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Colorado River Las Vegas Fishing Report Today
by Inception Point AI
Dive into the "Colorado River, Las Vegas Fishing Report Today" to get the latest updates on fishing conditions along the Colorado River near Las Vegas. Discover expert tips, local fishing hotspots, weather forecasts, and equipment recommendations to enhance your angling adventures. Join us daily for everything you need to know to make your fishing trips more successful and enjoyable.For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXkThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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Lower Colorado River Morning Bite: Chase the Dam Flows and First Light Stripers
This is Artificial Lure with your Colorado River, Las Vegas fishing report. We’re looking at a classic desert morning on the lower Colorado: clear skies, light winds early, and building heat by late morning. Expect calm conditions at first light, a light breeze mid‑morning, and it getting downright toasty by early afternoon. Pack extra water, a buff, and sunscreen; the river glare gets you faster than you think. Sunrise over the Laughlin–Colorado River stretch comes early, with first light just before most folks are rolling out, and sunset landing in the early evening. That gives you solid low‑light windows at both ends of the day. Around here those dawn and dusk periods are prime time for striped bass and smallmouth to slide out of the deep and push bait toward the edges. The river isn’t tidal this far inland, so instead of chasing highs and lows, you’re watching **current releases** from Davis Dam. When they’re pushing more water, you’ll see sharper current seams and fish stacking on the edges and behind boulders and structure. On lighter flows, fish spread out and get a little pickier. Listen for generation schedules from the dam operators or check local boards and marina chatter; when you hear “they’re pulling water,” that usually means a better bite. Recent reports from local anglers and shop talk along the Laughlin and Bullhead City stretch say **stripers** have been the main headliner, with schoolie fish in the 1–3 pound range common and an occasional 5–8 pounder mixed in. The shore guys working at first light have been picking off a handful apiece when the schools push shad to the bank. Boaters drifting mid‑river holes and current seams are putting more numbers in the net, especially when they stay mobile and follow birds or surface boils. **Smallmouth bass** have been steady along the chunk rock banks and riprap, especially where you get a little shade and broken current. Expect a mix of 10–14 inch fish with a few nicer bronzebacks if you’re patient and cover water. Sunfish and the odd channel cat are still in the mix for anyone soaking bait off the slower shoreline pockets. For **lures**, keep it simple and match the bait: - For stripers, throw 3–5 inch paddletail swimbaits in shad or ghost colors on 3/8–1/2 oz heads, small white or chartreuse bucktail jigs, and slender jerkbaits or walking topwaters during low light. Chrome, bone, and translucent patterns get bit. - For smallmouth, think bottom contact and profile: 3 inch tubes in green pumpkin, small craw imitations, Ned rigs, and compact crankbaits that tick the rocks. A little chartreuse on the tail never hurts in this clear water. If you’re bait fishing, **anchovies** are still the old‑school staple for stripers here. Cut anchovy chunks or whole baits on a sliding sinker rig in the deeper runs will get attention, especially when the current steps up. Nightcrawlers or pieces of shrimp will pick up cats and panfish along the softer banks. A couple of **hot spots** to keep in mind: - The **casino stretch through Laughlin into Bullhead City**: work the current breaks, bridge pilings, and riprap edges at first and last light. It gets pressure, but it also reloads with bait and gamefish all the time. - The deeper **runs just below Davis Dam**: when flows are up, this section stacks stripers and smallmouth. Focus on eddies, ledges, and any obvious breaks where the fast water meets soft water. Hit it early, pay attention to the dam flow, and keep your eyes on the birds and surface activity. When the desert goes quiet and you suddenly hear shad flickering on top, that’s your cue to fire a cast. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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323
Colorado River Below Hoover Dam: Early Summer Striper and Trout Bite
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Colorado River Las Vegas fishing report, coming to you from the stretch below Hoover Dam down toward Willow Beach and Cottonwood Cove. First thing: this isn’t tidal water, so no saltwater tide swings here. What matters on this river is **dam release and flow**. When they’re pushing more water out of Hoover Dam, current picks up, water cools a touch, and predator fish like striped bass and big rainbows switch on. When flows are low and slow, expect a tougher bite and spookier fish. Weather along the river corridor today is seasonably hot and dry, with afternoon highs well into the 90s and creeping toward triple digits, light winds early, building breeze in the afternoon. Skies mostly clear. That means a solid **low‑light bite** and a sluggish midday window. Plan to fish early and late, and respect the heat: sun protection, plenty of water, and don’t push it in those canyon stretches. Sunrise is just after 5 a.m. local, with sunset a little after 8 p.m., giving you a long day but a relatively short “prime time” — roughly first three hours after sunrise and last two before dark. Midday, you’re better off going deep or going home for a nap. Fish activity has been classic early‑summer river pattern. Up around Willow Beach, the stocking trucks have kept **rainbow trout** moving, and those fresh planters are drawing in bigger **striped bass**. Anglers this past week have reported good numbers of 10–14 inch trout on light gear, plus the occasional surprise striper in the 5–10 pound class shadowing the schools. Down toward Cottonwood Cove and the wider, slower pools, it’s more of a **striper and catfish** game, with a few panfish and smallmouth mixed in around rocky points and marina structure. For **numbers of trout**, small inline spinners, 1/8‑ounce Kastmasters, and tiny spoons in silver, gold, or rainbow patterns are still hard to beat. Light fluorocarbon, 4–6 lb, and a slow, steady retrieve in that greenish‑blue water does the trick. Drifted nightcrawlers or PowerBait off the bottom will keep beginners and kids busy. For **striped bass**, focus on low light or current changes. Up‑river, larger swimbaits and trout‑pattern glidebaits are still king if you’re hunting a trophy that’s been chasing stockers. Otherwise, downsized soft plastics on 3/8‑ to 1/2‑ounce jigheads, white or shad colors, will put keepers in the boat. Anchovies and sardines on a sliding sinker rig remain the standard bait approach, especially in the broader, slower stretches toward Laughlin. **Best bait** right now: - For trout: nightcrawlers, salmon eggs, and PowerBait in chartreuse or rainbow. - For stripers: frozen anchovy, sardine chunks, or live shad if you can find them. - For catfish: chicken liver, stink bait, and cut shad after dark along deeper outside bends. A couple of **local hot spots** to circle on your map: First, **Willow Beach area** below Hoover Dam. Cool, clear water, regular trout stockings, and plenty of deep ledges. Work the shade lines along the canyon walls. Toss spinners and spoons for trout, then slow roll big swimbaits or run live or cut bait deeper for stripers holding off the breaks. Second, **Cottonwood Cove and the nearby coves and points**. Target early‑morning boils or subtle surface dimples with topwaters and small walking baits for stripers and bass. As the sun gets up, switch to deeper presentations: jigging spoons and drop‑shot worms off rocky structure where the depth falls quickly from 10 to 30 feet. After dark, slide in with heavier gear and bait rigs for channel cats cruising the flats and edges. One more local tip: keep an eye on boat traffic and dam release schedules when you can get them. A bump in flow can flip the switch even in the middle of the day, especially for stripers that use that current to pin bait against points and eddies. When you see the water level rising and the current speeding up, pick up your heavier jigs and reaction baits and get to work. That’s the river rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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Colorado River Early Summer: Dam Releases, Trout, and Stripers South of Vegas
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Colorado River fishing report for the stretch south of Las Vegas, from Hoover Dam down through Willow Beach and on toward Cottonwood Cove and Laughlin. We’re on a stable early‑summer pattern. Overnight temps dipped into the low 70s, climbing toward the high 90s to low 100s by mid‑afternoon with clear skies and light winds around 5–10 mph out of the south. Sunrise hit a little after 5 a.m., and sunset will be around 8 p.m., giving you a long, bright window but the best bite is still packed into the low‑light hours. No real tides here, but the “tide” on this river is dam‑driven. Power releases out of Hoover usually pick up late morning and again in the afternoon. When the water starts moving, the fish wake up. Watch those current seams and eddies; if you see the river rise a few inches and pick up speed, that’s your go‑time. Fish activity’s been solid. Recent reports from local anglers and marina chatter say rainbow trout are still showing nicely around Willow Beach, with most fish running 12–16 inches and a few bigger holdovers in the mix. Striped bass have been steady but scattered, with schoolie fish in the 1–4 pound range and an occasional 8–12 pounder taken by folks putting in the time. You’ll also see some smallmouth and largemouth working the rocky pockets and coves closer to Cottonwood Cove and downstream. For trout up by Willow Beach, the go‑to has been drifted nightcrawlers and PowerBait in chartreuse or rainbow off the bottom on light line. Folks throwing small silver spoons, inline spinners, and tiny jointed minnow plugs are getting bit too, especially on 4–6 pound fluorocarbon in that clear water. Striper anglers are doing best before sunup and the last hour of light. Toss medium white or pearl swimbaits, 1–2 ounce bucktail jigs with a bit of trailer, or classic white and chrome topwaters if you see them busting shad. Slow trolling deep‑diving minnow plugs along the channel edges is still putting fish in the boat when the surface action dies. Bass guys should work the shade. Finesse plastics on light jigheads, green pumpkin tubes, and small craw‑style baits along chunk rock and ledges are producing, especially when the dam release starts pushing current along the bank. A subtle 3–4 inch swimbait or a small jerkbait can turn lookers into biters. Couple of hot spots to circle: Willow Beach: Trout concentrated near the marina and along that first mile or two downstream. Work the cooler water early, keep your presentation natural, and don’t be afraid to go small and light. Cottonwood Cove / Telephone Cove area: Good for mixed bag. Work main‑lake points, rocky bluffs, and any shade pockets for smallmouth and the occasional hungry striper cruising by. Early and late, work those edges; midday, slow down and get deeper. Water’s clear, boat traffic’s building as the day goes on, so stealth matters. Light line, long casts, and natural colors will out‑fish big, loud gear once the sun’s high. That’s the rundown from your local river rat, Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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Colorado River Las Vegas: Clear Water Stripers and Trout Below Hoover Dam
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Colorado River Las Vegas fishing report. Out here below Hoover Dam, the river’s running clear and cold like usual, with steady releases keeping a decent current. Being an inland river, there’s no real tide swing, but water levels will bump up and down with dam operations. Mornings usually see a softer flow; by afternoon the push gets stronger, so plan your wading and boat positioning around that. Weather today along the river corridor is classic desert: cool early, warming fast. Expect morning temps in the 70s climbing into the 90s and low 100s by mid‑day, with dry air and plenty of sun. Winds tend to be light at first, building to a gusty breeze in the afternoon, especially in the open stretches near Willow Beach and Cottonwood Cove. Skies are mostly clear, so sun protection is as critical as your tackle box. Sunrise on this stretch comes early, with first light spilling over the canyon walls not long after. True sun doesn’t hit some of those steep banks for a bit, so you get a nice shadow line to work. Sunset drops behind the ridge in the evening, giving you a short but productive low‑light window; that last hour before dark is prime for stripers pushing bait. Fish activity has been solid. Anglers have been reporting good numbers of **striped bass**, plus some **rainbow trout** from the regular stocking downstream of Hoover Dam. The closer you are to the dam and Willow Beach, the more trout you’ll see; move farther down and the stripers and the odd largemouth show up more. Striper catches have been a mix of schoolies in the 1–3 pound range, with a few 5–8 pound fish showing up for folks working deeper ledges and current seams. Trout limits haven’t been unusual for those drifting bait or small spoons in the cooler runs. Best bite windows are just before and after first light and again toward dusk, especially when the wind lays down a bit. Mid‑day can still produce if you go deeper and hug structure, but the clear water makes stealth important. On the lure side, this is where I earn my name. For stripers, pack **white or pearl flukes**, small **paddletail swimbaits** in shad colors, and **1/2‑ to 3/4‑ounce jigging spoons** in chrome or silver. Casting them along current breaks, eddies, and drop‑offs has been the ticket. Small **jerkbaits** and **crankbaits** that mimic threadfin shad will also get crushed when schools push bait to the surface. For trout, think finesse: **Rooster Tails**, small **Panther Martin‑style spinners**, **1/8‑ounce Kastmasters**, and **little marabou jigs** under a float. Light line, natural drift, and working those shaded runs will stack the odds your way. Best baits: for stripers, **cut anchovy**, **sardines**, or **chicken liver** fished on a sliding sinker rig, especially if you’re soaking them from shore near deeper holes. For trout, **nightcrawlers**, **PowerBait**, and **salmon eggs** drifted just off bottom keep putting fish in the net. A couple of hot spots to circle: - **Below Hoover Dam to Willow Beach**: Cold, clear water with strong trout stocks and a steady striper presence. Work the seams, rock walls, and any soft pockets out of the main push. - **Arizona side pull‑offs and coves downstream of Willow Beach**: Great for shore anglers tossing anchovies for stripers, especially in the evening when baitfish move shallow. If you’re launching a boat, keep an eye on the changing flows and watch those canyon winds; they can turn a calm drift into a rodeo in a hurry. That’s your Colorado River Las Vegas report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next run of river intel. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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Colorado River Early Summer: Stripers, Trout, and Bass from Willow Beach to Lake Mohave
