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Fly Fishing On The Big Snowbird Creek In North Carolina

Big Snowbird Creek North Carolina Fishing Report & Options for Selecting Flies: Email us  at (sales@perfectflystore.com) with the dates you will be fishing and we will send you a list of our fly recommendations. We can get flies and gear to you within two to three business days from the time you place your order via Priority Mail. If you provide a budget for flies, we will select them to match the budget and get them to you on time for your trip. Your can also call us at 800-594-4726 and we will help you decide what flies and gear to use. All orders are shipped free in the U.S. If under a $100 order requiring Priority mail is a charge of only $8.10. Orders over a $100 are shipped free via Priority Mail.

We also have custom Perfect Fly selections in 3 different price ranges for this stream that come with or without fly boxes. They make excellent gifts. Click Here To Order or Call us at 800 594 4726 or email us at sales@perfectflystore.com.

Type of Stream
Freestone

Species
Rainbow Trout (wild and stocked with
holdovers)
Brown Trout (wild and stocked with
holdovers)

Size
Small to medium

Location
Western North Carolina

Nearest Towns
Robinsville

Season
Year-round in wild trout section.
Closed in March is hatchery
supported water

Access:
Very Difficult


Non-Resident License
State of North Carolina

Weather

National Weather Service Link

Season:
The season runs year-round
Winter:
Trout can be caught most days of the winter
Spring:
Spring is the best time for fly fishing the River due to the hatches.
Summer:
Summertime is a good time
Fall:
Fall is the best time for big browns

Recommended Tackle & Gear
Fly Line:
4, 5 or 6 weight
Leaders:
Dry fly: 9 to 12 ft., 5 or  6X Nymphing:  
71/2 ft., 3 or 4X, Streamers 0-2X

Tippets:
Dry fly: 5 or 6X, Nymphing: 3 or 4X,
Streamer 0-2X

Best Fly Rods:
Perfect Fly Supreme Four, Superb Five
or Ultimate Six

Fly Reels:
For 4/5/6 fly line
Fly Floatants and Misc Items:
Floatants, KISS Strike Indicators

Tools & Accessories:
Nippers, forceps, retractors, etc.

Copyright 2013 James Marsh


Fly Fishing Big Snowbird Creek North Carolina
To get to the key feature quickly, lets just say that Big Snowbird Creek is one of the best small stream brook trout streams in North Carolina. It rivals the Raven Fork in Great Smoky Mountains National Park, but many claim it’s the state’s best brook trout stream. Like any other good brook trout stream, the thing that keeps its “good” status is the remoteness of its waters. To get to the best brook trout fishing in Big Snowbird Creek you are going to have to do a lot of hiking.

Big Snowbird Creek, located near Robinsville North Carolina, flows into Santeetlah Lake. Its waters are managed by the state two different ways. It has a wild trout section in its headwaters,and a hatchery supported section in its lower end. The creeks reputation as a good trout stream comes from its wild brook trout territory which is protected from upstream migrating brown and rainbow trout by three large waterfalls. The creek starts out as a very small brook trout stream on the Snowbird Mountains near the Cherohala Skyway and becomes a rather large brook trout stream in its lower wild trout section that is twenty to thirty five feet wide in places. The three water falls are Big Falls, the lowest one; Middle Falls and Upper Falls.

The best brook trout fishing is above these waterfalls. To get there you have two options. You can travel to the end of the Big Snowbird Creek Road, which is Forest Service Road #75, to a location known as the Junction and depart by foot up the trail at least six miles
to the better brook trout water. You can also hike down the King Meadows Trail from Hooper Bald on the Cherohala Skyway. For those of you that are unfamiliar, the Cherohala Skyway is a twenty-mile long highway that runs along the top of the mountain ridges from
Tellico Plains Tennessee to Robinsville North Carolina. This trail is very steep and probably takes more effort to reach the better brook trout waters than the lower trail. Once the trail gets to the main brook trout waters, its decline drops drastically and it falls at a much slower pace. There are several small tributary streams that also have populations of brook trout between the lower falls and the middle falls, but you normally will find the largest brook trout in the big pools of the main stream. Brook trout exist up to about 12 inches but most of them probably average about 5 inches.

The lower section is followed by Forest Service Road (Big Snowbird Road) with not much access. It flows through a mixture of public and private property for its length of eight miles from Santeetlah Lake.

The first three miles upstream from the Junction, the Big Snowbird Creek lies far below the trail but can be accessed in places. It has excellent wild brown trout and rainbow trout fishing. There are campground in the upper section and camping is probably the best approach to use to fish the better brook trout waters. Above Sassafras Creek the stream falls through a series of cascades that’s a few hundred feet high. These are known as the Mouse Knob Falls. Above the falls you will find brook trout only.

The thing that defines Big Snowbird Creek from other streams in this area of the state of North Carolina is its wide streambed. The stream has numerous deep pools, long runs, some short riffles but it’s mostly pocket water with boulders and large rocks spread throughout its waters. There are plenty of Rhododendrons that makes for tight situations in the extreme upper parts and all the small tributaries but you want have any casting problems at most any other location on Big Snowbird Creek.