|
learntoflyfishnyc.com
The Weekend Cast
Your Weekly Fly Fishing Outlook for the Greater NYC Region
Week of March 9–15, 2026
|
|
March is doing what March always does — teasing us with the promise of spring while keeping one foot firmly planted in winter. This week, a significant snowstorm is bearing down on the region for the weekend, and our rivers are reflecting that transitional tension: some are running high from recent rains, others are holding at winter-low levels as the snowpack builds. But here’s the thing: mid-March cold snaps have a way of focusing fish into predictable lies, and an angler who knows where to look can find some of the most rewarding fishing of the year.
With trout season opening day on April 1 just three weeks away, now is the time to check your gear, tie your pre-season flies, and watch those USGS gauges carefully. The Hendrickson hatch on the Beaverkill and Housatonic will be here before you know it. In the meantime, let’s see what this weekend has in store.
|
|
|
🎣 This Weekend’s River Report
Data: USGS Water Data for the Nation · As of March 12, 2026
|
Catskills – Beaverkill & Willowemoc
|
RUNNING HIGH
|
|
|
Beaverkill: ~527 CFS · Water temp ~37°F
|
Willowemoc: ~180 CFS · Water temp ~37°F
|
|
|
☁️ Sat: Mostly cloudy, ~25°F · 40% snow chance
|
❄️ Sun: Mostly cloudy, ~30°F · 40% snow chance
|
|
|
The Beaverkill is running above its ideal 100–400 CFS window after recent rains, and the approaching snowstorm will push it higher through the weekend. Fish deep, slow pools with heavy tungsten nymphs: Pat’s Rubber Legs (#10–12) as an anchor and a small #20–22 Zebra Midge or red copper John as a dropper. Target the seams and shelves between faster runs — trout have moved out of the riffles and are holding in protected lies. With catch-and-release, artificial-only regulations in effect through March 31, conditions are ideal for a quiet mid-week scouting trip before the April 1 opener changes the scene dramatically.
|
|
Croton Watershed – East & West Branch
|
GOOD
|
|
|
E. Branch (Brewster): ~48 CFS · Water temp ~38°F
|
W. Branch (Croton Falls): ~66 CFS · Water temp ~38°F
|
|
|
☀️ Sat: Sunny, ~44°F · Low wind
|
☀️ Sun: Sunny, ~38°F · Light wind
|
|
|
The Croton watershed is in solid shape this weekend — flows are within normal winter ranges and the clear skies forecast for Saturday and Sunday mean water temps could tick up to the low 40s during afternoon windows. This is the time to break out a #18–20 Black Beauty or Pheasant Tail Nymph and work the softer water below runs. During any sunny afternoon stretch, keep an eye out for early midges dimpling the surface — trout may be sipping right at the film even in these temperatures. A pleasant 44°F high on Saturday makes the Croton area the most comfortable choice for a winter outing this weekend.
|
|
Housatonic – Falls Village, CT
|
FAIR
|
|
|
Housatonic (Falls Village): ~235 CFS · Water temp ~33°F
|
|
❄️ Sat: Heavy snow, high ~14°F · 8–12″ possible
|
❄️ Sun: Continued snow, high ~25°F · 1–3″ more
|
|
|
Skip the Housatonic this weekend. A major winter storm will dump 8–12 inches of snow across the Falls Village area starting Saturday, with temperatures in the teens making for genuinely dangerous wade-fishing conditions. At 235 CFS the river is currently below its ideal 300–800 CFS range, but that will change dramatically as snowmelt hits early next week — likely pushing flows into the Running High category by Monday or Tuesday. File this one away: the post-storm drop, usually 3–5 days after the peak, often produces spectacular early black stonefly activity. Set your alerts now for when Housatonic flows settle back to 400–600 CFS.
|
|
Raritan – N. & S. Branch, NJ
|
GOOD
|
|
|
N. Branch (Far Hills) / S. Branch (Stanton): ~45–85 CFS estimated · Water temp ~39–41°F
|
|
⛅ Sat: Partly sunny, ~49°F · Light south wind
|
☀️ Sun: Sunny, ~49°F · Calm
|
|
|
The Raritan branches are the sleeper pick of the weekend. With highs near 49°F both days and no precipitation in the forecast for Flemington, this is the warmest and driest fishing spot within reach of NYC. Both branches are running at comfortable late-winter levels and water temps are approaching the upper 30s — warm enough for small midges and early BWOs to start emerging in the early afternoon. Try a #22 Griffith’s Gnat on the surface during the 11am–2pm window, backed up by a #18 Pheasant Tail below the surface. NJ trout season is open year-round on designated waters, so no countdown required.
|
|
|
|
📰 This Week in Fly Fishing
|
Conservation · NFWF / EPA · February 2026
$44.2 Million in Chesapeake Bay Grants Delivers Major Win for Brook Trout
The National Fish and Wildlife Foundation and the EPA announced 72 grants totaling $44.2 million for water quality and habitat restoration in the Chesapeake Bay watershed, with a total conservation impact of $75 million when matching funds are included. Trout Unlimited received $812,132 specifically to reconnect aquatic habitat for brook trout in the North Branch Potomac watershed, including more than 2 miles of agricultural exclusion fencing and 32 acres of riparian forest restoration.
