The brown was holding in a slot no wider than a doorframe, tucked tight against an undercut bank with maybe two feet of clearance overhead. I’d already blown two casts into the canopy. Third attempt — bow-and-arrow load, soft release — and the fly landed six inches upstream of his nose. He didn’t chase it. He just tipped up and ate it like he’d been waiting.
That’s Florida River fly fishing near Durango. It doesn’t reward your best cast. It demands your most precise one.
This river sits in the shadow of more famous water — the Animas, the San Juan — and most anglers drive right past it. That’s their loss and your opportunity. What the Florida offers is a technical, intimate fishery of wild brown and rainbow trout in clear, cold water that will expose every weakness in your game and sharpen everything that isn’t.
This post is built from real time on this water. Here’s exactly how to fish it right.
Finding Local Knowledge: A Stop at The San Juan Angler in Durango
There’s a kind of intelligence you can’t find on YouTube or in a forum thread — the kind that lives behind the counter of a good fly shop. Before heading out to the water, I made a stop at The San Juan Angler in Durango, and it was one of the better decisions of the trip.
The shop’s fly tying material selection was impressive — not just stocked, but thoughtfully curated for the region. If you’re someone who prefers to tie your own patterns rather than pull pre-packaged flies off a peg board, this is your kind of place. I picked up materials to tie a few patterns I had in mind for the browns and rainbows, and the selection gave me options I hadn’t anticipated.
What made the visit genuinely valuable, though, was the conversation. The staff didn’t just point me toward the most popular stretch and send me on my way. They talked through the Animas River running right through town, the Dolores River to the west, the Florida River tucked further out, and gave honest perspective on each. Water conditions, where fish were holding, what had been producing — the kind of river-specific intel that takes years of local time to accumulate.
That conversation changed how I approached the trip. The San Juan River down in New Mexico was already on my list, but the context they provided on timing and conditions helped me prioritize where to put my boots in the water first. Good local shops don’t just sell gear — they compress your learning curve and keep you from burning a day on water that isn’t fishing well.
If you’re planning a fly fishing trip through southwest Colorado, make The San Juan Angler one of your first stops. Walk in with questions. Leave with flies, materials, and a plan that’s actually grounded in what’s happening on the water right now.
Reading the Florida River Before You Ever Rig Up
Most anglers are rigged and in the water within five minutes of arriving. On the Florida, that’s five minutes of spooking fish you’ll never see.
Stop. Watch. The river will tell you what it’s holding and where — but only if you give it time to show you.
What to look for from the bank:
• Substrate color changes — dark bottom means depth and slower water, light sandy bottom means current pushing over a feeding shelf
• Foam lines collecting in the inside of bends — that’s where surface food concentrates
• Any subtle wakes, flashes, or movement tight to undercut banks
• Overhead canopy gaps — these determine where you can actually deliver a fly
The tailwater section below Lemon Dam runs 44–56°F most of the year. That cold, consistent temperature keeps fish active through midday when most freestone rivers go quiet — but it also makes these fish sharp-eyed and deliberate. They’ve seen pressure. They hold in the tightest, most protected lies available.
You’re not looking for open water. You’re looking for the least fishable-looking spot that has current bringing food to it.
Check USGS gauge data before every trip. This river changes with dam releases, and a small bump in flow repositions fish more than most anglers realize.
Tight Water Casting: The Four Presentations That Actually Work Here
A 9-foot five-weight is the wrong tool on the Florida. You need a 7.5- to 8-foot four-weight — short enough to maneuver under canopy, light enough to feel a 5X tippet load on a 13-inch brown that has no intention of cooperating.
Most anglers trained on big western water arrive here with habits that work against them. Distance isn’t the goal. Accuracy in a three-foot window is.
The bow-and-arrow cast is your go-to when canopy closes overhead. Pull the fly back toward you, load the rod tip, release. Effective within 15 feet. Practice it at home before you need it on the water.
The pile cast dumps slack line upstream of the fly deliberately. On the Florida’s variable seams — where current speed changes within inches — this is how you buy a drag-free drift that a standard cast cannot achieve.
The upstream roll cast is for when you’re below the fish with obstacles behind you. Anchor loads, forward sweep, high-trajectory finish into the feeding lane. Cleaner than it sounds once the muscle memory is there.
The reach mend extends your drift on any open section. Cast, then arc the rod tip upstream before the line touches water. Those extra seconds of drag-free float are often the difference between a look and an eat.
The Florida doesn’t care how far you can cast. It only cares where the fly lands relative to where the fish already is.
What These Fish Are Eating — and the Window When It Matters
Midges run the menu year-round. Sizes 20–24 in olive, black, and red — Zebra Midges, Mercury Midges, RS2s — are the baseline. Keep them in every box, every trip.
In summer, pale morning duns and caddis create genuine surface activity in the early morning and last hour of light. Don’t overlook the caddis pupa transition — a size 16 Partridge & Orange soft hackle swung through the tailout of a run is one of the most underused presentations on this entire river.
