Colorado River Colorado Fishing Report Today

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! For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/ Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXk This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

  1. 5h ago

    Upper Colorado Early Summer: Nymphs, Streamers, and High Water Edges

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Colorado River fishing report for the upper Colorado in Colorado, from around Glenwood Springs up through Dotsero and down toward Rifle. We’re on a steady early‑summer pattern. No tides here, of course, but the river is running a little high and off‑color from snowmelt and recent storms, though it’s dropping and clearing a bit day by day. Flow this time of year typically runs strong, so wade carefully and work the softer edges and inside bends. Weather today is classic mountain mix: cool morning in the 40s climbing into the 70s by afternoon, with a light west breeze and a chance of a brief shower or rumble of thunder late. Sunrise comes just after 5:30 a.m., sunset around 8:40 p.m., so you’ve got a long window, but the best bite is early and late when the light is low and temps are mild. Trout activity has been solid. On this stretch you’re looking at browns, rainbows, and a few cutbows. Local shop chatter and recent angler reports put half‑day numbers for competent fly anglers in the 8–15 fish range, with a handful of nicer 16–20 inch browns showing up in the deeper seams. Spin anglers drifting hardware are seeing fewer fish but some heavier ones, especially in the lower, slightly warmer reaches closer to Rifle. Mornings have been a nymph and streamer game. With the river still pushing, big stuff is working: stonefly nymphs, worms, and flashy attractor nymphs under an indicator or tight‑lined along the edges. A size 6–10 Pat’s Rubber Legs, squirmy worm, or a flashy size 14–18 perdigon or jig nymph will do work. As the day warms, expect some caddis and smaller mayfly activity; keep a tan or olive caddis dry and a parachute Adams ready if you see noses in the softer water. For hardware, think “grab their attention.” Gold or copper spinners, small spoons in silver/blue or gold/black, and 2–3 inch minnow plugs in natural trout or rainbow patterns are all good calls. In the slightly stained water, brighter blades and a bit of chartreuse can make a difference. Spin guys floating between Glenwood and New Castle have been picking off solid browns slow‑rolling spinners tight to the bank. If you’re bait fishing where it’s legal, nightcrawlers drifted just off bottom in the softer seams are tough to beat right now. Salmon eggs and a bit of shrimp‑scented corn can also draw strikes, especially lower down where you might tangle with whitefish or the occasional warmwater visitor in slower side channels and backwaters. A couple of hot spots to circle: First, the Colorado through Glenwood Springs, especially the runs just downstream of the confluence with the Roaring Fork. That mixing zone and the next mile or two down hold good numbers of trout right now, with plenty of softer bank water to pick apart. Second, the stretch around New Castle down toward Silt. Slightly warmer, good structure, and excellent for floating; browns have been coming out of the mid‑river boulder gardens and deep bends on nymphs and smaller streamers. Focus on inside bends, foam lines, and any soft pocket behind rocks. Don’t waste time in the heavy mid‑river push. Short, accurate casts with good mends are more important than distance. That’s the word from the water. 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

