This is Artificial Lure with your Lake Mead fishing report for August 30, 2025.
Weather’s starting out warm—expect a high just over 100 degrees, with early morning temps in the low 80s and a light southerly breeze picking up by midday. Skies are clear, so wear your sun gear and hydrate. Sunrise lit up the water at 6:10 AM and sunset won’t hit until 7:10 PM, giving you long stretches to chase whatever’s biting. Tidal influence isn’t a big factor here, but falling water levels have shifted some structures recently. Lake Mead’s up about 10 feet over last month, so some old points and coves are holding fish again after a dry spell.
Striped bass are still the main story—mornings and late evenings are your best bets. Folks working shad-pattern topwater baits and silver spoons around open water near Boulder Basin and Hemenway Point are seeing good action. According to local reports and the latest from the Lake Mead Daily Fishing Report podcast, plenty of anglers are limiting out on stripers in the 2 to 4-pound range, with a handful over 8 pounds showing up on live shad and deep-diving crankbaits.
Largemouth and smallmouth bass have bumped a little deeper as the water heats up, especially mid-day. Early in the morning, they’re sliding up shallow, crushing topwaters like chartreuse shad-colored poppers and walking baits. As the sun climbs, you’ll need to drop soft plastics—think watermelon or green pumpkin worms—down to brush piles or submerged rocks in 18 to 25 feet. Hot spots locals are talking about include Echo Bay (where a variety of species, even the odd catfish, are taking cut bait off the bottom) and the Overton Arm, especially around any fresh structure or flooded brush.
Channel cats are steady, with night anglers hauling in a good mix using cut mackerel and shrimp off points and coves along the northern reaches. Fish weighing 3 to 8 pounds aren’t uncommon if you set up before sunset and stay late.
When it comes to bait, nothing beats live shad for stripers if you can get it. Otherwise, frozen anchovies and sardines will keep you hooked up. For bass, soft plastics and jigs work best once the sun gets up. If you’re committed to shore fishing, toss a spinnerbait or small swimbait close to submerged sticks at first and last light.
Best lures: Topwater poppers, walking baits in shad patterns, soft plastics in green or watermelon, silver spoons for deep stripers, and heavy jigs for the midday bite. Chartreuse shad is especially productive right now in lower light—that color stands out and draws aggressive strikes, according to local tackle talk and the folks at Big League Bait Co.
A couple of the current hot spots:
- Boulder Basin—early stripers and steady bass near the boat launch, especially on structure recently covered by the rising water.
- Echo Bay—multi-species action throughout the day, lots of shore access, and some bigger catfish possibilities after dark.
- Overton Arm—more structure and cover as the water comes up, with shallow bass and roaming stripers all day.
That’s the bite for today—thanks for tuning in to the latest Lake Mead scoop. If you got a limit or landed a trophy, let us know for next report. Be sure to subscribe so you never miss the action. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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Published on 1 day, 14 hours ago
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