Boise River, Idaho
Below Diversion Dam — World-class trout fishing in Idaho's capital city greenbelt
The Boise River flowing through the Boise Greenbelt is one of the most remarkable urban fly fishing resources in the American West — a genuine tailwater trout fishery that runs through the heart of Idaho's capital city, accessible by foot or bicycle from downtown hotels and office buildings. For the 250,000 residents of the Boise metro area, this river is literally home water in the most immediate sense: lunch-hour fly fishing is not just possible but common.
Below the Diversion Dam east of Boise, cold releases from the Lucky Peak, Arrow Rock, and Anderson Ranch reservoir system maintain consistent temperatures year-round — cool enough for trophy trout in a high-desert climate that would otherwise preclude a cold-water fishery. The river's impressive fish population is a testament to these consistent flows: brown trout averaging 16–20 inches are regularly encountered by experienced local anglers, and trophy fish over 24 inches are caught each year.
The tailwater character produces reliable hatches year-round. The Mother's Day Caddis hatch in May rivals anything the famous Utah rivers produce, drawing local anglers from across the Treasure Valley for the river's most anticipated dry fly event. Summer brings PMD and Trico activity, while fall BWO hatches and streamer fishing for large browns provide excellent fishing through November.
The Boise Greenbelt — a 25-mile paved pathway along both banks — provides extraordinary access throughout the city reach. Multiple public parks, bridge crossings, and designated fishing access sites make this the most accessible urban trout fishery in the Pacific Northwest.
Barber Park — Greenbelt Access
Primary access point near the Diversion Dam. Barber Park has parking and direct river access. The most productive upper tailwater section begins here.
Downtown Boise — Greenbelt
Multiple access points throughout downtown via the Greenbelt pathway. Ann Morrison Park, Julia Davis Park, and Municipal Park all provide fishing access.
Veterans Memorial Park — Lower Access
Good wade access in the lower city section. Less pressure than upper tailwater. Larger average fish in slower, deeper pools near the lower river.
Brown Trout
Dominant in the upper tailwater sections. Wild fish averaging 14–20 inches. Some exceptional specimens over 24 inches. Most active during Mother's Day Caddis and fall BWO hatches.
Rainbow Trout
Present throughout, dominant in faster water sections. Wild and stocked fish mix. Respond well to Caddis and PMD patterns in summer.
The Boise River in downtown Boise is legitimately world-class — don't let the urban setting fool you into underestimating it.
Mother's Day Caddis on the Boise (typically early May) is one of Idaho's most spectacular hatches and occurs 30 minutes from the airport.
Urban fish pressure means longer, finer leaders are important — 5x minimum in the clearer upper sections.
Bicycle access via the Greenbelt allows you to cover 15+ miles of river efficiently — bring a backpack with gear and ride from pool to pool.
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River fishes year-round but conditions peak during these windows.
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