VOL. 14 · NO. 25 June 17, 2026 · Bozeman, MT LIVE · 6 RIVERS TRACKED · TOURNAMENTS THIS WEEK
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FISHINGExperience Montana’s Free Fishing Days This Father’s DayJun 17 FISHINGMastering Fly Selection: The Rock Method for Trout FishingJun 17 HUNTINGCan Arkansas Hunters Really Prepare for a Montana Spring Bear Hunt? Deadhaul…Jun 17 CONSERVATIONBeavers Rewilded 12,000 Montana Wetland Acres Better Than Anyone ExpectedJun 17 HUNTINGWildlife Policy Battle: Sportsmen Defend Hunting TraditionsJun 17
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Flathead Area Fishing Report: April 2026

Montana’s spring weather fluctuates wildly, slowing high-country snowmelt and benefiting fisheries. Local lakes are reliable for clear water fishing, while rivers like the Flathead shift to fishable conditions.

Montana’s spring weather has total commitment issues right now. One day you’re in a t-shirt, the next you’re shivering in the rain. This means the high-country snow is melting in fits and starts. The good news? That heavy winter snowpack means plenty of cold, healthy water for later this summer. The current news? Lakes and tailwaters are your safest bet, but the rivers aren’t totally out of the game.

Here’s a summary of what Montana Fishing Guides reported as of May 20, 2026:

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Flathead River: The “Do It Now” Window

  • The Feel: Dropping and clearing up.
  • The Situation: It was a raging torrent a few days ago, but the recent cold front hit the brakes on the snowmelt. It’s dropped from a scary 31k CFS down to a manageable 19.5k CFS. The water is transitioning from “chocolate milk” to a beautiful, fishable “guide green.”
  • The Play: Go right now before it warms up and melts more snow. Fish the slow, soft edges and inside bends. Go big and ugly—think dark nymphs or flashy streamers.

Kalispell Stillwater: The Safe Bet

  • The Feel: Technical but highly productive.
  • The Situation: Lakes are the smartest pivot right now, but the fish are playing hard to get based on the weather.
  • The Play: * The Drop-Off: Fish the steep edges where shallow water plunges into the deep. Trout use this as a highway to feed and hide.
    • The “Creep”: Put away the aggressive strips. Retrieve your fly at a agonizingly slow, figure-eight crawl. Just let the fly “breathe.”
    • The Snobs: If you see fish swirling but not breaking the surface, they’re eating bugs trapped just under the surface film. Use an unweighted emerger pattern on a long leader.

Missouri River: The Subsurface Grind

Stay Ready: The second the sun pops back out and warms the canyon, the bugs will hatch and the surface action will explode. Keep that dry-fly rod rigged and ready in the truck.

The Feel: Steady, but the party moved downstairs.

The Situation: Flows are great (3,230 CFS), but the cold front paused the epic dry-fly action. The fish aren’t fasting; they’ve just dropped deeper to stay comfortable.

The Play: * Go Deep: Ditch the dry flies for now and fish deep slots and slow water. Run a worm or caddis pupa lead with a small mayfly dropper.

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The New Menu: Pale Morning Duns (PMDs) are starting to show up. The fish are gorging on the nymphs subsurface, so add a PMD pattern (like a Split Case or Frenchie) to your rig.


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