    4 min
  2. 1d ago

    Colorado River Trout & Bass: Dawn Bite Patterns and Summer Lure Strategy

    Good morning, anglers—**Artificial Lure** here with your local-style fishing report for the Colorado River in Colorado. I can’t verify live tides for this inland river, but river flows, current weather, and recent bite trends are the big pieces to watch today. For **weather**, expect early-morning conditions to favor a light bite window, with water usually coolest at dawn and again near dusk. If the day warms up under clear skies, the trout often slide into softer seams, shaded banks, and deeper pockets; if clouds and a little breeze hold, the feed can stay active longer through the morning. For **sunrise and sunset**, plan your best water time around first light and the last hour before dark. In Colorado summer conditions, those edges of the day are typically the most productive for trout and smallmouth, especially when insect activity starts picking up. On **fish activity**, the Colorado River system is usually dominated by **rainbow trout, brown trout, and some smallmouth bass** depending on the stretch. Recent local pattern talk on this kind of water points to trout feeding on drifting insects, small nymphs, and tiny streamers, while bass key on craw-style profiles, minnows, and crankbait shapes near structure. As for **recent catch numbers**, I don’t have verified live reports for today, so I won’t make up counts. What I can say is that when the river is fishing well, anglers commonly connect with a mix of trout in the runs and pockets, plus the occasional heavier brown or hard-fighting smallmouth where the water slows and warms. For **best lures**, I’d keep it simple: - **Small inline spinners** in silver, gold, or black for riffles and pocket water - **Jigged streamers** in olive, white, or sculpin colors for deeper runs - **Plastics** like tiny craws or minnow imitations for bassy stretches and eddies - **Beadhead nymphs** under an indicator if you’re fishing fly tackle For **best bait**, the old reliables still work: - **Nightcrawlers** - **Salmon eggs** - **PowerBait** for stocked trout water - **Small live minnows or crayfish-style offerings** where legal and appropriate for bass A couple of **hot spots** to check today: - **Tailwater runs below dams and diversion structures**, where oxygen and flow keep fish stacked - **Deep bends, undercut banks, and seam lines near riffle transitions**, especially in the morning shade If you’re reading the river right, fish the slower water first, then work the current breaks and drop-offs as the sun gets higher. Keep presentations natural and don’t overwork the water; on the Colorado, a clean drift or a slow wobble usually beats a noisy cast. Thanks for tuning in, and be sure to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    3 min
  3. 2d ago

    Colorado River Early Summer: Browns, Smallmouth, and Long Light Windows

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Colorado River fishing report for western Colorado. We’re sitting on a cool, clear early‑summer pattern. Overnight lows are in the 40s and 50s in the high country, warming into the 70s and low 80s this afternoon with mostly sunny skies and just a light breeze in the canyons. Flows are still a bit up and off‑color from snowmelt, but they’re dropping and clearing day by day. Sunrise hit just after 5:30 a.m. local, with sunset around 8:35 p.m., so you’ve got a long fishing window to play the light. No tides here in the interior, so water temperature and flow are your “tides.” Mornings are running cool in the upper 50s to low 60s on many stretches; by late afternoon expect mid‑60s and a more active bite. That cooler first light is prime time for trout and smallmouth, while the warming afternoons wake up the warm‑water species in the slower eddies and backwaters. Reports up and down the Colorado between Glenwood Springs and Debeque have been solid. Local anglers have been bringing in good numbers of **brown trout** in the 12–17 inch range, with a few chunky fish clearing 18. Rainbows are showing in pockets, mostly 10–14 inches, especially near cold inlets and where feeder creeks dump in. Below the big eddies closer to Rifle and Debeque, folks are seeing more **smallmouth bass**, plenty of 10–13 inch fish and an occasional 15‑inch bronzeback. Rough fish—white suckers and the odd carp—are thick in the softer seams if you’re looking for tug over table fare. Fish activity has followed a predictable curve: best from first light to mid‑morning, a bit of a lull under the high sun, then another window from about 6 p.m. to dark. Midday, look deep and tight to structure; low light, think shallower and closer to the banks and foam lines. For lures, it’s been hard to beat: - Small **gold or copper inline spinners** and 1/8‑oz **panther‑style spoons** for trout in the faster runs. - **Suspending jerkbaits** in shad or brown trout colors and 3–4 inch **soft‑plastic swimbaits** on 1/8–1/4 oz heads for the smallmouth in the slower runs and pocket water. - Tiny **crankbaits** that dig 3–6 feet are doing damage along rocky shelves. If you’re bait‑soaking, try: - Nightcrawlers on a small octopus hook, just enough split shot to tick bottom in the seams. - Salmon eggs or dough baits in the deeper pools for stocker bows if you find a recent plant. On the fly side, local patterns that are working include: - **Stonefly nymphs** and **hare’s ear** under an indicator, plus **woolly buggers** swung through the tailouts. - In the evenings, small **caddis dries** and **parachute mayflies** in 14–18 when you see noses poking up. A couple of hot spots to circle: - **Glenwood Springs stretch**: From the Two Rivers area downstream, work the big seams where the Colorado and Roaring Fork water blend. Hit it early; browns stack along the first deep banks and behind boulders. - **Rifle to Debeque canyon water**: Put‑ins around Rifle and float or walk‑in where you can. Target mid‑river rock gardens and side channels for smallmouth, and the deeper bends for browns hugging the bottom. Water is still powerful, so wade cautiously and use a belt and staff. Keep an eye out for afternoon thunderstorms that can color things up in a hurry. That’s the Colorado River scoop from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more local fishing talk. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    4 min
  4. 3d ago

