Utah's Crystal Lake at Sunset. One of the many lakes in Utah's Uinta National Forest. An angler fishing Utah's picturesque Upper Provo River in the Uinta National Forest.
Current Fishing Report:

The Uinta Lakes (Mirror Lake Highway)

Uinta Lakes

Known as the “roof of Utah,” the High Uintas are the tallest mountain range in the state and are known for rugged peaks and countless lakes—most of which contain either brook trout, cutthroat trout, tiger trout, grayling, or rainbow trout. Fishing opportunities in the Uintas are abundant and diverse, ranging from hike-in lakes above treeline to float tube and shoreline fishing at drive-in access lakes. The lakes near Mirror lake Highway are by far the most popular and are managed accordingly with hatchery-bred trout being the norm. Alternatively, more remote lakes in the Uintas provide a more rugged wilderness experience, along with the opportunity to catch more wild, opportunistic trout that see minimal fishing pressure.

Access

With the vast majority of the Uintas being split between the Uinta-Wasatch-Cache and Ashley National Forests, public access points are abundant across the range. From Kamas, the Mirror Lake Highway (SR 150) grants entry to the western half of the Uintas and is a great jumping off point to explore the near-limitless fishing opportunities within this unique mountain range. Crystal, Trial, and Mirror Lake Trailheads are all great introductions to the area and are located about 26 miles east of Kamas on SR 150. If you’re headed to the Uintas and want more information on the many stillwater fly fishing opportunities in the area, be sure to stop by the Fishwest Fly Shop in Kamas to learn more.

When To Fish

Due to its high elevation and lingering snowpack, the High Uintas typically aren’t accessible until June or even July during big snow years. As ice recedes from these high mountain lakes, fish are generally eager to feed before winter sets in again. This makes summer and early fall a great time to catch aggressive, opportunistic trout at high elevations.

Current Conditions

Updated by Travis Vernon 6.12.26

The early ice off is complete and while you can still find some snow you can pretty much hike anywhere. Some mosquitoes are starting so have bug spray handy. 

The last few days we have started to see a big swell in midge hatches in the lakes and fish are cruising looking for food. Double dry with two smaller flies will work well.

Try tricos, mother shuckers, parachute Adams, skittering midges, and all things tiny will keep some fish looking up. Small balanced leaches in blue, black, and maroon are still working but not as well as last week. There are a lot more people up now so start changing it up. Small droppers on dries or bobbers will produce. 

Recommended Flies:

Fly Selection for the Uinta Lakes is fairly vast, but the flies listed below will work at most all of our favorite backcountry stillwaters. If you are looking for recommendations for a specific lake, please talk to our staff:

Streamers: Balanced Leeches (Maroon, Olive, Black, Rust), Beadhead Wooly Buggers (Tan, Black, White, Thin Mint Bugger, Low Fat Minnow, Squirrel Leeches, Goldie, Rusty Trombone, Ebony, Silver Minnow

Nymphs: Rainbow Warriors, Frenchies, Psycho Prince, Duracell Jig, Quill Jig, Copper John, Zebra Midges, WD-40's

Dry Flies: Parachute Adams, Griffiths Gnat, Elk Hair Caddis, Stubby Chubby, Foam Humpy, Chubby Chernobyl, PMX, Stimulator, Skater Tot, Triple Double, Renegade.