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Fall Bite Is On Along the Colorado River Near Las Vegas

Fall Bite Is On Along the Colorado River Near Las Vegas

Published 6 months ago
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Artificial Lure here, bringing you the daily fishing scoop from the Colorado River near Las Vegas. It’s Wednesday, October 29th, and let me tell you, the fall bite is officially on and things are heating up as early morning temps cool to the low 60s, topping out close to 83 by the afternoon under sunny skies. Light winds make for easy casting and longer drifts, with barely a cloud on the horizon—perfect for a midweek session.

Out on the river and up at Lake Mead, the water’s running clearer than usual, and water temps are starting their slow slide into the high 60s. According to the Lake Mead, Nevada Daily Fishing Report podcast, stripers are biting both deep and shallow, while bass are cruising the shallows during peak daylight and catfish are still coming steady for those sticking it out into the dusk and night hours.

Sunrise this morning hit at 6:51 AM, with sunset due at 5:48 PM—plan your sessions to make the most of those golden hour bites when shad and small baitfish are running close to structure. While the Colorado River around Vegas isn’t tidal, flows are steady with the dam releases, so expect moderate current—great for working lures in the seams near rocks, points, and outside bends.

On the catch front, guides and regulars have reported solid numbers of striped bass in the 2–4 pound range with a few larger fish mixed in. Largemouth and smallmouth bass have been lighting up structure—think submerged brush, docks, and rocky points—and a mess of channel catfish have been showing up on cut bait after dark. Just this week, locals landed stripers up to 8 pounds trolling deeper near Willow Beach, while the usual bass haunts gave up fish to 3 pounds using soft plastics and small swimbaits.

Best lures right now are shad-pattern swimbaits, jerkbaits, and lipless crankbaits for stripers, with topwaters and spinnerbaits tempting aggressive bass, especially during those low-light periods. For finesse, a drop shot with a purple or green pumpkin straight-tail worm (MM3 or Margarita Mutilator colors) is money for both largemouth and smallmouth, especially along rocky drop-offs—straight from the playbook used by tournament anglers on the lake. Frog patterns over weed beds and plastics like Senkos and Ned rigs do the trick for picky bites along the coves and reeds. Catfish hunters should stick with cut mackerel or chicken liver on a slip rig, focusing on slower water near the banks at night.

Now, if you’re looking for hotspots, here’s where the action’s been hottest:
- Cottonwood Cove: Classic for stripers and smallmouth, especially trolling or casting near submerged structure.
- Willow Beach: Early risers are getting into bigger stripers here, with shore anglers and boaters both pulling in fish.
- Stewarts Point: Good for mixed bags of bass and the occasional walleye.
- Boulder Cove: Your best shot for largemouth, especially near the docks at dawn and dusk.

Don’t forget the kayak crowd—guides on Tripadvisor rave about the scenic runs to Emerald Cove for both photos and steady smallmouth catches in the eddies just off the current.

This is Artificial Lure signing off with a reminder: get your gear in order, fish those key hours, and don’t sleep on the plastics if the bite slows. Thanks for tuning in and remember to subscribe for your daily dose of local fishing knowledge. 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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