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"Cooling Temps Boost Utah Fishing - Walleye, White Bass, and More Hit the Shallows"

"Cooling Temps Boost Utah Fishing - Walleye, White Bass, and More Hit the Shallows"

Published 7 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
Artificial Lure with your Salt Lake fishing report for Saturday, September 13, 2025.

Our day started cool and clear, with sunrise at 7:07 am and sunset coming at 7:34 pm. Weather’s kicking off in the high 50s, climbing to low 80s by midday, and not a drop of rain in sight—perfect for hitting the local waters.

Now, you’re probably wondering about tides. Inland Utah lakes, including Utah Lake and the Jordan River, don’t experience classic tides, so no need to time your casts around tidal swings. Focus on water temps, which are dropping thanks to cooler nights. Morning surface temps on Utah Lake are running in the mid-60s Fahrenheit, which is prime for shifting fish patterns. Expect fish moving out of deep summer haunts and pushing closer to shoreline structure.

Fish activity’s buzzing as we slide from late summer into early fall. The past week’s catches have shown a strong bite for **walleye** and **white bass** at Utah Lake and the Jordan River. Local anglers have reported pulling in limits of walleye in 10 to 20 feet of water, especially near rocky points and weedlines. White bass schools are visible chasing baitfish in the shallows—watch for surface boils early and late.

**Recent catches:** Reports from Utah Lake show:
- Strong walleye numbers, mostly 14–20 inches, on jigs tipped with crawlers and minnows.
- White bass hitting small spinners and twister tails.
- Channel catfish still biting well for bank anglers using cut bait and nightcrawlers.
- A handful of largemouth bass taken around reeds at American Fork Boat Harbor on soft plastics.

Up at the Jordan River, carp are abundant and visible all along the banks; bowfishermen are having a field day. Trout, especially brown and rainbow, are showing in the Big Cottonwood and Little Cottonwood creeks, with fly anglers netting 10–14 inch fish using nymph patterns and small streamers.

**Hot spots right now:**
- **Utah Lake State Park**—Walleye and white bass near the marinas and along the west dike, especially at dawn and dusk.
- **American Fork Boat Harbor**—Bass tucked in reeds, catfish by the riprap.
- **Big Cottonwood Creek (city stretch)**—Brown trout rising to blue-winged olive hatches.
- **Jordan River at 900 South**—Carp, bass, and the odd channel cat for versatile anglers.

**Best lures and baits:**
- For walleye, use chartreuse or orange jigs with a piece of nightcrawler or live minnow. Blade baits also produce well as water cools.
- White bass are smashing small silver spinners, inline spinners, and 1/16 oz twister tails. Fast retrieves excite the schools.
- Catfish anglers are best sticking with fresh cut carp, chicken liver, or nightcrawlers fished on the bottom.
- Bass are loving green pumpkin Senko worms, Ned rigs, and black/blue jigs worked slow near cover.
- Stream trout respond to #16 pheasant tail nymphs, scuds, and olive woolly buggers, especially on a quick strip through deeper pools.

Plan to fish early or late—midday can get slow as fish tuck deep with rising temps. A bit of wind is your friend, and cloud cover helps extend the bite.

Local tip: Don’t overlook shallow rocks for a surprise batch of hungry walleyes at first and last light, and keep moving if the bite slows. Fall patterns are just beginning, so experimentation pays off.

Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure’s Salt Lake City fishing report. Don’t forget to subscribe and stay ahead of the bite.

This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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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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