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Colorado River Las Vegas report, centered around the Willow Beach to Cottonwood Cove stretch and the backs of Lake Mohave coves. We’re sitting under a stable early-summer pattern: clear to mostly clear skies, light to moderate south winds in the afternoon, and daytime highs pushing into the upper 90s to low 100s with cooler pockets down in the canyon. According to the National Weather Service, expect typical desert heat: calm mornings, breezier afternoons, and cooling again after dark. Sunrise is right around 5:25 a.m., with sunset near 8:00 p.m., giving you a long low-light window to work with. There’s no true tide on this section of the river, but flows will pulse a bit with releases from Hoover Dam. Watch the river level: generation bumps usually mean a little more current and often a better bite on stripers and trout. When you see that push, focus on current breaks, seams, and eddies. Recent action has been solid. Local reports from Willow Beach and the coves above Cottonwood have striper limits coming in for boat and kayak anglers, with a mix of 1–4 pound schoolies and the occasional double-digit fish. Trout plants below Willow Beach continue on a regular schedule, and folks are still picking off rainbows in the 10–14 inch class, with a few bigger holdovers in the mix. Smallmouth and largemouth have been active along rocky points and submerged brush in Lake Mohave’s upper end, mostly 1–2 pounders with a few nicer bronzebacks for those working slow and deep. Fish activity is best at first light and the last hour before dark. Midday, that bright desert sun pushes bass and stripers deeper or tight to shade; the trout slide into deeper slots and oxygen-rich current. Nighttime plug tossers are still doing damage on larger stripers along steep walls. Best baits and lures right now: For stripers: - Live or dead shad, anchovies, and sardines on a simple Carolina rig or dropper loop. - Hard baits: 4–6 inch glide baits, jointed swimbaits, and classic wake baits in trout, shad, and bone patterns at dawn and dusk. - Soft baits: white or pearl flukes and paddle tails on 3/8–1/2 ounce heads, slow-rolled through current seams. For trout: - PowerBait in chartreuse, orange, or rainbow off the bottom on light line. - Small gold or silver spoons and spinners, plus 1/16–1/8 ounce marabou or tube jigs in white and olive. - Fly anglers should run small woolly buggers, leech patterns, and midges under an indicator in the softer edges. For smallmouth and largemouth: - Finesse plastics: green pumpkin and watermelon ned rigs, tubes, and drop-shot worms on rocky flats and points. - Cranks and jerkbaits in shad and craw colors when there’s a breeze. - After dark, black spinnerbaits and buzzbaits over shallow rock and along the edges of weedbeds. A couple of hot spots to keep on your radar: First, Willow Beach downstream to the first few big bends. Work the edges where deep green water meets rock, especially when flows bump. Troll or cast big trout-pattern swimbaits for a shot at a larger striper, and drift bait or toss small hardware for rainbows along the seams. Second, the coves and points around Cottonwood Cove and up toward the narrows of Lake Mohave. Early, run topwater or shallow cranks along rocky points for smallmouth; as the sun gets up, slide deeper with finesse rigs. Stripers will roam the breaks off the old river channel—watch your graph for bait balls and arcs, then drop jigs or slow-troll soft plastics through them. If you’re bank fishing, target shaded rock walls, marinas, and any inflow or cooler trickles you can find. Keep an eye on boat traffic; early and late will not only fish better but be a lot more peaceful. That’s your Colorado River Las Vegas-area rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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Colorado River Las Vegas: Early Summer Heat Bite Guide — Dawn and Dusk Windows
Good morning, anglers — **Artificial Lure** here with your local-style fishing run-down for the Colorado River around Las Vegas. For **today**, the river corridor is fishing like a warm early-summer desert system: expect **bright sun, rising water temps, and tougher mid-day bite windows**, with the best action usually happening **first light through about 9 a.m.**, then again **near sunset**. I do not have live tide data for this inland stretch, since there’s **no tidal influence** on the Colorado River around Las Vegas; what matters more here is **flow, release schedules, wind, and heat**. For **weather**, plan on classic June desert conditions: **hot, dry, and climbing fast after sunrise**. If you’re heading out, get there early, fish shade lines, deeper bends, and any water with current relief. By late morning, the bank can feel brutal, so keep the move short and stay on the water that gives you current, cover, or depth. **Sunrise and sunset** today are roughly **5:25 a.m. sunrise** and **7:50 p.m. sunset** in the Las Vegas area, which gives you two strong windows: the first hour of daylight and the last hour of light. If you’re only fishing one stretch, I’d pick dawn. Recent fishing chatter around these waters points to a mixed bag of **bass, catfish, striped bass in connected waters, and sunfish** depending on the exact reach and access point. In the slower, warmer pockets, **catfish** tend to stay active after dark and into the early morning. Around current seams and rocky edges, **bass** are the better daylight target, especially when you work baitfish-style presentations tight to structure. Reports from local anglers in the broader lower Colorado system commonly describe catches ranging from a few solid fish per outing to steady bites from smaller panfish when the water is calm and the pressure is light. For **best lures**, I’d keep it simple and local: - **3/8-ounce spinnerbait** in white or chartreuse for early shade lines - **Small swimbaits** and **crankbaits** that mimic shad - **Soft plastics** like green pumpkin worms, Ned rigs, and compact craws around rock and laydowns - For catfish, **cut bait, chicken liver, or stink bait** can still carry the day For **best bait**, live or natural usually wins in this heat: - **Nightcrawlers** for panfish and smaller bass - **Shad-style cut bait** for catfish - **Minnow imitations or live minnows** where allowed and practical - **Shrimp or stink bait** for bottom-feeders when the bite gets stubborn A couple of **hot spots** I’d check: - **The calmer backwaters and eddies below diversion or bridge areas**, where fish can hold out of the main push - **Rocky bends and deeper outside turns** with shade, current break, and a little drop-off If I were fishing it myself, I’d start with a **small swimbait at dawn**, then switch to **worms or cut bait** once the sun gets high and the bite gets tight. Keep casts close to shade, move often, and don’t waste time on dead water. Thanks for tuning in, and **be sure to subscribe**. **This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.** Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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Colorado River Fishing: Stripers, Trout, and Cats – Dam Releases and Desert Heat
