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"Bassmaster Elite Series Finale Heats Up La Crosse, Midwest Bite Sizzles"
Published 4 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
This is Artificial Lure, your all-knowing bass whisperer with this week’s lowdown on what’s hot, what’s biting, and who’s hauling in the lunkers across the good ole U.S. of A. If you’re a fly addict with an eye for green and brown, lend me your ear—there’s some splashy stuff to cover.
First up, tournament energy is downright electric this week as the Bassmaster Elite Series finale charges into La Crosse, Wisconsin. Over a hundred of the country’s saltiest pros are stalking bigmouths and bronzebacks in Mississippi River Pools 7, 8, and 9, hoping to outwit both each other and the local fish. There’s $100,000 and Bassmaster Classic spots up for grabs. Anglers are whispering that subtle topwaters and mid-depth cranks are the keys, which is music to the fly crowd who love a feisty surface take. Fans are swarming Copeland Park for daily weigh-ins, vendors, and even a BassmastHER workshop designed just for the ladies. If you’re within casting distance of La Crosse, it’s a scene you don’t wanna miss, especially with the Angler of the Year trophy still up for grabs, according to WIZM News.
On the big fish front, Illinois just can’t stay off the records page. Outdoor News reports the hybrid striped bass record there keeps getting a shakeup by determined anglers, with fish tipping the scales above 21 pounds in recent years. While this isn’t largemouth or smallie news, it shows the Midwest bite is hot and heavy—prime fly water to break out the big streamer rods for bass and bonus hybrids alike.
Now for some boots-on-the-ground hotspot action. Upstate New York’s Sodus Bay is hands-down a largemouth magnet this week. Locals are nailing fish at first light, working weedbeds and islands with unweighted Senkos or cheeky topwater patterns. If it’s smallmouth you’re after, try grubs or worm imitations outside Port Bay—just get there early, before the water skiers churn things up. For fly folks, crayfish patterns bounced along the bottom are straight-up deadly. The lower Niagara River is still turning up good numbers, so if you’ve got a drift boat and a stack of streamers, it’s game on. That’s locked in by the latest from Outdoor News and On The Water.
Looking to the South, Texas’s legendary Lake Fork is making noise for its big bass and superb summer fly action. The pros report the fish are laid up on brush piles and boat docks during the heat of the day but hitting frog patterns and streamers in shallow grass at sunup. Guide Alex Guthrie of Fly Fish Fork Guide Service says the early bite is “shallow and savage.” For anyone with a drift boat, floating a popping bug or woolly bugger along the pads is a Texas tradition that never gets old, per the Texas Parks and Wildlife fishing report.
And if you’re hungry for new waters, consider Florida’s Crystal River area. Lake Rousseau and the Withlacoochee River are teeming with thick-shouldered largemouths right now. It’s clear water, so stealth and accurate casts rule the game—think long leaders and olive buggers if you’re swinging a fly rod. FishingBooker’s recent guide says a full eight-hour float will get you into chunky bass and maybe a bonus snook or crappie if you’re feeling frisky.
Controversy notes? Sure, it wouldn’t be bass fishing without some. Northern New York anglers are still making noise about opening up full catch-and-release bass seasons across more counties. The science says the fishery is rock solid even with extra pressure, pointing to a possible rule change in the future, as Outdoor News covered.
In short, this week the U.S. bass scene is as lively as a five-pounder on four-pound tippet. Tournaments are crackling, records are falling, the classic summer patterns are on, and there’s water for every style—even for the bug-flingers and big streamer hounds.
Thanks for tuning in to this week’s splashy update from Artificial Lure. Be sure to come back next week for another round of tales, hotspots, and
First up, tournament energy is downright electric this week as the Bassmaster Elite Series finale charges into La Crosse, Wisconsin. Over a hundred of the country’s saltiest pros are stalking bigmouths and bronzebacks in Mississippi River Pools 7, 8, and 9, hoping to outwit both each other and the local fish. There’s $100,000 and Bassmaster Classic spots up for grabs. Anglers are whispering that subtle topwaters and mid-depth cranks are the keys, which is music to the fly crowd who love a feisty surface take. Fans are swarming Copeland Park for daily weigh-ins, vendors, and even a BassmastHER workshop designed just for the ladies. If you’re within casting distance of La Crosse, it’s a scene you don’t wanna miss, especially with the Angler of the Year trophy still up for grabs, according to WIZM News.
On the big fish front, Illinois just can’t stay off the records page. Outdoor News reports the hybrid striped bass record there keeps getting a shakeup by determined anglers, with fish tipping the scales above 21 pounds in recent years. While this isn’t largemouth or smallie news, it shows the Midwest bite is hot and heavy—prime fly water to break out the big streamer rods for bass and bonus hybrids alike.
Now for some boots-on-the-ground hotspot action. Upstate New York’s Sodus Bay is hands-down a largemouth magnet this week. Locals are nailing fish at first light, working weedbeds and islands with unweighted Senkos or cheeky topwater patterns. If it’s smallmouth you’re after, try grubs or worm imitations outside Port Bay—just get there early, before the water skiers churn things up. For fly folks, crayfish patterns bounced along the bottom are straight-up deadly. The lower Niagara River is still turning up good numbers, so if you’ve got a drift boat and a stack of streamers, it’s game on. That’s locked in by the latest from Outdoor News and On The Water.
Looking to the South, Texas’s legendary Lake Fork is making noise for its big bass and superb summer fly action. The pros report the fish are laid up on brush piles and boat docks during the heat of the day but hitting frog patterns and streamers in shallow grass at sunup. Guide Alex Guthrie of Fly Fish Fork Guide Service says the early bite is “shallow and savage.” For anyone with a drift boat, floating a popping bug or woolly bugger along the pads is a Texas tradition that never gets old, per the Texas Parks and Wildlife fishing report.
And if you’re hungry for new waters, consider Florida’s Crystal River area. Lake Rousseau and the Withlacoochee River are teeming with thick-shouldered largemouths right now. It’s clear water, so stealth and accurate casts rule the game—think long leaders and olive buggers if you’re swinging a fly rod. FishingBooker’s recent guide says a full eight-hour float will get you into chunky bass and maybe a bonus snook or crappie if you’re feeling frisky.
Controversy notes? Sure, it wouldn’t be bass fishing without some. Northern New York anglers are still making noise about opening up full catch-and-release bass seasons across more counties. The science says the fishery is rock solid even with extra pressure, pointing to a possible rule change in the future, as Outdoor News covered.
In short, this week the U.S. bass scene is as lively as a five-pounder on four-pound tippet. Tournaments are crackling, records are falling, the classic summer patterns are on, and there’s water for every style—even for the bug-flingers and big streamer hounds.
Thanks for tuning in to this week’s splashy update from Artificial Lure. Be sure to come back next week for another round of tales, hotspots, and