I went last fall, and my experience was that you need to check the generation schedules and plan accordingly.
With no generation, the river is mostly a long, skinny, clear lake. It's relatively deep in the area that I was in (about 4-5 miles below the dam), so wading to fish was not practical for us. We rented a jon boat and brought along a trolling motor, and it gave us the opportunity to fish until about 2-3 pm (that's when the generation kicked up while we were there).
If there is any generating going on, we needed a gas motor to stay on the water, and of course the level of the river rose fairly dramatically.
If there is current going, I'd recommend throwing jerk baits like Rapalas or shallow-diving crank baits.
I caught my first brown trout on the last hour of the last day of the trip using a small crankbait on a rocky shoal, but there were guys in gas-powered boats that caught them every afternoon by casting to the bank while the generators were running.
During the slack flow times, we caught fish with traditional trout spinning fishing gear (small lures or powerbait) by fishing the holes in the coontail weeds that are thick in parts of the river. My buddy brought his fly rod, but didn't do any good (I don't think he'd ever been trout fishing before, so skill and experience were not on his side).
I will say this...that river had the biggest wild trout that I had personally ever caught. We had a lot of fun, and saw some absolutely giant rainbows swimming around.
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