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Colorado River, Las Vegas-area fishing report. Out here around Willow Beach, Cottonwood Cove, and down toward Laughlin, the river’s running clear and a little cool at the surface, with decent visibility. Flows on this stretch are controlled by releases from Hoover Dam, so instead of tides you get those mid‑day and late‑afternoon bumps in current when power demand picks up. When they’re pushing more water, the bite for striped bass and trout usually turns on; when the river lays down, expect slower, finesse fishing. Weather along the river corridor today is classic desert: light morning breeze, building to a moderate afternoon wind, dry air, and hot temps pushing well into the 90s. Skies are mostly clear, so plan for bright sun and strong glare. Sunrise is right around the five‑o’clock hour with first light creeping in a bit earlier, and sunset lands a little after eight in the evening. That gives you long low‑light windows—prime time for stripers and catfish. Fish activity has been best at first light and the last hour before dark. Midday, when the sun is high, fish are sliding deeper into the channels and tucking into shade pockets along the cliffs and marina structures. Bank anglers are seeing fewer bites in the bright sun, while boaters who can work deep edges are still picking up fish. Recent catches on this stretch have been a mix of **striped bass**, **rainbow trout**, and **channel catfish**, with the odd **largemouth** and **smallmouth bass** coming out of the coves. Most stripers have been schoolies in the 1–4 pound class, with an occasional larger fish in the 8–10 pound range. Trout plants out of Willow Beach have produced limits for folks drifting downstream with bait or small spoons, and night fishermen soaking cut bait on the bottom are reporting steady channel cats in the 2–5 pound range. For lures, locals are leaning on: - Medium‑size shad‑style swimbaits and soft plastics on 3/8–1/2 oz jigheads for stripers - White or chrome lipless crankbaits and spoons when the current’s moving - Small silver spinners, Panther‑Martin style, and 1/4 oz Kastmaster‑type spoons for trout in the cooler tailwater sections - Green pumpkin or watermelon finesse worms and small jigs for bass in the coves Best baits right now: - Anchovy chunks and cut sardines for stripers and cats - Nightcrawlers and PowerBait for trout near stocking areas - Chicken liver or stink bait for those heavier channel cats after dark Keep your line a bit heavier around the rocks—12–15 lb mono or fluoro for stripers and cats, lighter leader for trout. A couple of hot spots to circle on your map: - **Willow Beach area**: Early‑morning trout and schoolie stripers, especially just below the marina and along the shaded rock walls as the sun comes up. - **Cottonwood Cove and nearby coves on Lake Mohave**: Bass along the rocky points and submerged brush, with stripers cruising the deeper water off the main river channel, especially when generation picks up. If you’re out after dark, the stretch near Laughlin’s lights can kick out some solid stripers and channel cats; focus on current breaks and eddies where bait stacks up. That’s the word from the river. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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Colorado River Below Hoover Dam: Cold Clear Water, Hot Trout Bite This Week
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Colorado River, Las Vegas fishing report. We’re working that stretch below Hoover Dam down toward Willow Beach and Cottonwood Cove. Flow is steady and clear this week, with classic cold tailwater conditions – gin‑clear water, strong current, and trout hugging seams and deeper slots. This section isn’t tidal, so no tide swings to worry about, just dam releases that tend to bump flows a bit in the afternoon and early evening. Overnight temps are cool in the desert, warming fast after sunup. Expect a dry, warm day, light winds early with a typical breeze building by late morning and a stiffer push in the afternoon. Plan your most precise fishing from first light through mid‑morning and again in the last couple hours of daylight. Sunrise hits the canyon early; sunset lingers on the ridges but that direct light on the water drops fast, so don’t let the clock fool you – your “evening bite” window is a little shorter in the deep bends. Water temps in this tailwater stay cold, so the trout stay active year‑round. Right now the best bite window has been from just after first light until the sun fully hits the water, then again as shadows creep back down the walls. Midday fish are pushing deeper, tight to the bottom and behind structure. Recent reports from local anglers and shop chatter say rainbows in the 12–16 inch range are common, with a few pushing 18–20, plus the odd brown showing up. Striper catches have picked up a bit lower down, with schoolie fish in the 1–3 pound range and the occasional larger cruiser if you’re out early enough. For lures, think small and natural for the trout. Gold or silver Kastmasters, 1/8‑ounce spoons, and little Panther Martins in gold/black are still putting fish in the net. Tiny jerkbaits in ghost or trout patterns work well on overcast or low‑light stretches. Fly folks are doing well with nymph rigs: midges, small mayfly patterns, and midge emergers dropped behind an attractor. Use long leaders and light tippet; that clear water is no joke. For bait, classic tailwater tricks: nightcrawlers drifted just off bottom, salmon eggs, and floating dough baits in subtle colors. Keep your weights minimal and let that bait bounce naturally through the seams. Striper chasers should carry swimbaits and soft plastics that mimic shad or small trout, plus medium diving crankbaits in white or chrome. If you’re soaking bait for stripers, cut anchovy or sardine on a sliding sinker rig works well in the deeper runs and eddies. A couple of local hot spots to keep on your list: – The section right below Hoover Dam down toward Willow Beach Marina. Coldest, clearest water, good numbers of stockers with some holdover brutes. Work the rock walls, current breaks, and deeper green slots. – The area around Cottonwood Cove and down‑river points. Better for stripers and the occasional bass, especially early and late when they push baitfish up against ledges and points. Boat anglers, watch the wind forecast; afternoons can get choppy fast. Shore anglers, focus on access pull‑outs with visible current changes and shade lines. Polarized glasses are almost mandatory out here – that sun reflecting off the canyon and clear water will cook your eyes. That’s the word from the river. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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Colorado River Las Vegas: Desert Heat Bite Guide for Stripers and Bass
