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Reel in the Big Ones: Your Weekly Bass Buzz from Coast to Coast

Reel in the Big Ones: Your Weekly Bass Buzz from Coast to Coast

Published 5 months ago
Description
Artificial Lure here with your weekly bass buzz, coast to coast and straight from the boat ramp.

Notable catches first: Serious Angler’s “Seriously Western” just had Steve Jenkins on talking about a potential 16.57-pound Arizona largemouth that could challenge the state record. He credits big gizzard shad and a live sonar game on desert impoundments like Saguaro, Canyon, Apache, and Roosevelt—wild rebound stories after golden algae kills. If you like technical fly fishing, think long casts to bait-schooled wolfpacks and intercepting current seams off points with sink-tip streamers—fast strips, big profiles, don’t blink.

Tournament scene: AnglersChannel reports Kyle Kitts won the Phoenix Bass Fishing League event on the Arkansas River at Muskogee with 17-8, a legit summertime bag on a stingy system. That tells you shallow current, shade lines, and eddies are producing—perfect for a 6- to 8-weight with Clousers swung through seams at first light. Meanwhile, The National Professional Fishing League’s 2025 season is heading toward a Logan Martin stop in late September and a Lake Hartwell championship in October, so expect finesse and forward-facing sonar on roaming spotted bass to stay in the headlines.

Hot spots this week:
- Midwest river smallies: The Iowa DNR’s Aug. 7 statewide report says water levels and clarity are improving on the Upper Iowa, Turkey, and Cedar rivers. Smallmouth are fair to good in back eddies and current edges—textbook fly water. Toss buoyant baitfish patterns into soft pockets, then mend and let them swing.
- Okoboji chain, IA: West Okoboji is reporting good largemouth of good size with mid-70s water temps. Weedline edges are the play—work swim flies or deer-hair divers over the deep weed wall mid-morning when the sun pins bluegill.
- Lake Erie, PA: VisitErie notes it’s consistently ranked among top bass destinations in the U.S., and summer brings big bronzebacks along Presque Isle and main-lake humps. Go deep with full-sinking lines over rock in 20–35 feet, counting down to marks. Bonus: you can hop a local charter to learn the structure game.
- Georgia curveball: GON reports Lake Oconee’s cooler-than-normal August temps have the topwater bite firing—rare for this month. If you’re fly-curious, that’s your green light for chuggers at dawn along seawalls and shad spawning pockets.

News you can use:
- Fisheries management: Saving Seafood reports the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission advanced a new plan for Chesapeake striped bass rebuilding by 2029, with updated quotas and rec regs. If you’re chasing tidal largemouth in the Potomac or Upper Bay grass, expect more attention on bait abundance and heat-related fish care—good reminders to keep fish wet and shorten fight times.
- Hatchery boost: Florida’s Richloam State Fish Hatchery shared they’re raising hybrid striped bass for statewide stocking. While that’s not your largemouth or smallmouth, it juices mixed-bag urban and reservoir action—carry a sink-tip and a white-over-chartreuse baitfish and you’re covered.

Regional reality checks:
- Texas heat dome: The Victoria Advocate says August bass in many Texas lakes push deep. Fly angle? Go dawn patrol on points with bait, or night flies on riprap with black bunny leeches. Daytime, consider suspending gamechangers on long leaders and let them hang over brush in 20+ feet.
- Summer fish care: The NPFL has summertime fish care tips circulating—use them. Barbless hooks, keep-em-wet, quick photos. Hot water is unforgiving.

Fly-curious crossover kit for late summer:
- 7–8 wt rod, intermediate and type 3–6 sink lines.
- Clousers, gamechangers, deceivers, and small “Ned-fly” jig patterns for spots.
- Surface: small poppers and pencil-style sliders for surprise topwater windows like Oconee’s.

Thanks for tuning in—come back next week for more. This has been a Quiet Please production
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