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Unlock the Secrets of Bass Fishing: Your Weekly Bite-Sized Update

Unlock the Secrets of Bass Fishing: Your Weekly Bite-Sized Update

Published 5 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
Artificial Lure here with your weekly bite-sized bass update, bringing you the latest and greatest from the frontlines of American bass fishing.

Let’s kick things off with a jaw-dropper: the St. Lawrence River in upstate New York is absolutely holding its title as the nation’s smallmouth goldmine. According to Bassmaster, tournament pros are bringing in bags so heavy people are starting to wonder if the river has hit “peak bass.” Last week’s major tournament saw Elite Series pro Chris Johnston take the top prize with a jaw-dropping catch, and folks are buzzing that it could take 25 pounds a day to win this week’s St. Croix Bassmaster Open. Even with the spot getting hit hard year after year, the fish just keep getting bigger—talk about a bass factory that refuses to quit.

If you’re the kind of angler who likes your options wide open, you might want to put Potholes Reservoir in Washington and Banks Lake on your map. The Spokesman-Review reports both largemouth and smallmouth bass are just as eager as ever. Potholes has been called “outstanding” for bass this season, with big bluegill thrown in for good measure—and for us fly anglers, cruising those shorelines with poppers and streamers would be pure fun. Moses Lake is another sleeper this year: both bass species are on the uptick, and locals trolling old-school plugs swear the 3- to 5-pounders are biting as aggressively as ever.

Florida is forever on fire for largemouths, but Labor Day weekend is shaping up for a blast. FishingBooker’s latest list ranks lakes Toho and Kissimmee as must-hits: double-digit hogs, easy access, and a chance to hook into some bonus crappie and bluegill if you’re ready to bend a lighter rod. If you swing further north, West Palm Beach’s Clear Lake and Lake Ida are serving up healthy largemouth and even exotic peacock bass for those chasing a fight with a different flavor.

Let’s not skip over Maryland—the Chesapeake Bay region has had its striped bass season closed most of July, but as of August 1, things reopen. The Maryland Department of Natural Resources is reminding everyone to fish quick and clean because those upper-80s water temps mean stressed-out stripers. The classic live-lining of spot along the Tolchester Lumps and channel edges is always a local favorite. If you want something different, Bay crabs are out in numbers, and blue catfish are keeping everyone busy with drag-screaming runs.

Curious about the high-stakes tourney scene? The National Professional Fishing League is mid-season, with pros testing their mettle on bass-rich waters like Santee Cooper in South Carolina and Lake Norman in North Carolina. Every weigh-in is live streamed, and the grind for that championship belt has been seriously intense. The final Bassmaster Opens Division 1 event is this week at the legendary St. Lawrence River, where a crop of new stars is vying for those coveted Elite Series spots.

Meanwhile, if you want a more grassroots moment, Joliet West High School’s bass team just made the state finals up in Illinois—proving bass fever is alive and well with the next generation.

That’s it for this Thursday’s rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in and don’t forget to come back next week for the freshest reports, more hot spots, and news that’ll put you on the bite. This has been a Quiet Please production, and for more of me check out QuietPlease dot AI. Now go tie on something flashy and see what’s lurking in your local waters!

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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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