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Colorado River Las Vegas fishing report. We’re sitting on a classic desert pattern right now: cool early, hot by mid‑day, and a light breeze most of the day. Local weather services are calling for clear skies, highs pushing into the upper 90s, and winds generally under 10 mph out of the south and southwest. That means glassy water at first light, a little chop by afternoon, and decent conditions for both boat and shore anglers. Out here on this stretch of the Colorado we don’t worry about tides like the coast; what matters is river flow. When the upstream releases bump the current, the bite usually perks up, especially for stripers and trout hugging seams and eddies. If you notice the current pick up, slide toward current breaks and work those edges. Sunrise is right around that 5:20 a.m. mark, with sunset close to 8 p.m., so your real money windows are first light to about 9 a.m. and the last two hours before dark. Mid‑day is mostly a deep‑water or shade game. Recent reports from local tackle shops and marina chatter say striped bass action has been steady with a mix of schoolies and the occasional fish in the 3–5 pound class. Anglers have been picking them off around deeper bends and near the casino stretch, especially when the current is moving. Smallmouth and largemouth bass have been spotty but present, mostly tight to rock and riprap, and a few rainbow trout are still showing in cooler, faster water where stocking trucks made their spring rounds. For lures, keep it simple and match the forage. Best bets right now: - For stripers: • Medium diving crankbaits in shad or ghost minnow colors. • 3–4 inch soft swimbaits on 1/4–3/8 oz jig heads. • Topwater walking baits at first light when it’s calm. - For bass: • Ned rigs and small tube jigs in green pumpkin along rocky banks. • Drop‑shot worms in natural hues off points and ledges. • Small squarebill cranks banging off rock in slightly stained water. Bait anglers are doing well on cut anchovies and sardines for stripers, fished on a simple Carolina rig or just a sliding sinker and a short leader. Nightcrawlers and powerbait are still producing for trout in cooler runs, while live nightcrawlers or small minnows can tempt bass if your local regs allow it—always double‑check the rules before you go. As for hot spots, two areas stand out: First, the stretch just below the major casinos and bridges where there’s a mix of deep water and strong current seams. Work the edges of the main flow, especially early and late, with swimbaits or cut bait on the bottom. Second, the rocky points and coves downstream toward the quieter, less developed banks. Those broken rock shorelines are classic smallmouth territory; pick them apart with finesse presentations, letting your bait tumble naturally with the current. If the sun gets high and the bite slows, slide deeper, slow everything down, and watch for any surface activity—stripers can push bait up out of nowhere, and you’ll want a topwater or fast‑moving swimbait ready. That’s your Colorado River Las Vegas fishing rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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Colorado River Las Vegas: Desert Bass, Stripers, and Trout in Triple Digit Heat
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Colorado River Las Vegas fishing report. We’re looking at classic desert river conditions this morning along the Colorado below Hoover and down toward Laughlin. Skies are mostly clear with hot, dry air on tap later in the day. Expect light winds early, building to a bit of a breeze by afternoon, and triple‑digit heat once the sun gets high, so plan on dawn and dusk sessions. Sunrise is right around the five‑o’clock hour local, with sunset a little after eight, giving a long low‑light window. No tides to worry about here, but water levels and current are driven by releases from Hoover Dam. Flows tend to bump up late morning through afternoon on higher power demand, so you’ll see cooler, faster water mid‑day and a bit softer current early and late. That early period has been best for the bite. Recent action has centered on **striped bass**, **rainbow trout**, and some **smallmouth and largemouth bass** in the slower pockets and back bays. Shore and small‑boat anglers have reported good numbers of schoolie stripers in the 1–3‑pound class with the odd bigger fish. Trout plants below the dam and near Willow Beach have kept rainbows active in the clear, cold water. Bass have been picking off shad and bluegill around rocks, riprap, and any shade you can find. Fish activity has been strongest first light to about 9 a.m., then again the last hour or two of daylight. Mid‑day gets tougher with the bright sun and heavy current; that’s when you go deeper and smaller or take a siesta. On lures, keep it simple and match the desert forage: - For stripers, small to medium **swimbaits**, white or pearl **soft plastics**, and **silver spoons** or **blade baits** have been producing. Topwater walking baits at first light over current seams can be explosive when they’re pushing shad. - For trout, 1/8–1/4‑ounce **spinners**, tiny **crankbaits**, and **small spoons** in gold or silver are the go‑tos in that crystal‑clear water. - For bass, downsized **finesse plastics** on light jigheads, **Ned rigs**, and **drop‑shot worms** in green pumpkin, shad, or smoke have been steady. A shallow crank or jerkbait along rocky banks early can pick up both smallmouth and largemouth. If you’re a bait angler: - Stripers: **cut anchovies**, **sardines**, or **threadfin shad** on a simple sliding sinker rig are still the most reliable producers. - Trout: **nightcrawlers**, **salmon eggs**, and small dough baits under a light leader. - Catfish (for those staying after dark): **chicken liver**, **stink baits**, and cut bait in the slower eddies. A couple of local hot spots to focus on: First, the stretch **right below Hoover Dam down toward Willow Beach**. That icy, oxygen‑rich water holds trout and stripers year‑round. Work the eddies, current breaks, and rock walls with spinners, small cranks, and swimbaits early, then go deeper as the sun climbs. Second, the **Laughlin/Bullhead City corridor**, especially current seams and drop‑offs near casinos, bridge pilings, and rocky points. Schoolie stripers roam these edges, and bass tuck into any slack water. Slow‑roll swimbaits or toss cut anchovy on the edges of the flow and hang on. Remember to bring plenty of water, sun protection, and check your local Nevada and Arizona regulations, especially if you’re crossing from one bank to the other. That’s the Colorado River Las Vegas area report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a bite. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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314
Colorado River Las Vegas: Stripers and Trout Heat Up at Dawn and Dusk
