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Colorado River Las Vegas Fishing Report: Stripers, Trout, and Tailored Tactics for Winter Clarity
Published 4 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Colorado River Las Vegas report.
Out here below Hoover Dam, we don’t worry about tides – the river’s controlled by dam releases, so flow bumps around peaking power demand instead of moon pull. Expect clearer, steady flows early and a little more push late afternoon when they kick on the turbines.
Weather along the river today is mild desert winter: cool at first light, warming into the upper 50s to low 60s with light winds and mostly clear skies, according to the National Weather Service. Sunrise hit around 6:45 a.m., with sunset roughly 4:30 p.m., so you’ve got a tight prime-time window at both ends of the day.
Cold water below Hoover keeps the resident striped bass and trout active even when the air has some bite. Local anglers and shop chatter this week point to solid striper action at first light and again in the last hour before dark, with most fish in the 1–3 pound class, plus the occasional 5–8 pounder. Rainbows are coming on slower, but steady, especially where current softens and there’s chunk rock.
Best-producing offerings lately:
- For **stripers**:
• Small to midsize swimbaits in shad or pearl, 3–5 inches, slow-rolled near current seams.
• 1/2–3/4 oz chrome or white spoons yo-yoed through deeper runs.
• Live or cut anchovies on a Carolina rig if you’re bait-soaking.
- For **trout**:
• Gold or silver Panther Martins and Rooster Tails, downsized, ticking just off bottom.
• Floating salmon eggs or nightcrawlers on light line under a small drift rig.
• Tiny marabou or woolly bugger jigs in olive or black if you’re running ultralight.
Action has been best when the sun is low, with the clear winter water pushing fish tight to structure and shade. Midday gets tougher and calls for lighter line and more natural presentations.
A couple local hot spots to put on your list:
- **Willow Beach area**: Cooler, clear water and a mix of stripers and trout. Work the rocky banks and eddies just upriver and downriver from the marina, especially early.
- **Below Hoover Dam down toward the powerline pulls**: Strong current seams, deep cuts, and ledges that stack stripers when flows bump up.
If you’re bank fishing, focus on points that stick out into the current and any little pocket that breaks the flow. Boat anglers should watch their electronics for bait balls hanging mid-depth; those have been the key to better stripers the past week.
Keep it simple: light fluorocarbon, natural shad colors, and slow retrieves. Let that cold, clear water work for you.
Thanks for tuning in, and 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.
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.
Out here below Hoover Dam, we don’t worry about tides – the river’s controlled by dam releases, so flow bumps around peaking power demand instead of moon pull. Expect clearer, steady flows early and a little more push late afternoon when they kick on the turbines.
Weather along the river today is mild desert winter: cool at first light, warming into the upper 50s to low 60s with light winds and mostly clear skies, according to the National Weather Service. Sunrise hit around 6:45 a.m., with sunset roughly 4:30 p.m., so you’ve got a tight prime-time window at both ends of the day.
Cold water below Hoover keeps the resident striped bass and trout active even when the air has some bite. Local anglers and shop chatter this week point to solid striper action at first light and again in the last hour before dark, with most fish in the 1–3 pound class, plus the occasional 5–8 pounder. Rainbows are coming on slower, but steady, especially where current softens and there’s chunk rock.
Best-producing offerings lately:
- For **stripers**:
• Small to midsize swimbaits in shad or pearl, 3–5 inches, slow-rolled near current seams.
• 1/2–3/4 oz chrome or white spoons yo-yoed through deeper runs.
• Live or cut anchovies on a Carolina rig if you’re bait-soaking.
- For **trout**:
• Gold or silver Panther Martins and Rooster Tails, downsized, ticking just off bottom.
• Floating salmon eggs or nightcrawlers on light line under a small drift rig.
• Tiny marabou or woolly bugger jigs in olive or black if you’re running ultralight.
Action has been best when the sun is low, with the clear winter water pushing fish tight to structure and shade. Midday gets tougher and calls for lighter line and more natural presentations.
A couple local hot spots to put on your list:
- **Willow Beach area**: Cooler, clear water and a mix of stripers and trout. Work the rocky banks and eddies just upriver and downriver from the marina, especially early.
- **Below Hoover Dam down toward the powerline pulls**: Strong current seams, deep cuts, and ledges that stack stripers when flows bump up.
If you’re bank fishing, focus on points that stick out into the current and any little pocket that breaks the flow. Boat anglers should watch their electronics for bait balls hanging mid-depth; those have been the key to better stripers the past week.
Keep it simple: light fluorocarbon, natural shad colors, and slow retrieves. Let that cold, clear water work for you.
Thanks for tuning in, and 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.
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.