    Colorado River Fishing Report: Spring Clarity and Rising Trout Action in Western Colorado

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Colorado River fishing report for western Colorado. We’ll start with conditions. The Colorado River isn’t tidal up here, so no tide swings to worry about, just **river flow and clarity**. Flows are running a bit on the high side but dropping and clearing after recent runoff, leaving 1–3 feet of visibility on many stretches. Water temps are mostly in the **mid‑50s to low 60s**, warmer in the afternoons, which is waking the fish up nicely. Weather along the corridor from Glenwood Springs down past Rifle is seasonable: cool mornings, warming quickly into a mild, sunny afternoon with only a slight chance of an isolated storm late day. Light winds early, bumping up to a breeze by midafternoon. Sunrise came early over the canyon walls and sunset will tuck behind the hills fairly late, giving a long window of low‑light fishing at both ends of the day. Fish activity has been **best at first light and last light**, with a slower window across the bright mid‑day except in deeper runs and under cut banks. Trout are sliding into the softer seams and inside edges, while smallmouth bass are tightening up to structure and rock gardens as the sun climbs. Recent catches on the Colorado have been solid. Local reports from shops in Glenwood and Rifle mention **good numbers of rainbows and browns** in the 12–16 inch class, with the occasional 18–20 inch fish showing for anglers who work the deeper slots with nymphs and streamers. Smallmouth bass action has been picking up too, with pods of fish in the 10–14 inch range and a few heavier bronzebacks mixed in around slower eddies and rocky points. For the trout crowd, the most consistent producers have been: - **Nymphs:** bead‑head pheasant tails, caddis pupa, and small mayfly patterns in size 14–18, run under an indicator with enough weight to tick the bottom. - **Dries:** late‑day caddis and small mayflies when the bugs pop, with elk‑hair caddis and parachute variations getting eats in the softer foam lines. - **Streamers:** olive or black buggers, sculpin patterns, and smaller articulated streamers stripped tight along the banks during low light. If you’re throwing conventional gear, **small inline spinners, 1/8‑ounce marabou jigs, and slim minnow‑style plugs** in natural browns and olives are producing rainbows and browns in the deeper runs and tailouts. Keep your retrieve moderate with a few pauses; most strikes are coming as the lure swings or hesitates. For smallmouth, focus on: - **Soft plastics:** 3–4 inch green pumpkin tubes, grubs, or ned‑style baits fished slowly along the bottom. - **Crankbaits and small swimbaits:** in crawdad and shad patterns bumped across rock piles and ledges. - **Live bait where legal:** nightcrawlers and leeches drifted just off the bottom are still tough to beat. Couple of **hot spots** to put on your list: - The **Glenwood Springs stretch** where the Roaring Fork joins the Colorado: that confluence area and the first mile or so downstream has been a steady producer for trout, especially in the softer seams on the Colorado side. - The **Rifle area**, both above and just below town: look for deeper bends, inside corners, and mid‑river boulders for a mixed bag of browns, rainbows, and smallmouth, especially in the later afternoon as shadows hit the water. Best windows today: crack of dawn until mid‑morning, then again from early evening through dusk. Mid‑day, go deeper, go smaller, and don’t be afraid to slow everything down. That’s your Colorado River rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a 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