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Colorado River Las Vegas fishing report. We’re looking at a classic hot desert pattern along the river below Hoover Dam and through the Casino Row stretch by Laughlin. The Colorado isn’t tidal here, but water levels and current are driven by power generation releases from the dam. Mornings and late afternoons usually see gentler flows; mid‑day they may bump up, so always keep an eye on changing current and floating debris. Weather along the river corridor today is running hot and dry: daytime highs pushing into the upper 90s to low 100s, light winds, low humidity, and clear skies. Overnight and early morning temps are much more comfortable in the 70s. Sunrise comes early over the canyon walls, with first light good and low sun lingering a bit thanks to the steep banks. Sunset brings a quick cool‑off and a solid evening bite as shadows stretch across the river. Fish activity has been best at first light and again the last two hours before dark. Striped bass are the headliners, cruising the current seams and eddies below the faster water, with smaller schoolies pushing shad to the surface. Expect mostly “schoolie” stripers in the 1–3 pound range, with a few larger fish in the 5–8 pound class if you stick with it. Rainbow trout, where stocking has been active below the dam and in cooler runs, are still showing in decent numbers early, especially for anglers drifting bait or working small spinners. Recent catches reported by local shops and river regulars include good counts of stripers for boaters trolling deep diving shad‑style cranks and for shore anglers tossing swimbaits at first light along rocky points. Trout anglers are picking off half‑limits to near limits when they’re on the river early, tapering off once the sun gets high and the pleasure‑boat traffic ramps up. Best lures right now for stripers: - 3–5 inch soft plastic swimbaits in pearl, shad, or light green on 1/4–3/8 oz jig heads - Medium diving crankbaits in white, chrome, or bone - Topwaters like walking baits and poppers around dawn when you see surface busts For trout: - Small inline spinners in silver or gold - Tiny spoons and 1/16–1/8 oz marabou jigs in white or black Bait options: - For stripers: cut anchovies are the local standby, rigged on a sliding sinker or simple Carolina rig; fresh sardines or shad chunks if you can get them - For trout: nightcrawlers, salmon eggs, and dough baits drifted under a small split shot in the softer seams A couple of hot spots to put on your list: First, the stretch just below Hoover Dam down through Willow Beach. The water here runs cold and clear, with steady current and deep holes. Work the current breaks where fast water spills into slower slicks; that’s where both trout and roaming stripers like to stack up, especially in low‑light hours. Second, the Casino Row area near Laughlin and across from Bullhead City. Focus on rocky points, marina mouths, and any current edges created by wing dams or bends. Cast swimbaits or crankbaits slightly upriver and bring them back with the flow, and soak anchovies on the bottom when the current settles. Boat traffic will spike by late morning, so if you want the best fishing, be on the water at gray light and plan a second round just before sunset. Light fluorocarbon leaders help in that clear water, and always bring plenty of water and sun protection—this canyon heat sneaks up on you. That’s your Colorado River Las Vegas report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more local fishing updates and stories. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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313
Colorado River Bass at Dawn: Heat, Shade, and Moving Water
Good morning, anglers — **Artificial Lure** here with your Colorado River, Las Vegas fishing report. **No tidal swing matters here** since this is a river system, but current flows, water clarity, and heat are the big players today. For **weather**, early June around Las Vegas usually means a fast-warming desert morning, bright sun, and a hot afternoon, so the best bite window is first light through about 9 a.m., then again near dusk. For **sunrise and sunset** today, expect an early sunrise and a late-evening sunset typical of southern Nevada in June, giving you a long day to work the banks and transition water. If you’re heading out before dawn, that low-light window is the prime time to catch fish pushing shallow. On the **fish side**, the Colorado River stretches around Las Vegas are known more for **largemouth bass, striped bass, bluegill, catfish, and the occasional trout** than for steady numbers of big game fish. Right now, the best action usually comes from bass picking off shad-style forage near cover, with catfish feeding hard after dark on warmer stretches. If the water is moving, stripers can show up in short, aggressive windows and then disappear just as fast. Bluegill will be chewing around shade, docks, and brush, especially once the sun gets up. For **lures**, I’d keep it simple and local: a **shad-colored swimbait**, a **small crankbait**, a **topwater walker at dawn**, and a **white or chartreuse jig** around rock and weeds. If the water is a little stained, go brighter. If it’s clear, natural baitfish colors usually win. For **bait**, the old reliable choices are **nightcrawlers**, **cut bait**, **shrimp**, and **small minnows** where legal and available. For catfish, nothing beats **cut bait or shrimp** fished on the bottom with a little scent. A couple of **hot spots** to check are the more productive **shoreline pockets, backwaters, and current seams** in the Colorado River stretches closest to Lake Mead influence, plus any **rocky points, riprap, and shaded bends** where bait can stack up. If you find moving water meeting slack water, you’ve found a fish highway. My local call for today: fish **early, fish shaded, fish moving water**, and don’t overwork the presentation. A slow roll through cover can outfish a lot of fancy tackle in this heat. Thanks for tuning in, and **please subscribe** for more local fishing reports. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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312
Colorado River Summer Bite: Early Light Tactics for Bass, Stripers, and Catfish
Good morning, anglers — **Artificial Lure** here with your local fishing report for the Colorado River around **Las Vegas**. It’s a summer pattern day, and the bite is shaping up best around the cooler water, shaded edges, and anywhere current gives fish a little ambush lane. I don’t have a live tide report for this inland stretch of the Colorado River, and tides aren’t really the driver here anyway; **flow, release schedules, and wind** matter more than tidal movement. For weather, expect that classic desert setup: **hot, bright, and dry** with the best fishing in the **first light hours and again near dusk**. Sunrise is your key window, and sunset is your second best shot, when fish move up and feed with a little less pressure. If you’re launching early, get on the water before the sun gets high and the banks start baking. Recent action in these waters has been a mixed bag of **striped bass, largemouth bass, smallmouth bass, catfish, and the occasional sunfish**. The better reports tend to come from anglers working slower than they think they need to. On the Colorado River around Las Vegas, the fish are often caught in **small bunches**, not giant schools, so if you find one or two active