Late July through September on the freestone water above the reservoir, run a hopper-dropper. Size 10–12 foam hopper, beadhead Hare’s Ear or Pheasant Tail trailer. Fish that haven’t seen that presentation all season will eat it aggressively.
Leader setup that works: 9-foot tapered leader to 5X fluorocarbon as baseline. On calm, clear days in the tailwater — especially when you can see fish — drop to 6X. Accept the occasional break-off. The alternative is refusals.
Pro Tips: What Most Anglers Miss on the Florida
Fish the margins, never the middle.
The biggest fish on this river hold where predators can’t approach from multiple angles — undercut banks, root tangles, the inside edge of brush that’s hanging two feet over the water. Wade to the center and cast toward the edges. Most anglers do the opposite.
Slow down between pools — more than you think you need to.
A rushed wade-through between holding lies pushes a pressure wave that spooks every fish within 30 feet. One step, pause, look. The fish you’re hunting is often visible if you move slowly enough to actually see it before it sees you.
Temperature is a better clock than time of day.
Carry a thermometer. Below 45°F, switch to the slowest possible nymph presentation tight to the bottom — trout metabolism drops and they won’t chase. Above 65°F, move to shaded sections only or fish the tailwater. The feeding window tracks water temp more reliably than the hour on your watch.
The riffle is not empty.
Fast, broken riffle water looks wrong for trout. It isn’t. In low-light conditions — first and last 30 minutes of the day — browns and rainbows slide into riffles to feed aggressively on drifting nymphs. A weighted soft hackle swung through at last light produces fish that nothing else touches.
⚠️ Mistakes That Will Cost You Fish on the Florida River
Overcasting your target.
The most common error on tight water. Thirty feet feels conservative — on a 12-foot-wide run it blows the presentation before the fish ever sees the fly. Train yourself to be uncomfortably close. It works.
Line sag between rod tip and surface.
Any excess fly line drooping in variable current drags immediately, even before the fly reaches the fish. High-stick nymphing hold, line off the water. Six inches of sag is enough to kill a drift in broken current.
Fishing too much water too fast.
A spooked fish on the Florida will return to its holding lie within 15–20 minutes if you stop pressuring the water. Rest the pool. Move downstream, come back. This discipline is rare and it’s exactly why it works — almost nobody does it.
Treating the Florida like the Dolores.
Coming off bigger tailwater, anglers try to cover distance and target open seams. The Florida rewards the opposite — shorter casts, tighter targets, slower movement. If you fished the Dolores on this same trip, reset your mindset completely before you make a cast here. (If you haven’t read the Dolores tailwater breakdown, that post covers the canyon system in full.)
Photography on the Florida: Tight Water, Better Frames
The Florida’s canopy is your best lighting asset. It creates natural diffusion all day — no harsh shadows, no blown highlights — which means you’re not chasing a narrow golden hour window. Good light exists here from shortly after sunrise until the canyon walls cut it off in late afternoon.
Shooting with the Canon R5, the RF 24–105mm f/4L handles most bank situations. But the frames that hold up — the ones worth keeping — come from getting low. Camera at water level, six inches off the surface, river filling the foreground. A brown trout held just above the waterline with canyon rock and broken current behind it tells the whole story of this fishery in one frame.
For the fight and the release, switch to the RF 85mm f/1.2L if you’re positioned downstream. That compression at f/1.4 isolates the fish against a soft, out-of-focus river background in a way the zoom can’t touch. Enable animal-eye autofocus on the R5 and let it lock on the fish as it comes to hand — it performs better than expected on a wet, moving subject in variable light.
The release frame is almost always the strongest image. Fly line slack, fish vertical in clear water, hands extended. It communicates the ethic and the moment at the same time. Shoot burst in the last ten seconds of the fight and through the release. That’s your window.
One rule that matters more than any gear choice: when the fish is exhausted, put the camera down. A properly revived wild trout is worth more than any photograph. The best fly fishing images happen fast or not at all.
For more field photography from these waters, the Beyond the Cast photo gallery has the full collection from this trip and others.
Final Takeaway: The Florida River Will Teach You Something
Thirty-five years of fishing rivers — saltwater flats, tidal creeks, tailwaters, spring creeks — and tight water like the Florida still teaches something that nothing else can. Space is not a given. Precision is not optional. And the angler who adapts to the river’s terms instead of demanding the river adjust to theirs is the one who figures it out.
Florida River fly fishing near Durango is not the most famous water in Colorado. It won’t be the easiest trip you plan. But if you approach it with the right tools, real reading of the water, and the discipline to slow down when everything in you wants to speed up — it will give you wild trout in wild country on your terms.
That’s the whole deal. That’s always been the whole deal.
Want more fly fishing tactics, backcountry water breakdowns, and field photography? Read the full New Mexico fly fishing streamer tactics post and the Dolores & Florida River canyon breakdown for the full picture on this water.
👉 Visit Beyond the Cast for every post, the gear list, and the full photo gallery.
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