Northern NB salmon river flowing into Chaleur Bay at Bathurst. Less famous than Miramichi or Restigouche but genuinely productive — smaller, more accessible, with good Crown water. Salmon runs June–September with a grilse-heavy profile. Also holds brook trout in upper sections. 8-hour response makes it quicker to fish after rain than the big rivers. Nymph and wet-fly fishing predominate.
The Nepisiguit — 'the river that dashes roughly along' in Mi'kmaq — drains the rugged highland between Mount Carleton and Big Bald Mountain in northern New Brunswick and falls some hundred and forty kilometres to the sea at Bathurst on the Bay of Chaleur. It earns the name: a torrential, tumbling river stepping down through forested wilderness over a hard rocky bed, broken by a series of falls — Indian Falls, Nepisiguit Falls and the Pabineau Falls near the tide. The water is clean and cold off the Christmas Mountains country. Once reckoned among the most remarkable fishing rivers of the region, its salmon have leaned heavily on conservation and restocking in recent decades. The character is fast, rocky freestone water on a steady gradient. Wading is genuine rock-and-ledge work, with proper care around the falls and the heavier rapids.
Wading: Fast water and ledges around the falls
- Mixed
- Partly confined
- Step pool
- Rapids