New York ·
Ausable River Fly Fishing Report - June 21, 2026

AUSABLE RIVER
ReportJUN 21 — 28, 2026
🌊
Flow
—CFS
🌡️
Water Temp
—
☀️
Weather
54–75°F
Scattered Rain Showers
💧
Clarity
Clear
Check post-storm
Live gauge data is unavailable for the Ausable River today, so wade carefully and read the water on-site. Overnight showers and Sunday thunderstorms are likely to bump flows and briefly color the water, so get on the river early before midday storm cells develop.
What's Working — Hot Flies

Parachute - Blue Wing Olive #22
#22

Juju Baetis Tungsten #22
#22

Corn-fed Caddis (CDC) Tan #20
#20

Corn-fed Caddis (CDC) Olive #20
#20

Tungsten Split Case Nymph - PMD #20
#20

Stealth Link Mercer - PMD #20
#20

Olsen's Straggle Stone Brown Barbless #12 - 32
#12

Egan's Thread Frenchie Jig - Olive #12
#12

Top Secret Baetis #16
#16

Black Zebra Midge(TBH) #20
#20

Coffey's CH Sparkle Minnow Sculpin #6
#6

Egan's CDC Rainbow Warrior #22
#22
Hatch Chart
| Insect | Size | Activity | Prime Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| Blue-Winged Olive (Baetis) | 18-22 | Moderate | 8 AM - 11 AM |
| Pale Morning Dun | 16-20 | Moderate | 10 AM - 1 PM |
| Caddis (various) | 14-18 | Heavy | 6 AM - 10 AM |
| Golden Stonefly | 6-10 | Light | 7 AM - 10 AM |
| Midge | 20-24 | Light | 7 AM - 9 AM |
Best Time Window
- 6:30 AM - 10:00 AM: Prime dry-fly and nymph window before storm cells develop; caddis and BWOs most active in riffle edges and tailouts.
- 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM: PMD hatch peaks in slower runs and pools; switch to emerger or dry-fly presentations in the film.
- After Storm Clearance (Evening): If storms pass by late afternoon, a brief evening window may open with renewed caddis activity along the banks.
Guide's Tip
From the benchGet on the water by 6:30 AM before the storm cells build — the overcast morning light will trigger both caddis and baetis activity simultaneously, and trout will be actively feeding in the riffles and tailouts. Focus your first two hours on riffle-to-pool transitions with a nymph fished at 18-24 inches, then switch to a dry fly as the hatch materializes mid-morning. If afternoon thunderstorms arrive and bump the flow, abandon the dry-fly game and swing a sculpin or streamer tight to the banks where big browns will be opportunistically feeding in the colored water. Keep your wading deliberate — without live gauge data, treat every crossing as potentially higher and faster than it looks.
Main Species
Brown Trout
Rainbow Trout
Brook Trout