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The Yellowstone River winding through Paradise Valley with the Absaroka Range rising beyond

Paradise Valley Fly Fishing

Three of the most demanding spring creeks on earth. The upper Yellowstone River at its finest. An Orvis Endorsed lodge — your base for both.

DePuy's · Armstrong's · Nelson's

The Spring Creeks of Paradise Valley

Paradise Valley, Montana is home to a concentration of private spring creeks that has no equal in North America. Three of them — DePuy's, Armstrong's, and Nelson's — flow through the same ranching corridor just south of Livingston, each fed by underground springs that keep the water at a constant 52 degrees year-round. No snowmelt surge. No summer drop. Crystal clarity in June when every freestone river in Montana is off-color and blown out.

What makes these spring creeks exceptional — and genuinely difficult — is the combination of clear water, slow current, heavy weed growth, and fish that have been educated by skilled anglers for decades. These trout do not chase. They hold in feeding lanes, inspect every fly that drifts over them, and refuse the ones that aren't right. Tippet size matters. Mend angle matters. The difference between a 6X and 7X tippet, between a size 20 and a size 22 fly, between a perfect drag-free drift and one with a hint of tension — all of it matters, here, in ways it does not on most Montana water.

Spring Creek Lodge is the closest full-service Orvis Endorsed fly fishing lodge to the Paradise Valley spring creek corridor — a short drive from the lodge. We handle rod reservations on your behalf. Daily rods are limited and book well in advance during summer; planning early is not optional, it's necessary.

The Spring Creek Season

The spring creeks fish well throughout the season, but they are at their most prolific during the PMD (Pale Morning Dun) and Trico hatches of July and August, when rising fish are visible across the entire stream and precision presentation becomes the only variable separating success from refusal. Baetis hatches in spring and fall extend the season on both ends. Midwinter fishing is possible and often exceptional for anglers willing to fish size 24 midge clusters to sipping fish in 30-degree air.

3
World-Class Spring Creeks
Constant
Spring-Fed Temperature
Nearby
Spring Creek Lodge Base
Limited
Daily Rods — Included

DePuy's Spring Creek

One of the most written-about fisheries in fly fishing literature. DePuy's is a private spring creek on a working ranch just south of Livingston — a place where prolific PMD, Trico, and Baetis hatches produce surface-feeding brown and rainbow trout at densities that challenge even experienced technical anglers. Limited daily rods, pre-booked by the lodge — access is included in your stay with no additional fees. The refusals are part of the experience.

Armstrong Spring Creek

Adjacent to DePuy's on the same ranch road, Armstrong's offers a distinct personality in the same tradition of technical excellence. Slow, clear, heavily weeded current pushes spring creek fish to the surface on consistent hatches. The density of fish per mile is extraordinary. So is the precision required to fool them. Limited daily rods, pre-booked by the lodge — access included. A place where casting mechanics and fly selection are tested honestly.

Nelson's Spring Creek

The third of the great Paradise Valley spring creeks, Nelson's provides access to the same caliber of technical spring creek fishing in a slightly more intimate setting. Clear water, selective fish, and prolific hatches define the experience. Like its neighbors, Nelson's limits daily rods — reserved by the lodge and included in your stay, no extra fees. It rewards the angler who respects the water — quiet approaches, careful presentations, and earned fish.
On the Water

Paradise Valley Spring Creeks in Frame

Technical spring creek fly fishing in Paradise Valley, Montana
Spring creek perfection
Large brown trout caught on a Paradise Valley spring creek
Trophy brown trout
Angler sight-fishing on a clear Montana spring creek
Sight fishing the spring creek
Clear spring creek water with weed beds and rising trout
The technical water
Rainbow trout held over clear spring creek water
Spring creek rainbow
Brown trout from the spring creek, held and released
Spring creek brownie
Paradise Valley's Great River

Float the Upper Yellowstone

The Yellowstone River entering Paradise Valley from Yellowstone National Park is a different river than the wide braided channels farther downstream. In the upper valley, it runs clear and cold through glacier-carved benchland, with the Absaroka Range rising directly off the river corridor and the Gallatin Range visible to the west. The scenery is the kind that stops casting.

The upper Yellowstone holds all three of the river's signature species: wild Yellowstone Cutthroat Trout in the fast riffles and upper reaches — a native species found in diminishing numbers outside this corridor — along with the Brown and Rainbow Trout that have defined the Yellowstone's reputation among fly fishers since the 1970s. Summer hopper fishing along grassy banks in the valley section is among the most visceral dry fly experiences available anywhere in the region.

Our Orvis Endorsed guides float the upper Yellowstone in drift boats, covering 8 to 12 miles of productive water per day. Section selection happens each morning based on current conditions, hatch reports, and flow data — ensuring you're fishing the best available water rather than a fixed beat. A Paradise Valley float pairs naturally with a spring creek day: one for the wide open river, one for the close technical focus of the spring creeks.

