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Late-Season Fly Fishing — October on the Beaverkill and Willowemoc

October on the Beaverkill and Willowemoc is the underrated Catskills fly-fishing window — bigger fish, lighter pressure, peak foliage on the river. A late-season planning guide for adults 21+.

By Theo — Editorial Team··4 min read
Evening sun at North-South Lake, Hunter NY (IG: @clay.banks)

Photo by Clay Banks on Unsplash

The Underrated Window

Most of the Catskills fly-fishing crowd treats opening day in April and the major mayfly hatches in May–June as the season's highlights. Both deserve their reputation. But late season — September through late October — is the under-asked window where the river fishes well, the crowds thin, and the foliage above the water turns a fishing day into a different kind of experience.

For adults 21+ planning a Catskills fly-fishing weekend in October, this is the planning piece.

Why October Works

A few river-specific reasons October fishes well on the Beaverkill and Willowemoc:

  • Water temperatures cool back into ideal range after summer's warm-water doldrums. Fish that hid in deep holes through August move back into feeding lies.
  • Smaller bug life is consistent. Blue Wing Olives (mid-September into November), midges, terrestrials. Not the showy mayfly hatches of spring; more methodical attentive fishing.
  • Pressure drops. Most non-residents wrap their season after Labor Day. October weekdays on the Beaverkill can feel near-deserted.
  • The foliage is the dividend. Standing in the water with the maples and birches turning is a non-fishing reward of the season.

What's Hatching

Blue Wing Olives (BWO) are the late-season anchor. Smaller mayfly, gray-blue body, fishes well as both dry and emerger. Mid-September through mid-November depending on year.

Tricos carry into early October on tailwater stretches. Tiny flies, technical fishing, predawn-to-mid-morning window.

Caddis keep going on warmer afternoons through early October.

Terrestrials (ants, beetles, grasshoppers) extend the season. Hopper-dropper rigs work well in shallower runs.

Streamers for trophy-fish chasing — the bigger browns get aggressive pre-spawn through October. Galloup-style articulated patterns; bigger leader.

Water Conditions

Beaverkill and Willowemoc flows in October depend heavily on the year's precipitation. Dry years: low-and-clear water that fishes technical and rewards stealth. Wet years: higher flows, more nymph and streamer fishing, fewer dry-fly windows. Check the Catskill Fly Fishing Center's weekly water-conditions reports or call the regional fly shops the morning of.

The Willowemoc holds up better than the Beaverkill in low-water years (smaller drainage; less impacted). The mainstem Delaware below Hancock fishes year-round as a tailwater regardless of season.

A Saturday Game Plan

6:30 AM. First light at the access point. Park, suit up, walk in.

7:00–10:00 AM. Morning session. BWOs hatching by mid-morning if the day cooperates. Coffee in the truck for the mid-morning break.

10:30–12:30 PM. Move locations or rest the section. Lunch.

12:30–4:00 PM. Afternoon session on a different stretch. Caddis activity through the warmer parts of the day; switch to streamers as the light fades.

4:00 PM onward. Pack up. Drive to lodging. Cannabis-aware adults 21+ pre-roll at the cabin or lodge once the rod is broken down — state-owned-land prohibition applies across river access.

Cannabis-Aware Late-Season Planning

The fishing day stays clean — wading cold rivers in October requires full attention and balance. The evening at the cabin is where the consumption window opens. For adults integrating cannabis into a slower-paced wellness rhythm, the post-river decompression has a structural fit; we make no medical claims, just describing a common pattern in the adult-21+ Catskills weekend.

Where to Buy

For a late-season Beaverkill / Willowemoc weekend:

  • MANOR CANNA in Livingston Manor when fully operational
  • For the broader Sullivan / Delaware corridor, plan to stock during the drive in (Margaretville options on the way down via Rt 30, or eastern Sullivan County options en route)

Lodging Strategy

The fishing-lodge tradition along the Beaverkill — West Branch Angler & Sportsman's Resort, the various smaller lodges — handles most October bookings well; smaller cabin rentals tighter to the river give a more independent rhythm. Plan ahead. Foliage-week weekends fill faster than non-foliage weekends but the week-before and week-after foliage peak give you the same fishing with easier lodging.

Why It Closes the Year Right

Most Catskills fly anglers who try late season once go back the following year. The fishing is real, the crowds are gone, and the foliage closes the season with a visual anchor that the spring hatches simply don't provide. For adults 21+ who can plan a non-summer Catskills weekend — typically empty-nesters, sole travelers, or couples without summer-camp constraints — October on the Beaverkill is the underrated calendar move.

Where to stay

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