Hatch calendar

Farmington River hatch calendar.

  • Tailwater
  • Trout Management Area (catch and release) / stocked
  • brown trout
  • rainbow trout
  • wild

New England's premier tailwater. Cold dam-controlled releases, prolific Hendrickson and Sulphur hatches, year-round catch-and-release Trout Management Area. Excellent both wading and from a drift boat.

Verify with the agency before fishing

Fishing regulations change every season. This page is a summary maintained by Bield — bag limits, exact dates, and species-specific rules must be verified with UpCountry Sportfishing before each trip.

What's hatching now

May on the water.

  • Midge

    Chironomidae spp.

    Midge
    Peak week
    Year-round
    Intensity
    Heavy
    Time of day
    Midday
    Water temp
    32–60°F · peak 40°F

    Top flies

    Griffith's Gnat #20-24 · Zebra Midge #20-22 · WD-40 #20

    Primary winter food

  • Blue Winged Olive

    Baetis spp.

    Mayfly
    Peak week
    Mar 25 – Apr 25
    Intensity
    Heavy
    Time of day
    Afternoon
    Water temp
    45–55°F · peak 50°F

    Top flies

    Parachute BWO #18-20 · CDC Comparadun #18-20 · Pheasant Tail Nymph #18

    Spring emergence

  • Hendrickson

    Ephemerella subvaria

    Mayfly
    Peak week
    May 1 – May 25
    Intensity
    Heavy
    Time of day
    Afternoon
    Water temp
    50–58°F · peak 55°F

    Top flies

    Hendrickson Parachute #12-14 · Red Quill Spinner #12-14 · Pheasant Tail Nymph #14

    Defining hatch on the West Branch

  • Sulphur

    Ephemerella dorothea / invaria

    Mayfly
    Peak week
    May 25 – Jul 5
    Intensity
    Heavy
    Time of day
    Evening
    Water temp
    55–68°F · peak 62°F

    Top flies

    Sulphur Parachute #16-18 · Sulphur Comparadun #16-18 · Sulphur Sparkle Dun #16

  • Pale Morning Dun

    Ephemerella excrucians

    Mayfly
    Peak week
    Jun 15 – Jul 25
    Intensity
    Heavy
    Time of day
    Morning
    Water temp
    55–68°F · peak 60°F

    Top flies

    PMD Parachute #16-18 · PMD Comparadun #16 · Rusty Spinner #16-18

    Morning emergence

  • Tan Caddis

    Hydropsyche spp.

    Caddis
    Peak week
    Jun 1 – Sep 15
    Intensity
    Heavy
    Time of day
    Evening
    Water temp
    58–72°F · peak 64°F

    Top flies

    Elk Hair Caddis #14-16 · X-Caddis #14 · LaFontaine Sparkle Pupa #14

Full year calendar

Twelve months on Farmington River.

Each row is a hatch species. Bar color = type, opacity = intensity, peak month outlined. The current month is highlighted on the timeline.

JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecMidge — Year-round (heavy)MidgeChironomidae spp.Blue Winged Olive — Mar 25 – Apr 25 (heavy)Blue Winged OliveBaetis spp.Hendrickson — May 1 – May 25 (heavy)HendricksonEphemerella subvariaSulphur — May 25 – Jul 5 (heavy)SulphurEphemerella dorothea / invariaLight Cahill — Jun 10 – Jul 5 (moderate)Light CahillStenacron / Leucrocuta spp.Pale Morning Dun — Jun 15 – Jul 25 (heavy)Pale Morning DunEphemerella excruciansTan Caddis — Jun 1 – Sep 15 (heavy)Tan CaddisHydropsyche spp.Terrestrials — Jul 1 – Sep 30 (heavy)Terrestrials(beetles, ants, hoppers)Trico — Jul 25 – Sep 10 (heavy)TricoTricorythodes spp.Blue Winged Olive — Sep 25 – Oct 30 (heavy)Blue Winged OliveBaetis spp.
MayflyCaddisStoneflyMidgeTerrestrial· peak month outlined · intensity = bar opacity · current month highlighted

Hatch species on Farmington River

The bug calendar in detail.

  • Midge

    Chironomidae spp.

    MidgeMidday

    Water-temperature trigger

    30°F3260°Fpeak 40°F80°F
    Duration
    52 weeks
    Also called
    Chironomids · Snowflies

    Top fly patterns

    • Griffith's Gnat #20-24
    • Zebra Midge #20-22
    • WD-40 #20
    • Disco Midge #22

    Year-round food source — the only consistent option on tailwaters in winter. On cold sunny days look for noses sipping clusters in slow water.

  • Blue Winged Olive

    Baetis spp.

