Skip to content
Home » News » Great Smoky Mountains Fly February 18, 2024

Great Smoky Mountains Fly February 18, 2024

Sorry for the missed reports. Angie’s mother, Pat, died a couple of days ago. She was in intensive care in the hospital for over three weeks twice as she was fighting squamous cell cancer again, double pneumonia, and other lung related illnesses. She has lived with us and kept us company for the past fifteen years or so. She has helped out as a backup on answering the telephone at times and other things for Perfect Fly for the past several years as well as helping us out in many other ways. We will miss her. The streams are all flowing at a normal level with clear water in good shape. We received two good reports from Perfect Fly customers fishing yesterday. The cold spell is over for a while and the forecast is showing warm temperatures for the next few days. It is getting very close to the time major hatches will begin to take place such as Blue Quills, Quill Gordons, little Black Caddis and other insects. In general, they start when the water temperature reaches seventy degrees for three or four days in a row. That usually happens close to the first of March. Now is the time for you to stock up on Perfect Flies to cover the coming hatches. Daily high temperatures are forecast to range from 48 degrees today, increasing each day to the mid sixties during the next five days.

Check out our sister websites: www.flyfishingyellowstonenationalpark.com & www.perfectflystore.com

Smoky Mountain Stream Conditions:
The streams with links that have nearby USGS Station Real-time stream data: Click the links to see updates:

Little River:  Rate 338 cfs at 2.36 ft
(Good wading up to 239 cfs and with extra caution up to 300 cfs)

West Prong Little Pigeon River (Gatlinburg): Rate 107 cfs at 3.48 ft

Oconaluftee River:  Rate 614 cfs at 2.12 ft, (Good wading up to 550 cfs and with extra
caution up to 850 cfs)

Cataloochee Creek: Rate 125 cfs at 2.75 ft. (Good wading up to 200 cfs with extra caution up to 250 cfs.

Hazel Creek and the other larger NC streams flowing into Fontana Lake:
The streams are all flowing at a normal level.

Weather Forecast: (click the boxes below for more detailed weather information)

https://forecast7.com/en/35d71n83d51/gatlinburg/?unit=us

https://forecast7.com/en/35d48n83d32/cherokee/?unit=us


Trout Flies Currently Needed or needed very soon;
Streamers:
Brown Sculpin: 6
White Belly Sculpin: 6
Articulated Sculpin and Leeches: 4

Blue-winged olives: 18
nymphs
emergers
duns
spinners

Winter Stoneflies: 18

nymphs

adults

Light Green Midges: 20/22

larva

pupa

adults


Recommended Fishing Strategy:
Keep in mind, the strategies I am recommending is for the maximum odds of catching numbers of fish. Many prefer or favor a dry fly and by all means there isn’t anything wrong with that. It’s just a fact that if nothing is hatching at the time, it reduces your odds of success. You can still probably hook some trout, just not as many as if you fish subsurface. Of course, this is also based on using good techniques and the right flies. Some guys don’t know how to fish below the surface.

Strategy:
Not all of the insects you see above will be hatching in the same location. It is usually only one or two. It varies with the elevation. Some are just starting in the low elevations and some about finished in the higher elevations. If you fished the day or two before and know where something is hatching, fish the nymph or larva stage of it. If you haven’t fished the day or two before, until I spotted something hatching, I would fish the BWO nymph. If you spot something hatching (coming off the water), change to the appropriate emerger, dun or adult imitations of the insect.

Tips for Beginners:
Don’t let anyone intimidate you by contending that fly fishing is more difficult to learn and master than other types of fishing. It isn’t.

Thank you for visiting our website

James Marsh