Time: 10:30AM – 3:30PM
Location: Between Wolcott and Avon
Eagle River 05/08/2026 Photo Album
The euphoria still lingers, as I prepare to log my outing on the Eagle River on May 8, 2026. I was anxious to return after a superb day on 04/20/2026, and Friday became that day, and what a day it was! An appointment on Monday prevented me from making a fishing trip, and adverse weather on Tuesday and Wednesday inhibited thoughts of fly fishing. Thursday was our day to watch the grandsons, so that left Friday. My daughter was visiting from Carbondale, and I was torn between spending time with her or fly fishing. Her visit extended into Saturday, so I opted for the trip to the Eagle River.
When I checked the flows, they were holding around 200 CFS, so the area was probably not affected by the same amount of snow that we received in Denver on Tuesday and Wednesday. The high temperature was projected to peak in the low sixties, so I deemed conditions perfect for a spring outing on the Eagle River.
As I have noted many times in this blog, expecting a repeat from a prior visit was unrealistic; but those thoughts were admittedly in my head. I arrived at my designated parking pullout by 10:00AM, and after my usual preparation and a short hike to the river, I was prepared to launch my fly fishing day. The temperature was in the upper fifties, so I pulled on my fleece hoodie and raincoat, and these layers served me well until lunch time, when I removed the raincoat and stuffed it in my backpack. In order to battle larger than average fish, I chose my stout Sage One five weight.
To begin the day I rigged my line with a three fly dry dropper. My choice for the surface fly was an amber ice dub chubby Chernobyl, and below it I strung a 20 incher and an olive perdigon. My approach never deviated from these three flies and the dry/dropper methodology over the course of my day on the river, which evolved into 4.5 hours.
Between 10:30AM and noon I advanced up the river for .1 mile and passed through some moderate riffles and glides, where the river widened quite a bit. I was somewhat skeptical about this structure, but I landed six trout in the morning session. Two of the fish were beneath twelve inches, but four were substantial fish, that I was proud to guide into my net. The best was a slab of a rainbow that probably approached twenty inches, but its weight and girth were more notable than length. A sixteen inch brown was also part of the morning net haul.
As I advanced up the river, I noticed another angler eighty yards above me, and by noon three other fishermen joined him. I decided to continue up the river to within forty yards of them after lunch, but before I could enact this plan, they departed.
After lunch I resumed my prospecting, but when I came within forty yards of the area occupied by the fly fishing party that recently departed, I exited the river and walked along the path, until I was above the area they disturbed. At least I thought I was, although I never tracked the three other anglers that were not with the individual that was first evident.
My concerns about disturbed water were overwrought, as the pace of action accelerated from the morning. From 12:30PM until 3:30PM I advanced up the river and tossed my dry/dropper in all the likely fish holding structures. During this window of time I observed a number of small blue wing olives but also some gray mayflies that were a bit larger than the tiny BWO’s. I estimate that they were size sixteen. I never saw a single rise, but the trout were quite active on my underwater offerings.
I elevated the fish count from six at lunch to twenty-five by the end of the day. Five of the landed trout consumed the 20 incher, and the remainder grabbed the olive perdigon. What a workhorse fly! The simple green thread body fly with a copper tungsten bead gets my nymphs in the feeding zone quickly, and the fish loved it.
A very effective technique was to swing the flies near the end of the drift, particularly after an across river cast through a glide or run of moderate velocity. The trout aggressively grabbed the perdigon, as it began to lift and swing at the tail of the run. I also caught trout with upstream casts, but the across and down was probably the most productive. I probably had another five to ten very brief connections, when the trout grabbed and spit the flies on numerous occasions.
What about the quality of these fish? That is what created my euphoria. I already documented the size of the netted fish prior to lunch. The trend continued in the afternoon with numerous trout in the thirteen to sixteen inch range. On the day I estimate that only six out of twenty-five landed fish were beneath the twelve inch threshold. The quality of fish mirrored my 04/20/2026 outing on the Eagle River.
Several outings ago I lost the rubber knob on the end of my homemade wading staff. It was attached with a wood screw, and the screw apparently worked its way loose. I did not realize the loss, until I returned to the car at the end of the day. Toward the end of the day on Friday I was wading along the bank to approach a new position for a cast. I glanced down to safely place my wading boot on a solid spot, and I saw what appeared to be the rubber knob from my wading staff. I attempted to stab it to bring it to the surface, but it was solidly wedged between two rocks. I rolled up my left sleeve, reached down and retrieved the object, and sure enough, it was my lost rubber knob. It still had the wood screw in it. What are the chances of this happening?
Will I return before the run off kicks in for good? I checked the flows today, and they increased from 200 CFS to 250 CFS. There is clearly a run off hump in the river flow graph. The outlook will depend on air temperatures over the next week, but I am certainly on the lookout for another fabulous day on the Eagle River.
Fish Landed: 25

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
No. 1 Was This Pleasant Surprise
Decent Clarity Although Somewhat Stained
Peek-a-Boo
Murkiness Evident in This Productive Pool
Nesting Mama Goose
Another Bow in Excess of Fifteen Inches
Rainbow Lived Eight Feet Out from Center-Right Bankside Rock
From the Top
Ugly 20 Incher Saved the Day
Only Fish of the Day from This Area
Nice Brown Trout
Upstream
First Fish of the Day
Another View of My Favorite Pool
Handful
Home to a Lot of Fish
Take Two
Wide Pocket Yielded
Whoa! What a Start!
Slick Produced
Zoomed
Better Sense of Width
Home of Brute Rainbow
The Large Pool
Perfect
Swirling Area Behind Exposed Rock Produced