Read the Full Story →
|
|
Regulations · NY State · 2026 Season
New York Trout Season Opens April 1 — Catskills Stocking Underway
Opening day for trout across most New York streams is April 1, with the DEC stocking approximately 2.3 million catchable brook, brown, and rainbow trout in nearly 3,100 miles of streams statewide, including the Beaverkill, Esopus Creek, and other Catskill favorites. Through March 31, all Catskill waters remain catch-and-release, artificial lures only — making the next three weeks a quiet, uncrowded opportunity to scout your favorite pools before the opener crowds arrive.
Read the Full Story →
|
|
Gear · Denver Fly Fishing Show · 2026
Best New Fly Fishing Gear of 2026: Orvis Recon, Abel SDX, and More
The Denver Fly Fishing Show brought a strong class of new equipment for 2026, with the Orvis Recon series standing out as a mid-range rod featuring Helios-inspired technology at roughly 20% greater strength than its predecessor. Abel’s new SDX reel — built for heavy saltwater and Spey applications with a sealed drag and 17.5-inch-per-turn line pickup — also generated significant buzz on the show floor.
Read the Full Story →
|
|
River Conditions · Housatonic River Outfitters · March 2026
Housatonic Early-Season Update: Stoneflies Hatching, Guide Season Booking
Early-season reports from the Housatonic have been encouraging, with early black stoneflies already hatching along the river despite cold water temperatures hovering in the low-to-mid 30s. Housatonic River Outfitters has reopened their Cornwall Market kiosk for the season, stocked with flies, leaders, and supplies, and is booking guided trips for spring 2026.
Read the Full Story →
|
|
Events · Minnesota Trout Unlimited · March 13–15, 2026
Great Waters Fly Fishing Expo Runs This Weekend in St. Paul
The Great Waters Fly Fishing Expo, presented by Minnesota Trout Unlimited and billed as the largest fly fishing event in the Upper Midwest, runs March 13–15 at Hamline University in St. Paul, featuring nearly 50 expert programs over three days with speakers from around the world. While it’s a bit of a haul from the NYC area, the presentations will be among the most educational of the year — worth checking for livestream or recorded content if you can’t make the trip in person.
Read the Full Story →
|
|
|
|
▶ Watch This Week
|
YouTube · Troutbitten
Euro-Nymphing in Cold Water: Tactics for Late-Winter Trout
Domenick Swentosky of the Troutbitten channel consistently produces some of the most thoughtful, tactical fly fishing content in the Northeast. His deep dives into nymphing technique are particularly valuable for exactly the conditions we’re fishing right now — slow, cold water with sluggish trout that need a perfectly presented fly drifted right in front of their nose.
Watch on YouTube →
|
|
YouTube · Wet Fly Swing · Paul McCain, River Bay Outfitters
Long Island Fly Fishing with Paul McCain of River Bay Outfitters
For NYC-area anglers looking for accessible early-season action closer to home, this Wet Fly Swing episode with Paul McCain of River Bay Outfitters covers fly fishing opportunities on Long Island — often overlooked but a genuinely viable option when the Catskill rivers are blown out or frozen. A great reminder that world-class fly fishing doesn’t always require a 3-hour drive.
Watch on YouTube →
|
|
|
|
💡 Tip of the Week
|
Pre-Season Prep: Get Your Gear Ready Now, Not Opening Morning
March is the most underrated month on the fly fishing calendar — not because the fishing is spectacular, but because it’s the last quiet window before spring opener chaos. Use these final weeks to strip and re-clean your fly lines (cold storage can make them stiff and coily), inspect your rod guides for cracks or corrosion, and replace any frayed tippet spools. Check your wader seams carefully — small delaminations that seem manageable in October become soggy disasters when you’re standing in 38°F water on April 1. Most importantly, tie your Hendrickson and Early BWO patterns now, before the hatch arrives and you’re scrambling at the vise at midnight — your future self will thank you.
|
|
|
|
🪰 Hatch Watch
|
Expected Hatches: March 12–22, 2026
We’re firmly in the Early Black Stonefly window right now. Capnia and Allocapnia species have been hatching since late February on the Housatonic and are starting to appear on warmer afternoons along the Beaverkill and Willowemoc. These tiny (#18–22), all-black flies emerge in impressive numbers when air temps hit the low 40s — fish a #20 black Elk Hair Caddis or a small black soft hackle in the film during the 11am–2pm window.
Midges remain the primary food source across all of our rivers and will continue to dominate through March. On the Croton and Raritan, look for trout sipping in flat, glassy water during warm afternoons — a #22 Griffith’s Gnat or a cluster midge (#20 Adams Parachute) can produce surprisingly strong surface takes even with water in the upper 30s.
Watch for the first Blue-Winged Olives of 2026 to appear during any cloudy, mild afternoon this month. Baetis hatches are triggered by overcast skies and moderate temperatures (42–55°F) — if we get a gray, mild day in the next two weeks, BWO #18–22 Parachute Adams or CDC Comparaduns will be your best surface bet.
Looking ahead: The Hendrickson hatch on the Beaverkill typically kicks off around April 15 and is the most anticipated dry-fly event of the NYC-area calendar. Begin stocking #14 Hendrickson Parachutes, Comparaduns in rusty and pink (for the Red Quill female), and soft-hackle wet flies in brown/olive. The fish will be gorging — and the crowds will be out in force.
|
|
|
|
|
The Weekend Cast is published every Thursday morning.
Questions or tips to share? Reply to this email – we read every one.
📬 Subscribe to The Weekend Cast
Get the weekly fly fishing outlook delivered to your inbox every Thursday.
[Unsubscribe]
© 2026 Learn to Fly Fish NYC | learntoflyfishnyc.com
|
|