Eagle River, Colorado
Vail Country — Blue Ribbon freestone through Colorado's ski resort corridor
The Eagle River flows west from its headwaters near Tennessee Pass through the Vail Valley and Eagle County before joining the Colorado River at Dotsero. Flowing through one of Colorado's most celebrated ski resort corridors, the Eagle provides Blue Ribbon trout fishing in close proximity to Vail, Beaver Creek, and Avon — making it the most accessible quality freestone river for the state's ski resort community.
The Minturn section — just downstream from Vail — is the Eagle's most celebrated water. The river runs through a dramatic canyon below town with a mix of pool, riffle, and pocket water holding wild rainbow and brown trout that have benefited from significant restoration work following the disastrous 1992 cyanide spill that nearly eliminated the fishery. The recovery has been remarkable — the Eagle is now a genuine quality wild trout fishery with fish averaging 14–17 inches in the prime canyon sections.
Below the canyon, the river opens into the Eagle Valley, with the towns of Eagle and Gypsum providing additional access points to good valley fishing. The water here is more agricultural in character but still holds quality trout with the Colorado River confluence providing a natural gathering point for large fish in the fall pre-spawn period.
Salmonfly and Golden Stone hatches in late May and June are the Eagle's premier events, followed by reliable Caddis and PMD fishing through summer. The river's proximity to I-70 makes it convenient for Denver-based anglers who can stop and fish on the drive to or from Vail without requiring a dedicated trip.
Minturn — Canyon Section
Access from Minturn below Vail. The canyon section below town is the prime water. Walk downstream from the US-24 bridge area.
Wolcott to Eagle — Valley Section
I-70 frontage road provides multiple access points. Valley character with good summer Caddis and fall streamer water.
Gypsum — Near Colorado Confluence
Access near Gypsum before the Colorado confluence. Good fall fishing for large pre-spawn browns.
Brown Trout
Dominant in canyon and lower valley sections. Wild fish averaging 14–18 inches. Most active during Salmonfly, Caddis, and fall BWO hatches.
Rainbow Trout
Present throughout. Wild fish averaging 12–16 inches. More active during daylight hatches than browns. Good Caddis dry fly fishing in summer.
The Eagle is a convenient I-70 stop on the drive to or from the mountains — fish the Minturn canyon section for 2-3 hours without requiring a dedicated trip.
The 1992 recovery story of the Eagle after the cyanide spill is remarkable — the fish populations are genuinely wild and self-sustaining after decades of restoration.
Fall fishing near the Colorado confluence at Gypsum is the Eagle's best-kept secret — large brown trout moving toward pre-spawn behavior in October.
Avoid the Minturn canyon on summer weekends when tubing traffic can make fishing difficult.
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River fishes year-round but conditions peak during these windows.
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