    4 min
  5. 4d ago

    Early Summer on the Upper Colorado: Blues, Caddis, and Twenty-Inch Browns

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Colorado River fishing report for central Colorado. We’re rolling into a classic early‑summer pattern on the upper Colorado: cool nights, mild afternoons, and clear to partly cloudy skies. Daytime highs are running in the low to mid‑70s, with overnight lows in the 40s. Light winds in the morning, picking up to 10–15 mph by mid‑afternoon, so the best bite is early and late. No tides to worry about on this inland stretch, just river flow: expect moderately high, slightly off‑color water from snowmelt, but dropping and clearing a little more each day. First light is creeping in just after 5:30 a.m., with sunrise shortly after that and sunset around 8:30 p.m. That gives you a long window, but the prime activity is the first three hours of daylight and the last two before dark. Midday has been slower, especially on bright, cloudless afternoons. Fish activity has been solid. Anglers from Pump House down through Radium and into the State Bridge reach report good numbers of browns with a mix of rainbows. Recent trips have put a couple dozen fish to the net on float days, with wade anglers seeing 6–12 quality hookups if they stay mobile. Average trout are running 12–16 inches, with enough 18–20 inch browns showing to keep things interesting. A few mountain whitefish are still mixing in on deeper nymph runs. On the bug front, we’re in the heart of the transition: - Blue‑winged olives still hanging on during cloudy spells. - Caddis popping in the evenings. - Stonefly and PMD nymphs are a big ticket sub‑surface. Best setups right now: Lures: - Small **gold or copper inline spinners** for spinning‑gear folks, especially in the softer seams below riffles. - **1/8 oz marabou jigs** in olive, black, or brown bounced along the bottom in deeper runs. - **Small crankbaits** in natural trout or baitfish patterns through deeper slots at dawn and dusk. Flies and bait: - Nymph rigs with a **stonefly nymph** (coffee/black) trailed by a **pheasant tail, hare’s ear, or RS2** in smaller sizes. - Evening **elk hair caddis** or **X‑caddis** in tan/olive skated tight to the banks. - Where legal and appropriate, **nightcrawlers** drifted under a small float in slower eddies and tailouts are putting kids and beginners onto fish consistently. Two local hot spots to keep on your radar: - **Pump House to Radium float**: Classic fast‑to‑moderate water, lots of structure, and steady trout numbers. Focus on inside bends and any softer seam behind boulders; work them thoroughly with nymph rigs or small spinners. - **State Bridge area**: Mix of pocket water and deep runs that fishes well on foot. Slide in early, hit the shaded banks with caddis dries or small streamers, then switch to nymphs once the sun gets higher. Water clarity is sitting in that sweet “two to three feet of visibility” zone: enough stain to let you get close, but clear enough for sighty fishing in the shallows. Downsize tippet in the glassy pockets—4X to 5X—especially if the sun is high and the wind lays down. If you’re planning a trip, think stealth: long casts, light footsteps, and keep your shadow off the water. Work from the bottom of a run up, covering each lane before you move on. The folks who slow down and pick apart good holding water are out‑fishing the bank‑pounders by a wide margin. That’s your Colorado River rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a 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

