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Colorado River Fishing Report: Stripers, Smallmouth, and More for a Sizzling Vegas Weekend

Colorado River Fishing Report: Stripers, Smallmouth, and More for a Sizzling Vegas Weekend

Published 7 months ago
Description
Morning folks, Artificial Lure here with your October 1st fishing report for the Colorado River around Las Vegas. Watch your hats—it's shaping up to be a sizzler out there even by southern Nevada standards, and the bite is picking up just in time for the weekend.

Weatherwise, according to the Bullhead City and Cottonwood Cove forecasts, expect clear skies this morning with a high creeping toward 94 by afternoon. Winds’ll hover south at 5 to 13 mph, so not much to worry about unless those afternoon gusts pick up. Humidity’s low and it’ll cool off to the low 70s after sunset, making for a pleasant dusk drift or shore cast. Hit the water early; sunrise popped at 6:38 a.m., and sunset’ll close out the day at about 6:26 p.m. No tides to mind on this desert stretch—the current is all river flow controlled.

Now let’s talk water and fish. River levels remain steady but lower end, reflecting both conservation efforts and an ongoing drought year. There’s less debris than last spring, and visibility is decent—certainly fishable. The river’s running a touch warmer than average after that hot September, so the bass and stripers are still a bit active in the shallows come sunrise.

Reports from the Willow Beach and Laughlin stretches have lit up with tales of quality striped bass, especially just after the sun cracks the hills. Anglers are boating healthy numbers of 2-to-4-pounders, with the odd 10-plus-pound brute stretching lines below the powerlines. Catfish have been steady—mostly channels, and a few chunky blues working the slower bends at dusk and well into nightfall. Smallmouth bass are showing in ambush zones around rocky drop-offs, especially at the outflows and submerged structure.

As for the bite: the early morning and late evening windows are best, with midday seeing a slow-down as the sun bakes the banks. Stripers are hitting on live shad if you can catch 'em, but cut anchovy is the old Las Vegas standby, and it hasn’t let anyone down recently. For artificials, stickbaits with a silver-blue flash, 4- to 6-inch swimbaits in pearl or shad imitation, and topwater plugs at dawn have all been deadly. Smallmouth have been smacking 3-inch tube jigs in watermelon red flake, and drop-shotting finesse worms along ledges can provoke a reaction strike. For catfish, nothing fancy: cut mackerel, chicken liver, or nightcrawlers fished deep in low current pockets are pulling fish.

If you’re looking for panfish for a fish fry, sunfish and the occasional crappie are schooling near submerged weeds around Big Bend. Bobbers with nightcrawlers or mealworms are perfect for the kids and will keep rods bent.

Hot spots today? Give these a try:
- *Willow Beach Marina launch ramp area*—stripers chasing bait early and near the docks.
- *Big Bend State Recreation Area*, especially along the rocky points for both stripers and smallmouth.
- *Below Davis Dam*—those tailrace waters produce numbers, especially for bank fishermen targeting both cats and bass around the first light.

Kayakers, don’t miss Emerald Cave if you want a scenic float and the chance for some light tackle bass action in the quieter pools—TripAdvisor users say it’s a can’t-miss experience.

Inventory your tackle, bring a hat, ice your drinks, and hit the water before the sun turns everything to toast. That's the latest from the riverbank. Thanks for tuning in—don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a river update!

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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