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Fishing the Colorado River near Las Vegas: Early Fall Bite, Striper Slams, and Panfish Hotspots

Fishing the Colorado River near Las Vegas: Early Fall Bite, Striper Slams, and Panfish Hotspots

Published 7 months, 1 week ago
Description
Artificial Lure here with your boots-on-the-ground fishing report for the Colorado River near Las Vegas, Friday, September 19, 2025.

First, the weather’s classic early fall—temperatures in the mid-70s rising toward 90 by midafternoon, low humidity, and mostly clear skies. If you’re heading out, expect a gentle southwest breeze, which keeps things comfortable but can make for a bit of chop mid-day, especially around open stretches. No rain on the books, which is welcome for anglers targeting clarity. Sunrise just touched the horizon at 6:30 AM, and you’ll get lines wet until sunset around 6:41 PM. So you’ve got a solid window to make something happen out there.

The key bite windows today are likely to be early, just after dawn, and then again late afternoon as the heat backs off. We may not have tides up here, but water flows are impacted by Lake Mead releases—flows pick up a little after breakfast and again late afternoon, making those transition periods prime for fish activity.

Let’s talk fish: Recent days saw solid action on striped bass down in the Willow Beach stretch and up by Big Bend State Recreation Area. Local guides and regulars report slot fish—2-5 pounds—taking both bait and artificial lures on moving water. There’s been occasional talk of larger linesiders, even a couple above 10 pounds this past week, usually on cut anchovy drifted or trolled plugs. Black bass (mostly largemouth, with some smallmouth mixed in) are hugging rocky points and deeper ledges as the water temp moderates. Shore anglers have landed decent bags tossing whacky rigs or soft plastic craws.

Catfish are still willing—late-night and pre-dawn folks fishing stink bait or chunks of mackerel from coves and slower eddies are reporting steady eating-size channel cats and the odd blue. Panfish—mainly bluegill and redear—are holding in shaded shallow water and under docks, responding to small jigs tipped with worm.

Best baits for this week: For stripers, cut anchovy, sardine, or shad works—especially if you can time your soak around moving water. On the artificial side, white swimbaits, paddle tails, and medium-running crankbaits in natural shad patterns are drawing strikes. For bass, stick with green pumpkin or watermelon soft plastics, Ned rigs, and topwater walking baits at first light or last cast. Catfish will take classic chicken liver or punch bait, and for panfish, nothing beats a piece of worm on a small hook under a slip bobber.

Hot spots you shouldn’t miss:
• Willow Beach Marina—striped bass early, plus trout stocked by the marina if you want to mix it up.
• Big Bend State Rec Area—prime for stripers, cats, and the occasional quality bass.
• Laughlin Lagoon—especially productive for panfish and bass with fewer crowds.

Remember, the flows can change fast, and clarity varies depending on releases. Adapt if things turn cloudy mid-day.

Thanks for tuning in to today’s Colorado River Las Vegas report. If you want more fishing intel, tips, and the latest scoop, make sure to subscribe. 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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