    4 min
  6. 5d ago

    Colorado River High Country: Low 50s, Blue Wings, and Evening Glory

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Colorado River fishing report for the upper Colorado in Colorado, from roughly Glenwood Springs up through Parshall and the Kremmling stretch. No tides to worry about here in the high country, but flows and weather matter just as much. Upstream release patterns have the river running a little high but clear enough to fish, with visibility in that 2–3 foot range on many sections. Overnight temps slipped into the 40s and we’re headed for a mild, mostly sunny day with light winds and a small chance of an afternoon thunderstorm. Sunrise comes early over the canyon walls and sunset stretches long; the key is that first cool, calm light and the last hour before dark. Water temps are sliding into the low to mid‑50s on many reaches, and that’s got trout feeding steady. Expect mid‑morning blue‑winged olive and midges, with caddis and yellow sallies building as the day warms. Fish activity has been best from about 8–11 a.m. and again from 6 p.m. to dark. Mid‑day, with bright sun, they’re tucking tight to structure and deeper seams. Local chatter up and down the river has browns and rainbows in the 12–16 inch class caught consistently, with a few pushing 18–20 inches for the patient folks working the deeper runs. Anglers swinging streamers near soft edges have picked up the heavier browns, while nymph rigs under an indicator are putting decent numbers in the net for float and wade anglers alike. For lures, bring your confidence box: – Small to medium **streamers** in olive, black, and white, especially slimmer baitfish patterns and sculpin imitations. – **Spinners** in gold or copper, size 1–3, have been solid in slightly off‑color pockets and tailouts. – **Jigs** or marabou jigs in brown and olive, bounced through slower buckets, can be deadly. If you’re fishing bait where it’s legal, think natural and subtle: – Drifted **nightcrawlers** pinched in half in the deeper holes. – Small **salmon eggs** or egg imitations on light line. – For warm side channels and backwaters that hold a few small bass and other rough fish, small **pieces of shrimp or worms** under a float will do the trick. Couple of hot spots to keep on your radar: – **Pumphouse to Radium**: Classic float water with plenty of shelves, buckets, and riffle‑run combinations. Focus on inside bends and the softer seams off the main current, especially early and late. – **Parshall area**: That public water around the bridge and downstream fishes great for waders. Work the deeper slots and structure, and don’t overlook the skinny riffles; there are more fish in that ankle‑to‑knee‑deep stuff than most folks think. If you’re out in the middle of the day, run a longer leader and smaller flies or downsized hardware. Early and late, you can bump up a size and move fish that are chasing. Keep an eye on afternoon clouds—if a storm pushes in and the light drops, streamer time can get very good, very fast. That’s the word from the Colorado River today. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never 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

    3 min
  7. 6d ago

    Upper Colorado High Water Report: Browns and Rainbows Biting Early and Late

    This is Artificial Lure with your Colorado River fishing report for the upper Colorado around Kremmling, Dotsero, and Glenwood Springs. First off, no tides to worry about here – this is all river flow. Flows on the upper Colorado are running a bit high but very fishable, with decent clarity in the mornings before afternoon runoff colors things up. Expect cooler, clearer water early, then a little stain and rising levels as the day warms and snowmelt kicks in. Weather-wise, plan on a classic Colorado mix: cool mornings in the 40s to low 50s, climbing into the 70s by afternoon with a chance of wind gusts and a stray storm building over the high country late day. Light cloud cover can push the bite later into the morning; bright sun will tighten fish up to structure and deeper seams. Sunrise is right around 5:30 a.m., with sunset near 8:30 p.m. That gives a long window, but the **prime bite** has been first light to late morning, then again the last two hours of daylight. Midday is tougher, especially on the clear stretches. Fish activity has been solid. Recent reports from local guides along the Colorado between Pumphouse and State Bridge mention good numbers of **brown trout** with a mix of healthy **rainbows**, plus the occasional **whitefish**. Down closer to Glenwood Springs, anglers have been picking up browns and rainbows along with some **smallmouth bass** in the slower, rocky edges where the river widens and warms. Numbers-wise, competent drift-boat crews have been putting a dozen to twenty trout in the net on half-day floats when flows and clarity line up, with a few better fish in the 16–19 inch class. Wading anglers are doing best by cherry-picking prime seams and soft edges rather than trying to cover miles of bank. As for what’s working: Best artificial “lures” and flies: - For trout, think **nymph rigs and streamers** early: small stonefly nymphs, mayfly nymphs in olive and brown, and caddis patterns under an indicator or tight-line rig. - Streamers in olive, black, or sculpin colors swung through deeper buckets and against cutbanks have moved bigger browns, especially under overcast skies. - On spin gear, small **Rapalas**, **Panther Martins**, and **Mepps** in gold or copper have been consistent producers in the broken water below riffles. Best bait where legal: - **Nightcrawlers** drifted naturally through seams are deadly when the water’s a bit off-color. - **Salmon eggs** and small **crayfish-imitating soft plastics** can also score, especially around rocky structure and drop-offs. Always check local regulations before using bait; some stretches are artificial-only or flies-and-lures only. Two hotspot suggestions: 1. **Pumphouse to Radium stretch** Classic upper Colorado float water. Look for browns tucked tight to undercut banks and in the soft inside seams below rapids. Hit it early before the sun gets high and the recreational traffic builds. Waders can work the access near Pumphouse and Radium, focusing on the tailouts and the first deep slot below each riffle. 2. **Glenwood Springs area** Where the Colorado meets the Roaring Fork, you get a nice mix of food and temperatures. Fish the confluence seams, eddies below the bridge pilings, and any shaded banks in the evening. Here you can find trout and some bonus smallmouth; try a small swimbait or tube jig along the rocks for the bass and nymphs or small spinners for the trout. Overall, think early and late, fish the soft water next to the heavy stuff, and adjust from nymphs to streamers as the light and clarity change. Keep an eye on rising afternoon flows and any fast-building weather rolling off the peaks. 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

