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"Sizzling Smallmouth Showdown: Tackle Warehouse Invitational Ignites the St. Lawrence River"
Published 5 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
Howdy, bass fanatics, this is Artificial Lure coming at you with the week’s most riveting buzz from the world of bass fishing across the United States. Strip that leader, tie on your favorite bug, and let’s dive into the stories everybody’s talking about.
Let’s start off with the fireworks on the St. Lawrence River in upstate New York, where the pros are absolutely crushing it at the Tackle Warehouse Invitationals. Chris Johnston currently leads the pack after Day 1 with a whopping 25 pounds, 12 ounces of smallmouth in his livewell—a classic St. Lawrence bag that’d make anyone jealous. Not far behind, Banks Shaw slammed home 25-8 pounds before lunchtime, while Hayden O’Barr and company broke the 24-pound mark. The scales were smoking: 435 bass weighing a shade under 1,706 pounds crossed the stage from just 88 pros. That’s more than eighty five-bass limits in a single day, including heavy hitters like John Murray’s 6-pound-7-ounce big bass that earned him a cool $1,000 for the Berkley Big Bass award. If you’re itching for numbers and the chance at a trophy, the St. Lawrence is absolutely on fire and deserves a spot at the top of your bucket list this summer, especially for those who love a good smallmouth tussle (Major League Fishing reports).
But hold on, folks—the hot spots don’t end there. Clear Lake, California, just earned the top spot in Bassmaster’s “2025’s 100 Best Bass Lakes in America” for the first time in five years. This North Bay gem is notorious for monster largemouths and clear water sight-fishing that’ll push your tackle to the edge and might tempt even the die-hard fly slingers into throwing a frog or swimbait. Never bet against a West Coast classic for those legendary double-digit bass and wild topwater chases.
Down in Georgia, the Altamaha and Satilla Rivers are finally back in prime summer shape. With good water levels and active fish, the buzzbait bite is heating up early and late—look for bass holding on brush piles in 12 to 14 feet of water if you’re dodging the midday melt. And if you’re looking to change it up, paddle-craft fishing in the Okefenokee Swamp is getting a big thumbs up from seasoned locals, thanks to its wild scenery and feisty fish (Georgia Wildlife Blog).
Colorado’s Ridgway Reservoir is running their annual Smallmouth Bass Classic through early August, and this event even puts a bounty on smallmouth as an invasive species. There’s up to $20,000 in prizes up for grabs for anglers who help with removal, so it’s both a blast and a positive for the local ecosystem. No registration hassles—just show up and fish to win. If you’re road tripping or live nearby, get out there and make your casts count for science and for glory (Colorado Parks and Wildlife).
Before I sign off, here’s a quirky tidbit from up in Maine: biologists just confirmed largemouth bass—invasive and all muscle—have somehow shown up in pristine West Musquash Lake. The state’s not happy about it, and they’re even offering a $6,000 reward for info on how these bucket-mouthed bandits appeared. Definitely one to watch, especially if you love pure, wild fisheries and the conservation twist that comes with this sport (Maine Inland Fisheries and Wildlife).
That’s the wrap for this week, bass chasers. Thanks for tuning in—don’t forget to come back next week for more American bass fishing action, hot tips, and wild tales with Artificial Lure. This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out Quiet Please Dot A I. Tight lines until next time!
For more http://www.quietplease.ai
Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Let’s start off with the fireworks on the St. Lawrence River in upstate New York, where the pros are absolutely crushing it at the Tackle Warehouse Invitationals. Chris Johnston currently leads the pack after Day 1 with a whopping 25 pounds, 12 ounces of smallmouth in his livewell—a classic St. Lawrence bag that’d make anyone jealous. Not far behind, Banks Shaw slammed home 25-8 pounds before lunchtime, while Hayden O’Barr and company broke the 24-pound mark. The scales were smoking: 435 bass weighing a shade under 1,706 pounds crossed the stage from just 88 pros. That’s more than eighty five-bass limits in a single day, including heavy hitters like John Murray’s 6-pound-7-ounce big bass that earned him a cool $1,000 for the Berkley Big Bass award. If you’re itching for numbers and the chance at a trophy, the St. Lawrence is absolutely on fire and deserves a spot at the top of your bucket list this summer, especially for those who love a good smallmouth tussle (Major League Fishing reports).
But hold on, folks—the hot spots don’t end there. Clear Lake, California, just earned the top spot in Bassmaster’s “2025’s 100 Best Bass Lakes in America” for the first time in five years. This North Bay gem is notorious for monster largemouths and clear water sight-fishing that’ll push your tackle to the edge and might tempt even the die-hard fly slingers into throwing a frog or swimbait. Never bet against a West Coast classic for those legendary double-digit bass and wild topwater chases.
Down in Georgia, the Altamaha and Satilla Rivers are finally back in prime summer shape. With good water levels and active fish, the buzzbait bite is heating up early and late—look for bass holding on brush piles in 12 to 14 feet of water if you’re dodging the midday melt. And if you’re looking to change it up, paddle-craft fishing in the Okefenokee Swamp is getting a big thumbs up from seasoned locals, thanks to its wild scenery and feisty fish (Georgia Wildlife Blog).
Colorado’s Ridgway Reservoir is running their annual Smallmouth Bass Classic through early August, and this event even puts a bounty on smallmouth as an invasive species. There’s up to $20,000 in prizes up for grabs for anglers who help with removal, so it’s both a blast and a positive for the local ecosystem. No registration hassles—just show up and fish to win. If you’re road tripping or live nearby, get out there and make your casts count for science and for glory (Colorado Parks and Wildlife).
Before I sign off, here’s a quirky tidbit from up in Maine: biologists just confirmed largemouth bass—invasive and all muscle—have somehow shown up in pristine West Musquash Lake. The state’s not happy about it, and they’re even offering a $6,000 reward for info on how these bucket-mouthed bandits appeared. Definitely one to watch, especially if you love pure, wild fisheries and the conservation twist that comes with this sport (Maine Inland Fisheries and Wildlife).
That’s the wrap for this week, bass chasers. Thanks for tuning in—don’t forget to come back next week for more American bass fishing action, hot tips, and wild tales with Artificial Lure. This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out Quiet Please Dot A I. Tight lines until next time!
For more http://www.quietplease.ai
Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI