South Fork Snake River Idaho Fishing — Conditions, Hatch Chart & Reports
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Snake River — South Fork, Idaho

Below Palisades Dam — World-class float fishing through canyon and cottonwood country

📍 Eastern Idaho — Snake River Plain 🎣 Snake River Fine-Spotted Cutthroat, Brown Trout 📅 Best: Jun, Jul, Aug, Sep 📊 USGS 13046995
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About the Snake River — South Fork
Eastern Idaho — Snake River Plain · Below Palisades Dam — World-Class Float Fishery

The South Fork of the Snake River below Palisades Dam is one of the most celebrated float fishing rivers in the Rocky Mountain West — a powerful, wide tailwater that flows through dramatic canyon country and cottonwood-lined valleys before joining the main Snake near Menan, Idaho. With exceptional populations of wild cutthroat and brown trout in water that averages 100–200 feet wide, the South Fork demands a drift boat and rewards with some of the finest dry fly and nymph fishing Idaho has to offer.

The tailwater character below Palisades Reservoir produces consistent cold flows year-round, maintaining ideal trout habitat in water that ranges from mountain canyon to broad agricultural valley. The canyon section between Palisades and Swan Valley is the most spectacular — sheer volcanic walls rising hundreds of feet above the river, with wild Snake River Fine-Spotted Cutthroat trout averaging 14–18 inches in every productive run.

The South Fork's signature events are its spectacular Salmonfly and Golden Stone hatches in late May and June, followed by exceptional summer Caddis activity that continues through September. These hatches trigger aggressive surface feeding from the river's large cutthroat that is genuinely spectacular — fish erupting from the surface to take large stonefly dries is an experience that defines Western float fishing.

The standard approach is a full-day guided float from Swan Valley to Byington (approximately 10 miles) or from Byington to Lorenzo (another 10 miles). The combination of varied water types, consistent hatches, and the South Fork's impressive fish makes this one of Idaho's premier guided fly fishing destinations.

Hatch Chart
Individual hatch data for the Snake River — South Fork · All months · April highlighted
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Midge
Peak
Peak
Peak
On
On
Peak
Peak
Blue-Winged Olive
On
On
Peak
Peak
On
On
Peak
On
On
Salmonfly
On
Peak
Peak
On
Golden Stonefly
On
Peak
Peak
Peak
On
Pale Morning Dun
On
Peak
Peak
On
Caddis
On
Peak
Peak
Peak
Peak
On
Grasshopper
On
Peak
Peak
Peak
Peak hatch
Some activity
Inactive
Outlined = current month (April)
Fly Pattern Recommendations
Proven patterns for each active hatch on the Snake River — South Fork
Midge
Zebra Midge #20-22
Adams #18-20
Blue-Winged Olive
Parachute Adams #16-20
RS2 #18-20
Sparkle Dun #16-20
Salmonfly
Stimulator #4-6
Chubby Chernobyl #4-6
Sofa Pillow #4-6
Clark's Stone #4-6
Golden Stonefly
Yellow Stimulator #6-10
Golden Stone Dry #8-10
Chubby Chernobyl #8
Pale Morning Dun
PMD Comparadun #16-18
Sparkle Dun PMD #16-18
Caddis
Elk Hair Caddis #12-16
X-Caddis #14-16
Goddard Caddis #12-14
Grasshopper
Chubby Chernobyl #6-10
Dave's Hopper #8-12
Rainy's Grand Hopper #8
Access & Sections
Public access points and section descriptions

Palisades — Above Canyon

Put-in near the dam. Begins the canyon section. Most dramatic scenery and some of the most productive water. Float only — no wade access in canyon.

Swan Valley — Canyon to Valley Transition

Take-out and re-launch options in Swan Valley. Good wade access from the public access sites. Bridge pullouts provide shorter float options.

Lorenzo — Lower Valley

Take-out and access points in lower valley section. Broader water with different character. Good Caddis fishing in summer, streamer fishing in fall.

Species & Regulations
What swims here and how you can fish for it

Snake River Fine-Spotted Cutthroat

The South Fork's signature species — a distinct subspecies of cutthroat with exceptionally fine spots. Averaging 14–18 inches throughout. Wild fish with extraordinary aerial acrobatics when hooked.

Brown Trout

Increasingly present in lower sections. Large average size. Most active during Salmonfly hatch and fall spawning. Streamer fishing is particularly effective.

Rainbow Trout

Present throughout, particularly below the canyon. Wild fish that hybridize with cutthroat in some sections. Aggressive dry fly feeders.

Regulations Summary
⚠ Idaho fishing license required. Fine-spotted cutthroat may have special slot limits — check Idaho Fish & Game regulations for current South Fork specific rules. Catch and release strongly encouraged. Float boating regulations apply — check BLM for current rules.
Pro Tips
Local knowledge from guides who fish this water
💡

The Salmonfly hatch on the South Fork is among the most intense in the West. Coordinate your trip with Swan Valley guides to hit the peak window, which moves upstream over 2–3 weeks.

💡

Hopper fishing in July and August requires casting tight to the bank — within a foot of the grass and willows. The fish know where food comes from.

💡

First-time South Fork visitors should book a guided float. The river's channels, braids, and private land complexity make local knowledge invaluable.

💡

Fall streamer fishing for large browns (September–October) is the South Fork's best-kept secret — aggressive fish, less competition.

Guides on the Snake River — South Fork
Verified licensed guides who know this water
CW
Cole Whitney
Box Canyon Anglers
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Quick Facts
StateID
TypeWorld-Class Float Fishery
USGS Gauge13046995
Ideal Flow3,000–20,000 cfs
Primary SpeciesSnake River Fine-Spotted Cutthroat
Best Months
JunJulAugSep

River fishes year-round but conditions peak during these windows.

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