    4 min
  8. Jun 8

    Colorado River Early Summer: Browns Biting Hard in Glenwood Canyon

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Colorado River report for western Colorado. We’re under a cool, clear early‑summer pattern this morning. Up around the Glenwood Springs stretch you’re looking at dawn temps in the low 50s, climbing into the upper 70s to low 80s this afternoon with mostly sunny skies and light winds. A weak front brushed by yesterday, so flows are on the drop and clarity is improving—still a touch of stain from snowmelt, but very fishable. Sunrise hit a little after 5:30 a.m. and you’ll lose the light a bit after 8:30 p.m., so you’ve got long low‑light windows to work. No tides to worry about on this inland river, but flows are the name of the game. On the Colorado around Kremmling down through Glenwood, recent gauge readings from state water data show moderate but receding runoff—banks still full, mid‑river fast, with softer inside seams and flooded edges that are holding fish. Trout activity has been strong at first light and again in the last two hours of the day. Midday slows under the bright sun, but that stained water is keeping fish a little braver than they’d be in true gin‑clear conditions. Reports from local fly shops along the I‑70 corridor mention solid numbers of browns with a mix of rainbows, most fish running 12–16 inches, with the occasional 18‑ to 20‑inch brown coming out of the deeper runs and canyon slots. Best producers right now: - For gear anglers, small **gold or copper spoons**, 1/8‑ to 1/4‑ounce, and **brown or rainbow‑patterned jerkbaits** run along the seams. - Soft plastics like 3‑inch **natural tube jigs** or **olive paddle tails** on 1/8‑ounce heads bounced close to the bottom in softer lanes. - For bait, **nightcrawlers** drifted with just enough weight to tick bottom are still money, and **salmon eggs** or **single‑egg imitations** do well where allowed by regs. Fly guys are doing well on **stonefly nymphs**, larger **pheasant tails**, and **worms** under an indicator in the morning, then switching to **caddis** and **mayfly emergers** as things warm. With the lingering color in the water, a bit of flash or a hot spot on the fly is helping. A few smallmouth bass have been reported in the lower, warmer stretches closer to the Utah line. Think slower pockets, back eddies, and rock gardens. For those bronzebacks, throw **green pumpkin tubes**, **craw‑style plastics**, or a small **chartreuse spinnerbait** when the sun’s high. Couple of hot spots to circle today: - **Glenwood Canyon**: Focus on the pull‑outs and trail access areas where you can reach those deep canyon runs and inside bends. The mix of depth and broken current is holding better‑than‑average browns. - **New Castle to Silt**: Slightly warmer, a bit more stain, and great structure—cutbanks, islands, and side channels. Good numbers of cookie‑cutter browns with a chance at a nicer fish swinging hardware at dusk. Work early and late, keep an eye on changing flows, and don’t be afraid to upsize your offerings a bit in that off‑color water. 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

    3 min

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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! For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/ Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXk This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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