|
There are a lot of options and diversity when it comes to fall fishing in Wyoming. From walleye to trout and northern pike to kokanee salmon, there are ample opportunities for anglers to enjoy the state’s bountiful fishing resources. Here is a fall fishing forecast from Wyoming Game and Fish Department fisheries supervisors and biologists from the department’s eight regions.
|
|
Wyoming watercraft registration closing for fall
The Wyoming Game and Fish Department will be closing the 2024 watercraft registrations and preparing for the 2025 season in October. Watercraft registrations will resume again Nov. 1 at Game and Fish offices and online. Boaters can still purchase 2024 aquatic invasive species stickers in October, if needed.
|
|
|
Two weeks left to order your Wyoming Wildlife calendar
Get ready to go wild next year and preorder the Wyoming Game and Fish Department’s most eagerly awaited special issue of the year, the 2025 calendar. The Wyoming Wildlife calendars are more than just a way to keep track of dates — it’s a celebration of Wyoming’s wildlife.
|
North Fork fisheries study completed
The Wyoming Game and Fish Department recently completed a four-year study to better understand seasonal distribution of trout and angler harvest in the North Fork of the Shoshone River and Buffalo Bill Reservoir west of Cody.
|
|
Sportsperson Hotline: (307) 777-4600 | Open 8 a.m.- 5 p.m. MT Monday-Friday
The Wyoming Game and Fish Department manages and conserves more than 800 species of fish and wildlife across Wyoming. For nearly 120 years, we’ve carried out our mission to conserve wildlife and serve people. Through these efforts, the Wyoming Game and Fish Department ensures the public continues to enjoy Wyoming’s vast fish and wildlife resource through hunting, fishing, trapping, wildlife watching and other forms of outdoor recreation. Hunters, anglers and wildlife watchers contribute over a billion dollars to Wyoming’s economy each year.
|
|
|
|