Autumn in Colorado means one thing — the browns are angry and the rainbows are hungry. The leaves turn gold, the crowds vanish, and the water clears up just enough for a fish to see your mistakes in 4K clarity.
Streamer season isn’t for everyone. It’s for the hopeful, the patient, and the slightly deranged — the ones who believe that somewhere beneath that undercut, a twenty-inch brown is waiting to ruin a perfectly good morning.
If that sounds like you, here are the best fall streamer patterns for Colorado and how to fish them when the big fish finally stop pretending to be polite.
Forget fancy articulated monsters — the Thin Mint is the working-class hero of streamer fishing. It’s simple, balanced, and it gets chewed on every major Colorado tailwater and freestone alike.
Why it works:
The combo of peacock herl, brown, and olive makes it look like everything a trout wants to eat — leech, sculpin, baby trout, or just a bad attitude.
Best water:
Arkansas River near Salida, Clear Creek Canyon, and any pocket water that holds depth and current seams.
How to fish it:
Short strips, tight to structure. Or better yet — swing it through riffles at the end of a drift and let it pulse naturally. When it stops? Set the hook like you mean it.
Tired of tiny flies and invisible eats? The Mini Dungeon is a smaller, more castable version of the Drunk and Disorderly — and it moves like it’s had too much caffeine.
Why it works:
It pushes water, triggers predatory instincts, and has that articulated swagger that browns can’t resist once the spawn turns their brain into mush.
Best water:
The Blue River below Green Mountain, the Roaring Fork, or any section of the South Platte with deep runs and ambush points.
How to fish it:
Strip fast and erratic near drop-offs. Add pauses mid-retrieve — that’s when most strikes happen. Use a sink-tip line if you’re fishing deeper runs or tailouts.
Some days, the big bugs scare them off. Enter the Mini Leech — the fly that gets it done when browns are sulking and rainbows are opportunistic.
Why it works:
It looks like an easy meal — small enough not to spook, big enough to make it worth biting. The micro movement of marabou in cold water is deadly.
Best water:
Dream Stream, Cheesman Canyon, and any tailwater with spooky trout that have seen every streamer in the catalog.
How to fish it:
Dead drift under an indicator or slow strip it along the bottom. Olive or black is the move — simple, clean, and deadly effective.
A flash of gold in the current, a strip, a pause — and suddenly, chaos. The Goldie is the loudmouth cousin of the Thin Mint, and sometimes, it’s exactly what a trout needs to lose composure.
Why it works:
It looks like a baby rainbow, moves like one too, and the flash is irresistible in off-colored or low-light conditions.
Best water:
The Gunnison, the Yampa, and lower stretches of the Arkansas.
How to fish it:
Fish it with confidence — quarter-downstream, strip once or twice, and let it hang. Big trout hit it out of jealousy more than hunger.
Every Colorado angler has a Sculpzilla in their box, even if they pretend they don’t fish “junk flies.” It’s the heavyweight champ for deep water and fast runs — the perfect choice when everything else feels too polite.
Why it works:
It’s heavy, it dives, and it looks like a real meal. Trout that won’t rise for a midge will still body-check this thing.
Best water:
Frying Pan below Ruedi, the Colorado near Glenwood, or the lower Blue River.
How to fish it:
Swing or strip it deep through pools and tailouts. A sink-tip helps, but confidence and persistence help more.
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