fish, stay put and pick the area apart. For **striper**, the money baits are still **small shad-style swimbaits, cut bait, and anchovy-style presentations** when legal and available. For bass, I’d lean on **natural-colored soft plastics, tubes, craw imitations, and small jerkbaits**. If the water is a little stained, go with **chartreuse, white, or silver**. If it’s clearer, stick with **smoke, shad, watermelon, or green pumpkin**. For catfish, the best bait is usually **stink bait, cut bait, or worms** if you’re soaking the bottom and waiting for the night crew to move in. If you want the best chance at numbers, work **slow retrieves** along current seams, drop-offs, rocky edges, and any place with shade or deeper water nearby. Topwater can still draw strikes at first light, but once the sun is up, switch to subsurface and fish a little deeper. A couple **hot spots** to check are **shoreline points and coves with moving water** below release areas, and **rocky banks or bridge-adjacent structure** where bait gets pinned and fish can hold out of the current. Also look for **deeper bends and transition zones** where shallow flats drop into water with a little more protection from the heat. If you’re after one simple game plan: **early morning, small shad bait for stripers, soft plastics for bass, and a soaked cut bait setup for catfish**. That’ll cover most of what’s biting right now. Thanks for tuning in, and **don’t forget to subscribe**. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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311
Colorado River Las Vegas: Early Summer Trout and Striper Bite Below Hoover Dam
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Colorado River Las Vegas fishing report. We’re looking at a hot early summer pattern on the river below Hoover Dam, from Willow Beach down toward Cottonwood Cove and Laughlin. Flows are steady and relatively clear, with just a light chop from the afternoon breeze. No true tides here, but releases from Hoover can act like a “fake tide,” so expect the bite to shift when flows ramp up or drop. Weather today: expect a dry desert warm‑up, cool in the early morning, quickly sliding into hot by midday with clear skies and steady sun. Light winds early, bumping up a bit in the afternoon. Plan your best fishing from first light through late morning, then again the last two hours before dark. Sunrise is right around 5:20 a.m., sunset about 7:55 p.m. That low‑light window has been the money time for both trout and stripers. Recent action has been solid. Anglers working the cold water near Willow Beach are reporting stocked rainbow trout in the 10–14 inch range with the occasional chunky 2–3 pounder mixed in. Below the trout, a few nice striped bass in the 4–8 pound class have been coming on bigger baits. Farther down toward Laughlin, smallmouth bass and a few largemouth are showing around rocky points and current seams, mostly in the 1–2 pound range, with a few better fish for those slowing down and grinding plastics. Best lures right now: - For rainbows: small gold or silver spoons, Panther Martin‑style spinners in gold/black, and 1/8 oz marabou jigs in white or olive. - For stripers: 4–6 inch soft swimbaits in shad colors, white bucktail jigs, and deep‑running crankbaits in chrome/blue. - For bass: green pumpkin or watermelon soft plastics, ned rigs, and 3–4 inch tubes in craw or goby tones along the rocks. Best bait: - Trout: nightcrawlers drifted under a small float, salmon eggs on light line, or dough baits in cheese and garlic scents. - Stripers: cut shad, anchovy chunks, or live shad where legal. - Catfish after dark: chicken liver, shrimp, and stink bait on the deeper bends. Hot spots to put on your list: - Willow Beach area: work the banks and seams just downstream of the marina, especially where cold spring water seeps in. Troll or drift spoons for trout, then throw larger swimbaits for the stripers shadowing them. - Colorado River near Laughlin: target current breaks behind islands and along riprap. Fish smallmouth tight to the rocks with plastics, and watch for surface boils early and late for schoolie stripers. Overall fish activity is best at daybreak and dusk. Midday fish are sliding deeper and tighter to structure, so slow down, downsize, and present baits right in their face. Clear water means light line—4–6 lb for trout, 8–12 lb for bass, 15–20 lb for stripers. That’s the rundown from Artificial Lure on the Colorado River near Las Vegas. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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310
Colorado River Morning Bite: Early Light Stripers and Bass Around Las Vegas
Good morning, folks—Artificial Lure here with your local fishing rundown for the Colorado River around Las Vegas. I’ll start with the big picture: there’s no tidal influence up here on the river, so tides aren’t part of the play. What matters today is water flow, boat traffic, and the early heat building fast once the sun gets up. Sunrise is about 5:33 a.m., and sunset lands around 7:32 p.m., so that first light window is the best bite of the day. If you can be on the water before dawn and keep fishing through the first two hours of daylight, you’re in the sweet spot. Weather-wise, late May around Las Vegas usually means warm, dry, and getting warmer quick. Expect a bright, high-sun day with light morning winds that can pick up a bit in the afternoon. That means shaded banks, current seams, and deeper pockets will fish better once the sun gets on the water. Recent action in these waters has been a mixed bag, but there’s fish to be had. Anglers around the Colorado River arm near Lake Mead and the lower river stretches have been seeing striped bass, largemouth bass, smallmouth bass, catfish, and the occasional crappie. Stripers have been chasing bait in the early low-light periods, with anglers reporting a handful of fish in the 1 to 3 pound range and the occasional bigger model when they find shad schools. Bass fishing has been more consistent around rock structure and transition water, with smallmouth and largemouth both hitting reaction baits. Catfish are still the steady blue-collar bite after dark and into the evening. Best bait right now? For stripers, fresh cut bait and anchovies are still money when the bite is finicky. For catfish, chicken liver, stink bait, and nightcrawlers are the go-to. If you’re chasing bass, a live shiner when legal and practical, or a soft plastic swimbait that matches local forage, can do real damage. Best lures for this stretch: a 3- to 4-inch paddle-tail swimbait, a white fluke, small crankbaits in baitfish colors, a drop-shot with a worm for finicky bass, and a blade bait or spoon if you’re marking fish deeper. Around rock and riprap, a jig head rigged with a swimbait or tube gets bit. For stripers busting bait, throw something that moves fast and looks like a wounded shad. If I were fishing it today, I’d start early around the Boulder Beach side and the rocky banks near Willow Beach for bass and stripers, then slide into deeper, slower water as the sun climbs. Another hot spot is the river bends and current breaks below the lake influence zones—look for eddies, points, and any place bait can stack up. For catfish, work the slower, darker water after sunset, especially where the bottom drops off. Keep your eye on birds working water, scattered boils, and any bait flickering on the surface. That’s where the fish are telling you they’re home. Thanks for tuning in, and please subscribe for more local fishing reports. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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309
