Hatch calendar

Loyalsock Creek hatch calendar.

  • Freestone
  • Mixed wild and stocked
  • brown trout
  • wild
  • stocked

Big freestone winding through PA Wilds country — long pools, big rocks, classic Pocono-region hatch progression.

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 Pennsylvania Fish & Boat Commission before each trip.

What's hatching now

May on the water.

  • Hendrickson

    Ephemerella subvaria

    Mayfly
    Peak week
    Apr 25 – May 15
    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

  • Sulphur

    Ephemerella dorothea / invaria

    Mayfly
    Peak week
    May 25 – Jun 25
    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

  • Midge

    Chironomidae spp.

    Midge
    Peak week
    Year-round
    Intensity
    Moderate
    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

  • Blue Winged Olive

    Baetis spp.

    Mayfly
    Peak week
    Apr 1 – Apr 25
    Intensity
    Moderate
    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

  • Quill Gordon

    Epeorus pleuralis

    Mayfly
    Peak week
    Apr 15 – May 5
    Intensity
    Moderate
    Time of day
    Afternoon
    Water temp
    48–56°F · peak 52°F

    Top flies

    Quill Gordon Dry #12-14 · Quill Gordon Wet #12 · Pheasant Tail Nymph #14

  • Grannom Caddis

    Brachycentrus spp.

    Caddis
    Peak week
    Apr 25 – May 15
    Intensity
    Moderate
    Time of day
    Afternoon
    Water temp
    52–62°F · peak 56°F

    Top flies

    Elk Hair Caddis #14-16 · Henryville Special #14-16 · LaFontaine Sparkle Pupa #14

  • March Brown

    Maccaffertium vicarium

    Mayfly
    Peak week
    May 10 – Jun 5
    Intensity
    Moderate
    Time of day
    Afternoon
    Water temp
    55–65°F · peak 60°F

    Top flies

    March Brown Parachute #10-12 · Grey Fox Comparadun #12 · March Brown Nymph #12

  • Light Cahill

    Stenacron / Leucrocuta spp.

    Mayfly
    Peak week
    Jun 5 – Jul 5
    Intensity
    Moderate
    Time of day
    Evening
    Water temp
    60–72°F · peak 65°F

    Top flies

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

Full year calendar

Twelve months on Loyalsock Creek.

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 (moderate)MidgeChironomidae spp.Early Black Stonefly — Feb 1 – Mar 1 (light)Early Black StoneflyCapnia / AllocapniaBlue Winged Olive — Apr 1 – Apr 25 (moderate)Blue Winged OliveBaetis spp.Quill Gordon — Apr 15 – May 5 (moderate)Quill GordonEpeorus pleuralisHendrickson — Apr 25 – May 15 (heavy)HendricksonEphemerella subvariaGrannom Caddis — Apr 25 – May 15 (moderate)Grannom CaddisBrachycentrus spp.March Brown — May 10 – Jun 5 (moderate)March BrownMaccaffertium vicariumSulphur — May 25 – Jun 25 (heavy)SulphurEphemerella dorothea / invariaLight Cahill — Jun 5 – Jul 5 (moderate)Light CahillStenacron / Leucrocuta spp.Yellow Sally Stonefly — Jun 5 – Jul 5 (light)Yellow Sally StoneflyIsoperla spp.Tan Caddis — Jun 20 – Aug 30 (moderate)Tan CaddisHydropsyche spp.Slate Drake — Jul 1 – Sep 30 (moderate)Slate DrakeIsonychia bicolorTerrestrials — Jul 15 – Sep 20 (heavy)Terrestrials(beetles, ants, hoppers)Blue Winged Olive — Sep 25 – Oct 25 (moderate)Blue Winged OliveBaetis spp.October Caddis — Sep 25 – Nov 1 (moderate)October CaddisPycnopsyche spp.
MayflyCaddisStoneflyMidgeTerrestrial· peak month outlined · intensity = bar opacity · current month highlighted

Hatch species on Loyalsock Creek

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.

