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Reel in the Midwest's Hottest Bass Fishing Spots: A Guide to Lure Tactics and Trophy Catches

Reel in the Midwest's Hottest Bass Fishing Spots: A Guide to Lure Tactics and Trophy Catches

Published 3 months, 3 weeks ago
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Artificial Lure here, coming at you with the latest from the wild world of bass fishing across the United States—and trust me, whether you’re a crankbait cranker or a streamer slinger, there’s something fresh and fishy for everyone this week.

Let’s start with a reel bender from the Major League Fishing Phoenix Bass Fishing League, where just this past weekend, Ryan Deal from Evansville, Indiana, closed out the Hoosier Division event on the Ohio River-Tanners Creek with an impressive 10-bass haul tipping the scales at 18 pounds, 5 ounces. Deal fished those classic river creeks, throwing spinnerbaits and plastics, and managed to keep a one-pound lead to lock in the win. If you’re a fan of targeting tight cover, Deal’s strategy proves that old-school approaches—think spinnerbaits burned around laydowns—are still on fire for heavyweights.

Want even more action? Head a little further south to the Illinois River in northeast Oklahoma, where a fling for the rare Neosho bass is turning into one of the year’s can’t-miss adventures. This bass isn’t your average chunky greenback—it’s Ozark-born, trout-sized, and known for scrappy fights that have even hard-core fly fishers converting from feathers to finesse plastics. According to local guides, the best shot at landing a pure Neosho happens with light spinning gear or, get this, your favorite 5-weight fly rod and a small streamer or popper. Fall is prime time, the scenery is top-notch, but if you get one, treat it with care—these little fighters are getting harder to find, and most locals vouch strictly for catch and release to keep the magic alive.

Hot spots? They keep popping up all over the Midwest. In Kansas, Herington City Lake just got a fresh report: largemouth bass fishing is rated good, with healthy catches on jigs and plastics around brush and rocks. Even as the numbers dipped a bit this summer, fish up to six pounds are still showing up—and that’s enough to get any angler’s heart pounding. Meanwhile, Brown State Fishing Lake is seeing black bass hitting crankbaits, especially around rocky structure, and the clear water makes for killer sight fishing. If you’re a fly angler, try early mornings around shallow brush with a juicy deer hair diver.

On the tournament circuit, all eyes are shifting to Logan Martin Lake in Alabama this week for the National Professional Fishing League’s season finale. It’s well-known as a haven for topwater blowups and hulking largemouths hiding out under thick grass mats. Some pros swear by punching through that cover with big creature baits on heavy braid, but don’t sleep on those creek and river arms—moving baits like swim jigs can land you a kicker bass at first light.

For a story that’ll tug your conservationist heartstrings, the Chesapeake Bay striped bass (or “rockfish” to the locals) are under some serious pressure, with regulators debating tighter harvest restrictions. While not a bass in the strictest sense of the word, these fish mean a lot to the culture and economy up and down the coast, and fly fishers have been urging for even more habitat protections as warming waters and invasive species shake up traditional haunts. The Chesapeake Bay Foundation is calling for public input—so if these iconic fish are dear to your heart, now’s the moment to get involved.

That’s a wrap for this week’s cast—thanks for tuning in to another edition with Artificial Lure! Be sure to check back next week when we’ll hook more wild stories from the water. This has been a Quiet Please production—swing by QuietPlease.ai for more, and keep those lines tight!

For more http://www.quietplease.ai

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