Jordan River Michigan Fishing Conditions
The Jordan River holds the distinction of being Michigan's first Natural River: a designation it earned in 1972 that has preserved its wild character for more than fifty years. Cold, clear, and spring-fed, the Jordan flows through Antrim and Charlevoix counties to Lake Charlevoix. Its brook trout are wild, colorful, and as good as any in the Lower Peninsula.
The Jordan River is a spring creek in character if not in name. Cold springs feed the river throughout its length, maintaining temperatures in the low 50s through the warmest months of summer. Brook trout need water below 65°F to survive and thrive: the Jordan delivers that margin consistently. The result is a stream full of wild, native brookies in water that looks like it belongs in the Canadian Shield rather than northern Michigan.
The river is relatively small: most stretches can be waded across in a few steps. Casting is tight, requiring accuracy rather than distance. Fishing here rewards anglers who slow down, approach carefully, and present flies with precision rather than those who cover water quickly. The brookies are not large by trout standards: a 12-inch Jordan River brook trout is a good fish: but they are wild, gorgeous, and surprisingly difficult in low, clear conditions.
The Natural River Corridor
Natural River designation means the Jordan River corridor is protected from development and channelization. The state has acquired significant acreage along the banks, and the Jordan Valley Pathway hiking trail follows much of the river through state land. Access is excellent from the state pathway and from several county road crossings. Graves Crossing, Webster Bridge, and Rogers Road are the main entry points for wading anglers.
Hatches and Fishing
The Jordan carries the full complement of Michigan mayflies and caddis. Early season Hendricksons in late April and early May fish well on warm afternoons. The spring caddis hatch in May can be explosive. Summer brings Sulphurs, terrestrials, and the occasional Hex emergence, though the Jordan's relatively small size means Hex activity is not as dramatic as on the AuSable. Fall Blue-Winged Olives provide excellent midday fishing in September and October.
Brook trout in the Jordan respond well to small dry flies and subsurface presentations throughout the season. Parachute Adams, Elk Hair Caddis, and stimulator patterns work well. When fish are not rising, a weighted Hare's Ear Nymph or Pheasant Tail drifted through the slower pockets and undercut banks will find fish. Leader length matters: the Jordan's clarity means 5X or 6X tippet is the minimum.
Brown Trout
While brook trout are the primary target, the Jordan also holds brown trout: particularly in the lower reaches toward Lake Charlevoix. Browns are larger on average than the brookies and hold in the deeper pools and undercut banks. Fall is the best time to target large brown trout in the Jordan system.
Reading the Conditions on the Jordan
The Jordan is Michigan's first designated Natural River, and it fishes like one: cold, clean, and intimate. The gauge near East Jordan tells the story. At 150 to 250 cfs, the Jordan is perfect: brook trout in the upper sections, browns in the lower, and the gravel-bottom runs are ankle to knee deep and wadeable in hip boots.
The Jordan rarely blows out because its watershed is heavily forested, but spring snowmelt can push it above 350 cfs. When that happens, the lower sections near East Jordan get strong and off-color first while the upper valley above Graves Crossing stays fishable longer. High water on the Jordan concentrates fish behind logjams and in the softer inside bends. Stonefly nymphs and small streamers fished tight to wood are the call.
Below 120 cfs (usually late summer), the Jordan gets low but stays cold. The spring-fed nature of this river keeps temperatures in the low 50s even in August. This makes it a summer destination when the Boardman, PM, and other popular rivers warm up. Low water on the Jordan means small flies and long leaders. The brook trout in the upper reaches are less leader-shy than the browns downstream, so that is where to focus in skinny conditions.
The Jordan Valley is remote and beautiful. Cell service is spotty. Check this page before you leave and screenshot the conditions if you need them at the river. The Jordan rewards anglers who walk: the road-access spots see pressure, but a 20-minute hike through the cedar swamp puts you on water that may not see another angler all week.