Monday, August 4, 2025

Hoot-Owl Fishing Restrictions to Take Effect Saturday on Blackfoot?River

Hoot-owl restrictions will take effect Saturday, Aug. 2, on the entire mainstem of the Blackfoot River – from the headwaters at the confluence of Anaconda Creek and Beartrap Creek to the confluence with Clark Fork River.

Hoot-owl restrictions prohibit fishing from 2 p.m. to midnight each day. These restrictions will stay in effect until conditions improve.?????

To check for other restrictions, click here.????

FWP's Statewide Fisheries Management Plan and the Blackfoot Drought Response Plan call for angling restrictions when flows drop below critical levels for fish, when water quality is diminished or when maximum daily water temperatures reach at least 71 degrees for three consecutive days. Water temperatures of 77 degrees or more can be lethal to trout.?????

These restrictions are designed to protect fish that become more susceptible to disease and mortality when water temperatures warm. Restricting angling to only cool morning hours can help reduce catch-and-release mortality.?????

Catch-and-release anglers can reduce stress on fish by getting them to the net or in hand quickly, keeping them in the water and reviving them prior to releasing them back into the river. ?????

Along with monitoring stream temperatures, FWP also monitors stream flows and in some streams holds instream flow water rights. FWP’s water program can issue a call on junior water users, when appropriate, to contribute to stream flows through the late summer and early fall. For more information on FWP water rights, click?here.????

If high temperatures and extremely low flows persist, anglers may want to consider fishing areas with less stressful temperatures and conditions, such as larger lakes or reservoirs or higher elevation waterbodies.