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Lively Fall Bite on the Colorado River Near Las Vegas
Published 6 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
Artificial Lure here, reporting from the banks of the Colorado River near Las Vegas on this crisp Friday, October 10th, 2025.
Las Vegas woke up to a stretch of **clear skies and mild temperatures** today, with cooler-than-average days lingering after last week’s heavy rains. According to the local drought update, these showers have improved streamflow and water clarity, making conditions ideal for anglers across the Colorado River corridor. Expect a high near 76°F and light breezes for most of the day.
**Sunrise hit at 6:44 AM and sunset’s coming at 6:16 PM**, giving you a long window to work all the hot spots. With the full moon just having passed, tidal influence is less dramatic here than out West, but nocturnal and early morning activity is still up—cats, stripers, and bass feeding along deeper drop-offs and current seams.
The **fish activity has been rock steady** in this stretch as fall transitions push baitfish into tighter schools. Willow Beach guides and tackle shops report **good numbers of striped bass** pulled early in the week, ranging from school-sized up to a few citation fish breaking the ten-pound mark by dusk. **Channel catfish** are also moving well at night – several folks landed cats weighing between 5-8 lbs on cut bait just south of Big Bend State Recreation Area.
**Smallmouth bass** and largemouth are staging near rocky outcroppings and submerged brush, especially in coves around Cottonwood Cove and the downstream edges of Willow Beach. Recent catches favor reaction baits in the morning, moving to slower presentations as the sun climbs.
For optimal results, locals have been sticking with:
- **Topwater lures** at dawn—Whopper Plopper, Zara Spook, or walking baits get the boils along shallow flats
- **Jerkbaits and swimbaits** during midday, particularly in shad patterns
- **Crankbaits** in craw colors fished tight to drop-offs and submerged wood
- **Cut anchovy and chicken liver** for catfish and even stripers at night
- **Soft plastics (Senko, Ned rig, tube baits)** around rocky banks for smallies and largemouths
Insider tip: If you’re gunning for a trophy striper, make sure to drift a live shad or big chunk of anchovy near the deeper ledges off Willow Beach before sunrise, where several fish in the 15-20 lb class have been spotted lately.
**Hot spots worth hitting:**
- **Willow Beach Marina**: Consistent stripers and a good mix of catfish off the docks and rocky shelf.
- **Cottonwood Cove**: Best bass bite in the afternoons, with aggressive fish feeding in 8–15 feet of water near submerged brush.
- **Big Bend State Recreation Area**: Productive for nighttime catfish action and the occasional striper cruising the shallows.
Boat traffic is lighter today, thanks to that post-rain stretch, and the improved water quality means jerkbaits and crankbaits running a touch clearer are a smart pick. Don’t forget extra fluorocarbon leader if you’re chasing stripers—their bite’s been sharp.
That’s your boots-on-the-ground report for the Colorado River in Las Vegas. Thanks for tuning in—make sure you subscribe and stay hooked for more daily tips and updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
This episode includes AI-generated content.
Las Vegas woke up to a stretch of **clear skies and mild temperatures** today, with cooler-than-average days lingering after last week’s heavy rains. According to the local drought update, these showers have improved streamflow and water clarity, making conditions ideal for anglers across the Colorado River corridor. Expect a high near 76°F and light breezes for most of the day.
**Sunrise hit at 6:44 AM and sunset’s coming at 6:16 PM**, giving you a long window to work all the hot spots. With the full moon just having passed, tidal influence is less dramatic here than out West, but nocturnal and early morning activity is still up—cats, stripers, and bass feeding along deeper drop-offs and current seams.
The **fish activity has been rock steady** in this stretch as fall transitions push baitfish into tighter schools. Willow Beach guides and tackle shops report **good numbers of striped bass** pulled early in the week, ranging from school-sized up to a few citation fish breaking the ten-pound mark by dusk. **Channel catfish** are also moving well at night – several folks landed cats weighing between 5-8 lbs on cut bait just south of Big Bend State Recreation Area.
**Smallmouth bass** and largemouth are staging near rocky outcroppings and submerged brush, especially in coves around Cottonwood Cove and the downstream edges of Willow Beach. Recent catches favor reaction baits in the morning, moving to slower presentations as the sun climbs.
For optimal results, locals have been sticking with:
- **Topwater lures** at dawn—Whopper Plopper, Zara Spook, or walking baits get the boils along shallow flats
- **Jerkbaits and swimbaits** during midday, particularly in shad patterns
- **Crankbaits** in craw colors fished tight to drop-offs and submerged wood
- **Cut anchovy and chicken liver** for catfish and even stripers at night
- **Soft plastics (Senko, Ned rig, tube baits)** around rocky banks for smallies and largemouths
Insider tip: If you’re gunning for a trophy striper, make sure to drift a live shad or big chunk of anchovy near the deeper ledges off Willow Beach before sunrise, where several fish in the 15-20 lb class have been spotted lately.
**Hot spots worth hitting:**
- **Willow Beach Marina**: Consistent stripers and a good mix of catfish off the docks and rocky shelf.
- **Cottonwood Cove**: Best bass bite in the afternoons, with aggressive fish feeding in 8–15 feet of water near submerged brush.
- **Big Bend State Recreation Area**: Productive for nighttime catfish action and the occasional striper cruising the shallows.
Boat traffic is lighter today, thanks to that post-rain stretch, and the improved water quality means jerkbaits and crankbaits running a touch clearer are a smart pick. Don’t forget extra fluorocarbon leader if you’re chasing stripers—their bite’s been sharp.
That’s your boots-on-the-ground report for the Colorado River in Las Vegas. Thanks for tuning in—make sure you subscribe and stay hooked for more daily tips and updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
This episode includes AI-generated content.