Pre-Spawn
Trophy fishing window40–43°F
Cutthroat trout subspecies spawn in spring, with timing varying by elevation and subspecies. Fish stage in deeper pools and below-shoal habitat as runoff begins.
Pre-spawn cutthroat are aggressive on streamers and large nymphs in pre-runoff conditions.
43–55°F (peak 45–50°F)
Active spawning behavior. Redd spawners. Native subspecies (Yellowstone, Snake River, Bonneville, Greenback, Colorado River) all have distinct conservation status.
Many cutthroat subspecies are protected by C&R-only or limited harvest regulations year-round. Native cutthroat conservation is one of the most active fisheries restoration efforts in the West.
Conservation context
Many cutthroat subspecies are protected by C&R-only or limited harvest regulations year-round. Native cutthroat conservation is one of the most active fisheries restoration efforts in the West.
Post-Spawn
Recovery feeding55–63°F (~14 days)
Post-spawn cutthroat recover for 2 weeks before resuming summer feeding patterns at higher elevation lakes and streams.
Dry-fly fishing for high-country cutthroat begins as post-spawn fish disperse to summer haunts.
Summer Pattern
Standard patternsAbove 63°F
Fish disperse to summer habitat and feeding patterns. Spawn cycle complete until following year.
Standard summer fishing tactics apply.