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Colorado River Fishing Report: Heat, Drought, and Resilient Catches

Colorado River Fishing Report: Heat, Drought, and Resilient Catches

Published 7 months, 4 weeks ago
Description
Artificial Lure with your Colorado River Las Vegas fishing report for Wednesday, September 3rd, 2025.

We’re clocking in at 2:55 PM, and folks, it's been one wild run of extremes. Summer’s packed up, but the heat sure hasn’t, with July and August pulling in higher than normal temps and bone-dry air. No surprise, the monsoon fizzled out, leaving behind thirsty soil, below-normal rainfall, and waters running lean. Outflow to Lake Mead and Lake Powell’s way under average—the West is feeling that pinch according to The Land Desk and Coyote Gulch.

**Weather today:** Highs flirting with the upper 90s to low 100s, smoky haze from wildfires, and humidity low as a desert lizard’s hide. Skies mostly clear, but keep your eye out for sudden thunderheads—September’s notorious for late storm popups. As for tides, the Colorado River below Hoover Dam isn’t tidal, but flows are steady and slow due to the reservoir controls. Current’s gentle between Hoover and Davis Dams, as the folks running Emerald Cave Kayak Tours remind us.

**Sunrise was at 6:18 AM, sunset rolls out around 7:08 PM.** Best fishing windows are usually first light and dusk; evenings should cool off nicely.

**Fish activity:** The bite’s been slow, but not dead. Low flows and high temps mean fish are hunkered down in cooler, deeper holes during the day, so target shadowed stretches and tailouts. Anglers near Willow Beach have picked up smaller stripers and a handful of healthy rainbow trout. Action for catfish and largemouth has improved after dark with the cooling water. Natives like the humpback chub remain low, as USGS research tells us populations are still struggling, mainly confined to a few canyon pockets after decades of habitat changes.

Recent catches include:
- Striped bass (mostly 1-pounders with an occasional 5-pounder if you play your cards right)
- Rainbow trout stocked in Willow Beach (averaging 14-16 inches)
- Channel catfish (night bites on chicken liver and shrimp)
- Largemouth bass (slower, but worth it around submerged brush or rocky points)

**Lure and bait selection:** Locals are swearing by the classics:
- Stripers: Go with silver spoons, soft plastic swimbaits, or live shad, especially if you mark schools on sonar at 25-40 feet.
- Rainbow trout: Salmon eggs and PowerBait in chartreuse are top for bait; small gold Kastmasters or Panther Martin spinners do well.
- Catfish: Night fishing with stink bait, chicken liver, or cut anchovy off sandy bottoms, preferably near drop-offs.
- Largemouth: Try watermelon red Senko worms, topwater poppers at dawn, and jigs around rocky edges.

**Hot spots:** My picks for today—
- **Willow Beach:** For trout and stripers, the area just south of the marina’s been productive, especially at sunrise.
- **Emerald Cave/Black Canyon:** Smallmouth and stripers hold near the deeper ledges and boulders—kayakers report solid catches, plus unbeatable scenery.
- **Nelson’s Landing:** Off the rocky points, expect bass action, particularly at dusk as water cools.
- **Below Hoover Dam:** Early risers picking up stripers trolling deep.

As always, play it safe—burn scars upriver mean flash floods can rocket down with little warning after sudden rain, a heads-up from the National Park Service. Pack extra water, check your gear, and release natives when you can.

Thanks for tuning in to the Colorado River report from Artificial Lure. Don’t forget to click subscribe so you never miss a bite!

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

This episode includes AI-generated content.
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