  • Early Black Stonefly

    Capnia / Allocapnia

    StoneflyMidday

    Water-temperature trigger

    30°F3850°Fpeak 42°F80°F
    Duration
    4 weeks
    Also called
    Little Black Stonefly · Winter Stonefly

    Top fly patterns

    • Black Stonefly #16-18
    • Black Beadhead Nymph #16
    • Small Black Stimulator #16

    Cold-water freestone stonefly, often seen crawling on snow banks. Trout key on the nymphs more than adults.

  • 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.

  • Quill Gordon

    Epeorus pleuralis

    MayflyAfternoon

    Water-temperature trigger

    30°F4856°Fpeak 52°F80°F
    Duration
    3 weeks
    Also called
    QG

    Top fly patterns

    • Quill Gordon Dry #12-14
    • Quill Gordon Wet #12
    • Pheasant Tail Nymph #14

    Classic Catskill spring hatch. First major mayfly of the year on many freestone streams. Emerges underwater — wet flies often outperform dries.

  • 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.

  • Grannom Caddis

    Brachycentrus spp.

    CaddisAfternoon

    Water-temperature trigger

    30°F5262°Fpeak 56°F80°F
    Duration
    3 weeks
    Also called
    Apple Caddis · Mother's Day Caddis (East)

    Top fly patterns

    • Elk Hair Caddis #14-16
    • Henryville Special #14-16
    • LaFontaine Sparkle Pupa #14
    • Green-bodied Caddis Nymph #14

    First major caddis emergence of the year. Look for clouds of small dark caddis above riffles in late afternoon.

  • March Brown

    Maccaffertium vicarium

    MayflyAfternoon

    Water-temperature trigger

    30°F5565°Fpeak 60°F80°F
    Duration
    4 weeks
    Also called
    Grey Fox · American March Brown

    Top fly patterns

    • March Brown Parachute #10-12
    • Grey Fox Comparadun #12
    • March Brown Nymph #12

    Sporadic emergence rather than a heavy hatch — but trout key on individual large duns drifting through. Freestone-river specialty.

  • 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.

  • Yellow Sally Stonefly

    Isoperla spp.

    StoneflyAfternoon

    Water-temperature trigger

    30°F5870°Fpeak 64°F80°F
    Duration
    5 weeks
    Also called
    Little Yellow Stone

    Top fly patterns

    • Yellow Sally Stimulator #14-16
    • Yellow Stonefly Nymph #14
    • Yellow Elk Hair Caddis #14

    Common on freestone rivers. Adults flutter back to lay eggs on warm afternoons — trout target the egg-laying females.

  • 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.

  • Slate Drake

    Isonychia bicolor

    MayflyEvening

    Water-temperature trigger

    30°F5570°Fpeak 62°F80°F
    Duration
    12 weeks
    Also called
    Iso · Mahogany Dun (spinner)

    Top fly patterns

    • Slate Drake Parachute #12
    • Iso Comparadun #12
    • Mahogany Spinner #12
    • Iso Nymph #12 (swimming nymph)

    Long-running hatch from June into October. Nymphs are strong swimmers and crawl out of the water to emerge — fish a swung wet fly through riffles.

  • 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.

  • October Caddis

    Pycnopsyche spp.

    CaddisEvening

    Water-temperature trigger

    30°F5062°Fpeak 56°F80°F
    Duration
    4 weeks
    Also called
    Fall Caddis · Great Brown Sedge

    Top fly patterns

    • Orange Stimulator #10-12
    • Goddard Caddis #10
    • October Caddis Pupa #10
    • Orange Elk Hair Caddis #10

    Large orange-bodied caddis. The big fall food source on cold freestone rivers. Trout eat them all day in October but the egg-laying flight at dusk is the most explosive feeding.

River info

River type
Freestone
Primary species
brown_trout · wild · stocked
Management
Mixed wild and stocked
Counties
Lycoming County, Sullivan County
Elevation
750 ft
Access
Long stretches of public access in state forest land; popular with both anglers and paddlers.
USGS gauge 01552000

Sources

Data quality: estimated

Live water temperature & hatch alerts.

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

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