Rock Creek Montana Fishing — Conditions, Hatch Chart & Reports
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Rock Creek, Montana

Near Missoula — Wild cutthroat and Salmonfly in a pristine wilderness canyon

📍 Western Montana — Missoula County 🎣 Westslope Cutthroat, Brown Trout 📅 Best: Jun, Jul, Sep 📊 USGS 12352500
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About the Rock Creek
Western Montana — Missoula County · Near Clinton — Wilderness Freestone

Rock Creek, flowing west from the Sapphire Mountains into the Clark Fork near Clinton, is one of the finest and least-pressured wild trout streams within an hour of Missoula. While the Blackfoot and Bitterroot receive the bulk of attention from visiting anglers, Rock Creek rewards those willing to make the short drive east from Missoula with exceptional Westslope Cutthroat fishing in a beautiful canyon setting with virtually none of the summer crowds that characterize the more famous Missoula-area rivers.

The creek is a medium-sized freestone stream — averaging 30–60 feet wide through most of its accessible length — with a productive mix of riffle, run, and pool water flowing over clean granite and quartzite cobble. The canyon walls rise steeply on both sides, creating a sheltered environment that warms slightly faster than the exposed valley rivers and produces some of the earliest Salmonfly activity in western Montana each spring.

Rock Creek's wild Westslope Cutthroat are the stream's greatest attraction — native fish of exceptional beauty, averaging 12–16 inches in the prime canyon sections, that rise eagerly to attractor dry flies throughout the season. Bull trout are also present in small numbers — they must be immediately released and their presence is a powerful indicator of the creek's ecological health and water quality.

The Rock Creek Road provides approximately 30 miles of access into the wilderness, with the upper reaches becoming progressively more remote and less pressured. Multi-day camping trips into the upper canyon encounter fish that may have never seen a fly — an increasingly rare experience in accessible Western Montana.

Hatch Chart
Individual hatch data for the Rock Creek · 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
Peak
Peak
On
Golden Stonefly
On
Peak
Peak
On
Caddis
On
Peak
Peak
Peak
Peak
On
Pale Morning Dun
On
Peak
Peak
On
Grasshopper
On
Peak
Peak
On
Peak hatch
Some activity
Inactive
Outlined = current month (April)
Fly Pattern Recommendations
Proven patterns for each active hatch on the Rock Creek
Midge
Adams #18-20
Zebra Midge #20-22
Blue-Winged Olive
Parachute Adams #16-20
RS2 #18-20
Salmonfly
Stimulator #4-8
Chubby Chernobyl #4-6
Golden Stonefly
Yellow Stimulator #8-12
Royal Wulff #10-12
Caddis
Elk Hair Caddis #14-16
Royal Humpy #14-16
Pale Morning Dun
PMD Comparadun #16-18
Sparkle Dun PMD #16-18
Grasshopper
Dave's Hopper #10-12
Chubby Chernobyl #8-10
Access & Sections
Public access points and section descriptions

Lower Rock Creek — Near Clinton

Access from I-90 exit at Clinton, then Rock Creek Road. First 5 miles of canyon accessible with moderate hiking. Most pressure but also most accessible water.

Mid Canyon — Campground Access

Multiple USFS campgrounds along Rock Creek Road provide base camp access. 10–20 miles from the mouth. Less pressure, excellent cutthroat fishing.

Upper Canyon — Wilderness

30+ miles from the mouth. Virtually no pressure beyond this point. Wild, remote water requiring overnight camping. The finest cutthroat fishing on the creek.

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

Westslope Cutthroat

Montana's native cutthroat, abundant throughout. Averaging 12–16 inches in accessible sections, larger in remote upper reaches. Aggressive attractor dry fly feeders. Rock Creek's signature fish.

Brown Trout

Present in lower sections near the Clark Fork confluence. Less numerous than cutthroat. Larger average size. Best targeted with streamers.

Bull Trout

Present but protected. Immediately release any encountered. Their presence is a positive indicator of Rock Creek's water quality and habitat integrity.

Regulations Summary
⚠ Montana fishing license required. Westslope cutthroat and bull trout have special regulations — check Montana FWP carefully. Bull trout are fully protected throughout. Catch and release strongly encouraged for cutthroat.
Pro Tips
Local knowledge from guides who fish this water
💡

Rock Creek's Salmonfly hatch often arrives 1–2 weeks before the Blackfoot and Bitterroot — monitor its timing for an early-season advantage.

💡

The upper canyon sections beyond campground 10 see dramatically less pressure — invest the extra 30-minute drive for noticeably better fishing.

💡

Attractor patterns work extremely well on Rock Creek's cutthroat — Royal Wulff and Humpy patterns are classic Rock Creek flies.

💡

Watch for bull trout in deeper, colder pools — they're unmistakable with their cream and orange spots on a dark background. Immediate, careful release is mandatory.

Guides on the Rock Creek
Verified licensed guides who know this water

No verified guides listed for this river yet. Browse all guides →

Quick Facts
StateMT
TypeWilderness Freestone
USGS Gauge12352500
Ideal Flow100–1,500 cfs
Primary SpeciesWestslope Cutthroat
Best Months
JunJulSep

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

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