    MayflyAfternoon

    Water-temperature trigger

    30°F4555°Fpeak 50°F80°F
    Duration
    6 weeks
    Also called
    BWO · Olive

    Top fly patterns

    • Parachute BWO #18-20
    • CDC Comparadun #18-20
    • Pheasant Tail Nymph #18
    • RS2 #20

    Most reliable Eastern hatch. Two emergences — spring (March-April) and fall (September-October). Best on overcast, drizzly days.

  • Hendrickson

    Ephemerella subvaria

    MayflyAfternoon

    Water-temperature trigger

    30°F5058°Fpeak 55°F80°F
    Duration
    3 weeks
    Also called
    Red Quill · Dark Hendrickson

    Top fly patterns

    • Hendrickson Parachute #12-14
    • Red Quill Spinner #12-14
    • Pheasant Tail Nymph #14
    • Hendrickson Comparadun #14

    First substantial mayfly hatch on most Eastern rivers. Spinner falls in evening can be as productive as the dun emergence.

  • Sulphur

    Ephemerella dorothea / invaria

    MayflyEvening

    Water-temperature trigger

    30°F5568°Fpeak 62°F80°F
    Duration
    6 weeks
    Also called
    Pale Watery · Little Yellow May

    Top fly patterns

    • Sulphur Parachute #16-18
    • Sulphur Comparadun #16-18
    • Sulphur Sparkle Dun #16
    • Pheasant Tail Nymph #16
    • Sulphur Spinner #18

    The most important mayfly hatch on Eastern rivers. Reliable emergence + spinner fall every evening for 4-6 weeks. Match the spinners with rusty-bodied patterns.

  • Light Cahill

    Stenacron / Leucrocuta spp.

    MayflyEvening

    Water-temperature trigger

    30°F6072°Fpeak 65°F80°F
    Duration
    5 weeks
    Also called
    Cahill

    Top fly patterns

    • Light Cahill Parachute #14-16
    • Cahill Comparadun #14
    • Light Cahill Spinner #14

    Pale yellow-cream mayfly. Less intense hatch than Sulphur but reliable across many Eastern rivers in late spring through early summer.

  • Pale Morning Dun

    Ephemerella excrucians

    MayflyMorning

    Water-temperature trigger

    30°F5568°Fpeak 60°F80°F
    Duration
    6 weeks
    Also called
    PMD

    Top fly patterns

    • PMD Parachute #16-18
    • PMD Comparadun #16
    • Rusty Spinner #16-18
    • Pheasant Tail #16

    More reliable on tailwaters where stable temps suit the hatch. Often runs concurrently with Sulphurs but emerges in morning rather than evening.

  • Tan Caddis

    Hydropsyche spp.

    CaddisEvening

    Water-temperature trigger

    30°F5872°Fpeak 64°F80°F
    Duration
    10 weeks
    Also called
    Spotted Sedge · Cinnamon Caddis

    Top fly patterns

    • Elk Hair Caddis #14-16
    • X-Caddis #14
    • LaFontaine Sparkle Pupa #14
    • Tan Caddis Soft Hackle #14

    Workhorse summer caddis. Heavy emergences and egg-laying flights at dusk through summer. Drop a soft hackle on the swing during the evening.

  • Terrestrials

    (beetles, ants, hoppers)

    TerrestrialAfternoon

    Water-temperature trigger

    30°F6078°Fpeak 70°F80°F
    Duration
    12 weeks
    Also called
    Hoppers · Ants

    Top fly patterns

    • Foam Hopper #10-12
    • Foam Beetle #14-16
    • Para-Ant #16-18
    • Chernobyl Ant #10

    Not a hatch but the most important summer trout food in many Eastern systems. Fish tight to grassy banks and overhanging trees. Hopper-dropper rigs are deadly July through September.

  • Trico

    Tricorythodes spp.

    MayflyMorning

    Water-temperature trigger

    30°F6075°Fpeak 68°F80°F
    Duration
    8 weeks
    Also called
    White-Winged Black · Curse

    Top fly patterns

    • Trico Spinner #20-24
    • Trico Parachute #22
    • CDC Trico #22

    Tiny black-bodied mayfly. The spinner fall — not the dun emergence — is the main event. Look for clouds of spinners over flat water at sunrise.

River info

River type
Tailwater
Primary species
brown_trout · rainbow_trout · wild · stocked
Management
Trout Management Area (catch and release) / stocked
Counties
Hartford County
Elevation
350 ft
Access
Long stretches of public access along the West Branch including the famous Trout Management Area in New Hartford and Barkhamsted.
USGS gauge 01188090

Live water temperature & hatch alerts.

Bield Fish reads USGS gauges, watches for the trigger window, and pings you when Farmington River hits the temperature for your target hatch.

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