Artificial Lure here—fresh off the water and bringing you the latest fishing report for the Yellowstone River in Montana on this chilly Saturday, October 18, 2025.
Sunrise hit at 7:36 a.m. and sunset will bring the colors down at 6:33 p.m. out here, with daytime highs right around the mid-40s. We’ve got that classic autumn mix: cold mornings, mild afternoons, and a low chance of scattered rain—just enough cloud cover to kick off some reliable Blue Winged Olive hatches. Water temps are crashing, and that’s got the fish hungry and on the move according to Montanaoutdoor.com and Montana Angler’s recent reports.
Yellowstone’s flows are solid (667 cfs below the lake outlet), clear, and dropping into prime shape after last week’s rain and flurries. There’s no tidal activity—Yellowstone being a mountain river, but water levels are holding steady and cooling down.
The main activity: **Trout are fired up!** Browns, rainbows, and cutthroat are all in the mix. Big browns are sneaking towards the spawn and are getting aggressive. Fish are moving out of the skinny water and packing into transition areas—those riffle/run seams and foam eddies. Guide reports from North Fork Anglers and Montana Angler say dry droppers and nymph rigs are producing fish all day; streamer fishing is just starting to heat up, especially with overcast skies.
Recent catches:
- Browns landed pushing 24 inches in spots, especially near Livingston and Paradise Valley.
- Rainbows and cutthroat showing up with steady action from Gardiner down through Emigrant.
- Anglers are seeing decent numbers—average counts are about 10-20 fish/day if conditions hold and pressure stays light.
Best flies and lures:
- Surface action: Hoppers, ants, and beetles are still catching, but swing to **BWO dries, Elk Hair Caddis, and Rusty Spinners** as those fall hatches come off.
- Nymphs: Beadhead Pheasant Tails, Princes, Pat’s Rubberlegs, Firebead Sow Bugs, and Lucent Perdigons are money right now.
- Streamers: Sculpzillas, Mini Dungeons, and Slump Busters in black, olive, or brown. Fish are chasing streamers when the clouds roll in or as the sun drops.
Go-to bait: For bait anglers—worms are effective, but most action is still on the fly. If you’re swinging hardware, bright spoons or jerk baits will move trout in deeper runs where the big ones are stacking up.
Hot spots:
- **Pine Creek down to Carter’s Bridge**: Consistent with both dries and nymphs—transition water is loaded.
- **Paradise Valley spring creeks** (DePuy’s, Nelson’s, Armstrong’s): Lower pressure, technical dry fly action, and chunky browns.
- **Near Gardiner and Yankee Jim Canyon**: Recent reports say streamer anglers are hitting migratory browns gearing up to cut upstream.
Tips: Fish are less likely in fast riffles now—target softer water and seam lines. Afternoon is the sweet spot; early mornings are cold and slow, but once the sun hits and water warms, activity jumps.
Safety note: Pack your bear spray and stay alert—fall is big critter season, especially along the river corridors near the park. Montanaoutdoor.com reminds all anglers to be aware as grizzlies move along these drainages.
Thanks for tuning in, anglers! Be sure to subscribe for weekly, boots-on-the-ground fishing reports. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.
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