated the Flies Under the Branches
Size 14 Olive-Brown Deer Hair Caddis
Starting Point
Salivating Over This Wide Riffle
Getting Larger
Many Fish Hung Out in Front of Large Boulders
Wide
Downstream Dangle Worked Here
Another Promising Area
Lots of Pockets to Explore
Just a Beauty
Rainbow Haven
Gorgeous Spot Pattern on This One
Site of First Fish
Respectable for Boulder Creek
Produced One Fish
Nice Deep Spot
The Pool Beckons
Decent Fish
Boulder Searching
Tail Sag
Along the Rock Wall
Hard Earned
Productive Spot
Quite a Start
Brown Trout Are Great As Well
Lovely Colors and Speckles
Slicks Behind Exposed Boulders
Gold, Bronze or Butter
Turned Around
Deep Color
Trough Between Exposed Rocks
Across the Turbulence
Smacked a Hippie Stomper
Another Rainbow Beast
Three Eats in This Location
Deep Olive