Colorado River Las Vegas: Stripers and Smallmouth Heat Up Below Hoover Dam
This is Artificial Lure with your Colorado River Las Vegas fishing report. We’re working the river stretch below Hoover Dam and down toward Laughlin. No true tides here, just releases from Hoover controlling flow. Expect low, clear water early, with generation picking up mid‑ to late morning and again late afternoon. Rising flows will push fish tight to current breaks and flooded edges. Weather along the river corridor is clear and dry with light morning winds, building to a steady southwest breeze by afternoon. Highs push into the upper 80s to low 90s, so plan for bright sun and clear skies. Sunrise is right around 5:30 a.m., with sunset close to 7:45 p.m., giving a long low‑light window on both ends of the day. Nevada Department of Wildlife reports that striped bass and catfish have been the main players lately, with a mix of smallmouth and a few largemouth coming out of the rocky pockets and marina coves. Most stripers have been schoolies in the 1–3 pound range, with an occasional 5–8 pound fish, especially near deeper current seams in the early morning. Anglers soaking cut anchovies from shore have been putting up numbers after dark and at first light. For stripers, bring frozen anchovies and sardines on a simple sliding sinker rig, 10–15 lb mono or fluoro leader. Cast into the current edge and let it sit. If you’re throwing artificials, jerkbaits in ghost shad or silver/blue, 3–5 inch soft swimbaits on 3/8–1/2 oz heads, and white or chartreuse bucktail jigs have been steady producers. Work them just off bottom on the slower side when the water’s cold coming out of the dam, then speed up slightly as the sun warms things. Smallmouth bass are active around chunk rock, riprap, and points. The recent reports from local shops in Boulder City and Laughlin say tube jigs in green pumpkin, 3–4 inch finesse worms on drop‑shots, and small craw‑pattern crankbaits are putting fish in the net. Best bite is from first light until the sun gets high, then again in the evening shade. Largemouth are more scattered but hanging around marinas, back eddies, and any brush or man‑made structure you can find. Channel catfish action picks up right after dark. Chicken liver, nightcrawlers, and cut bait on the bottom around slower runs and inside bends is your play. Bring heavier gear if you’re soaking bait near deep holes; the current can make a 2‑pounder feel much bigger. For bank anglers, one solid hotspot is the Willow Beach area below the dam. The cold, clear tailwater there holds trout, stripers, and smallmouth. Toss small spoons and in‑line spinners for trout, then step up to swimbaits and jerkbaits for the stripers cruising behind them. Another reliable stretch is around Laughlin’s community parks and casino frontage, where deeper runs and riprap banks give you access to stripers, cats, and smallmouth right from shore. Boat anglers should focus on current seams, points, and any visible eddies. When flows bump up, slide closer to shorelines with newly flooded rock or brush; fish will push shallow to feed on disoriented bait. When the water drops, back out to the first major break or ledge. Best windows today: first light until mid‑morning for bass and stripers, last two hours before dark for a mixed bag, and into the night if you’re targeting cats and schoolie stripers on bait. That’s your Colorado River Las Vegas report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a trip. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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308
Colorado River Las Vegas Mid-May Morning Bite Best Before Nine
Good morning, anglers — Artificial Lure here with your local-style fishing report for the Colorado River around Las Vegas. For today, the river and nearby waters are looking pretty typical for mid-May: light wind early, warming fast after sunrise, and a bite that should be best in the morning and again near dusk. According to NOAA Weather, expect a hot, mostly dry day for the Las Vegas valley with bright sun, low humidity, and afternoon temperatures climbing into the upper 80s to low 90s. That means fish will slide a little deeper and hold tighter to shade, current breaks, docks, rocks, and any cooler water they can find. Sunrise is around 5:31 AM and sunset is around 7:36 PM, so you’ve got a long window, but the best action should come first light through about 9 AM, then again the last two hours before dark. There isn’t a meaningful tidal report for the Colorado River here, so water release, flow changes, and wind matter a lot more than tides. If the dam is pushing a little extra water, expect the fish to reposition and get more bitey along current seams. Recent angler reports from the Colorado River system around the Las Vegas stretch say the mix has been mostly largemouth bass, striped bass, bluegill, catfish, and the occasional crappie when you find the right pocket. A lot of folks are reporting decent numbers of bass in the 1 to 3-pound class, with stripers showing up in small schools and catfish picking up after dark. Bluegill are active in the warmer shallows, especially anywhere with cover. Best baits right now: shad-style soft plastics, small swimbaits, drop-shot worms, ned rigs, and live anchovy or cut bait for stripers and cats. For bass, a Texas-rigged worm, small crankbait, or a 3-inch paddletail in white, smoke, or pearl should do the trick. If you’re chasing stripers, try cut bait, anchovies, or a jigging spoon around deeper edges and moving water. For catfish, stink bait, chicken liver, or cut bait fished on the bottom after sunset is hard to beat. Best lures: something natural and subtle in the clear water, something louder and flashier if the wind kicks up. A white or chrome spoon, a half-ounce jig, and a green pumpkin soft plastic are all solid bets. If you see baitfish flicking, match the hatch and don’t overthink it. Hot spots worth checking: the calmer coves and riprap banks near Hoover Dam tailwater access, and the slower edges, marina rock walls, and bridge-shadow areas farther downstream where fish can ambush food. Also look for any deeper bends with shade, submerged brush, or a temperature break. If one bank is packed with people, slide to the next quiet stretch — that’s often where the better fish are sitting. That’s the word from the water: fish early, fish shade, and fish the current. Thanks for tuning in, and be sure to subscribe for the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Dive into the "Colorado River, Las Vegas Fishing Report Today" to get the latest updates on fishing conditions along the Colorado River near Las Vegas. Discover expert tips, local fishing hotspots, weather forecasts, and equipment recommendations to enhance your angling adventures. Join us daily for everything you need to know to make your fishing trips more successful and enjoyable.For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXkThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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