Weber River Fly Fishing Report - June 14, 2026

Fly Fishing Report

WEBER RIVER

Report
JUN 14 — 21, 2026
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Flow
CFS
🌡️
Water Temp
☀️
Weather
46–78°F
Clear
💧
Clarity
Clear
Check post-storm
USGS real-time gauge data is unavailable for this report; guide shop sources indicate the Weber is running approximately 206 CFS at Wanship and 258 CFS at Coalville — a fishable but pushy flow that crowds trout tight to softer seams, bankside structure, and slower edges. Clear skies and highs near 77–78°F this weekend will concentrate the best action in early morning and the long evening window.
Hatch Chart
Insect Size Activity Prime Time
Mother's Day Caddis (lingering) #14–16 Moderate — trailing off but still triggering rises near Rockport Early afternoon to dusk (1–8 PM)
Caddis Pupa #14–16 Moderate — subsurface emergers drawing consistent takes Evening (5–9 PM)
Pale Morning Dun (PMD) #18–20 Building — summer hatch just getting started Afternoon (2–6 PM)
Yellow Stonefly #10–12 Moderate — nymphs active subsurface all day All day (nymph)
Midge #20–22 Low–Moderate — reliable filler hatch in slower pockets Early morning & evening
Best Time Window
  • Dawn to 8 AM — Low-light streamer bite; swing or strip the Sparkle Minnow Sculpin tight to undercut banks for aggressive brown trout
  • 2–6 PM — PMD nymph window; fish the Tungsten Split Case PMD and Straggle Stone in slower inside seams as afternoon hatches begin to build
  • 5–9 PM — Prime evening rise; caddis adults and PMD emergers on the surface, with the Corn-fed Caddis CDC Tan and GTI Caddis covering both stages
Guide's Tip
From the benchWith flows pushing 206–258 CFS, the Weber's narrower channel means fish are stacked tight to the edges — don't waste time in the middle of the river. Wade the bank and present your nymphs within 2–3 feet of structure: undercut banks, submerged willows, and the soft seam just inside the main current. The evening window from 5–9 PM is your best shot at dry-fly action as caddis adults and early PMDs come off together — position yourself upstream of rising fish and let the fly come to them. If you arrive at dawn, lead with the Sparkle Minnow Sculpin along the bank before switching to nymphs once the sun hits the water.
Main Species
Brown Trout
Rainbow Trout
Bonneville Cutthroat Trout
Fly Fish Food
Report generated June 14, 2026 — Next update: June 21, 2026