Upper Yellowstone Season Highlights

Runoff clears earlier on the upper river than on the lower Yellowstone, with fishing typically coming into form by late June. July and August are the peak months: Pale Morning Duns, Golden Stones, Caddis, Yellow Sallies, and the transition into terrestrials through August and September. Fall brings the brown trout into pre-spawn aggression, with big streamers producing outsized fish from the undercut banks and boulder gardens. The upper Yellowstone fishes later into fall than almost any water in our region.

3 Species
Cutthroat · Brown · Rainbow
Float
Drift Boat Access
Jun–Oct
Prime Window
Native
Yellowstone Cutthroat
June – July
Early Summer
Runoff clears and the river comes into form. PMDs, Golden Stones, and Caddis dominate. Native Cutthroat are active in the upper reaches. The best all-around combination of hatch activity and fishable conditions.
August – September
Terrestrial Season
Grasshoppers along grassy Paradise Valley banks produce explosive dry fly takes. Spruce moths and beetles fill the gaps. One of Montana's most exciting and visually engaging forms of fly fishing.
October
Fall Browns
Pre-spawn brown trout become highly aggressive. Big streamers into structure and undercut banks. Baetis hatches bring fish to the surface on overcast afternoons. Fewer anglers, brilliant cottonwood color, memorable fishing.
Your Base for Paradise Valley

Spring Creek Lodge — Your Paradise Valley Base

Spring Creek Lodge sits just south of Big Timber, Montana — at the foot of the Absaroka-Beartooth Wilderness and a short drive from the Paradise Valley spring creek corridor. It is the closest full-service, all-inclusive fly fishing lodge to DePuy's, Armstrong's, and Nelson's Spring Creeks, and the closest lodge of its caliber to the upper Yellowstone float sections we fish.

The lodge itself is built from hand-scribed, wildfire-killed Montana ponderosa pine on the Drange family ranch — a 4th-generation working ranch in the family since 1937. Five guest rooms, all ensuite. Gourmet dining from breakfast through a multi-course dinner. Private spring creek water on property for an evening session when you return from the valley. The kind of place where the day's fishing gets revisited in detail, with guides who were there.

Montana Fly Fishing Lodge is an Orvis Endorsed Fly Fishing Lodge and was named a Top 3 Finalist for Orvis Lodge of the Year 2024 — one of three finalists in the United States. That endorsement means our guides meet Orvis's guide certification standards, our fly shop carries Orvis gear, and we participate in Orvis's lodge quality review program annually.

Spring creek rod reservations require advance planning. DePuy's, Armstrong's, and Nelson's all limit daily rods and book out for peak summer dates months in advance. We coordinate access as part of your stay planning — not as a day-of scramble. If you are targeting the spring creeks, the conversation starts when you inquire, not when you arrive.

5
Guest Rooms
4.5 mi
Private Spring Creek On Property
Orvis
Endorsed · Top 3 LOY 2024
All-Inclusive
Meals · Guides · Creek Access

Rod Reservation Coordination

Daily rods on DePuy's, Armstrong's, and Nelson's are limited and book months ahead for July and August. We coordinate access as part of your stay planning — confirming rod availability on the creeks you want to fish before you arrive, not after. Tell us your target dates when you inquire and we plan backward from the creek calendar.

Private Water on Property

Spring Creek Lodge has 4.5 miles of private spring creek on the ranch property — a complement to the valley creeks, not a substitute. Fish your own private water in the evenings, work on technique in the morning before the drive, or spend a full day on the ranch creek if you want a change of pace from the more pressured valley fisheries.

The Dual Lodge Experience →

Combine nights at Spring Creek Lodge with nights at our Flagship Lodge on the Stillwater and Yellowstone for a single trip covering both lodges and both river systems. The Dual Lodge Experience is the full Montana fly fishing itinerary — spring creeks, freestone rivers, and two distinctive lodge settings in one seamless stay.
On the Water

Spring Creek Lodge in Frame

Spring Creek Lodge lit at night reflected across the pond beside a streamside fire
Lodge reflections at night
Great room with hand-scribed log construction and lodge furnishings
The great room
Spring Creek Lodge log exterior at dusk with warm-lit windows and wraparound porch
Lodge at blue hour
Guide and client moment at the end of the day on the spring creek
Pass on the passion
Two anglers casting on the trout pond at dusk with the lit lodge reflected in the water
Evening cast on the pond
Large yellow-spotted brown trout from the spring creek
Gold bar
Fire pit at dusk with the lodge glowing in the background
Fire pit evenings
Spacious log cabin bedroom with vaulted ceiling and lodge furnishings
Guest suite
From Anglers Who Fished the Valley

Words from the Water

See all 185 reviews →

Begin Your Montana Story

Whether it's your first trip or your twentieth, there's always new water to discover. Let us help you plan the perfect fly fishing experience.

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Orvis 2024 Finalist — Endorsed Fly-Fishing Lodge of the Year Orvis Endorsed Fly-Fishing Lodge