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Lake Mead Winter Fishing Report: Slow Bites and Quality Catches

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake Mead fishing report for the Colorado River playground we call home. Out here we don’t worry about tides – Mead’s a big desert reservoir, so water level and wind matter more than any pull of the moon. The National Park Service notes the lake is still running low, so expect plenty of rock and structure showing, especially up in the coves and along points toward the Overton Arm and around Boulder Basin. Weather today around the lake is classic winter desert: cold at first light, clear to partly cloudy, light to moderate north-to-northeast breeze, and dry air. Mornings will feel brisk with temps near freezing, but we’ll climb into the 50s by afternoon. Sunrise is right around 7 o’clock local, with sunset just after 5, giving a tight feeding window around both ends of the day. Winter fish activity is all about slower metabolisms. Striped bass and largemouth are still chewing, but you’ve got to slow your presentation and key on that mid‑morning warmup and the last hour of light. Local reports from recent trips out of Hemenway and Las Vegas Bay have shown fair numbers of schoolie stripers in the 1–3 pound class, with an occasional 5–8 pounder for folks willing to chase birds and watch their electronics. Largemouth and smallmouth have been coming as singles rather than big numbers, but they’re quality fish holding on deeper rock and ledges. Best bets for **striped bass**: - Working vertical in 40–80 feet with 1– to 2‑ounce jigging spoons, Kastmasters, or ice jigs in chrome, white, or glow. - Slow‑trolled deep‑diving cranks or umbrella rigs along the old river channel edges. - For bait soakers, frozen anchovies are still king; thread them on a 1/0–2/0 hook, drop to the marks, and let them sit still. A little scent and fluorocarbon leader help in this clear winter water. For **largemouth and smallmouth**: - Finesse is the name of the game. Drop‑shot worms in green pumpkin, morning dawn, or shad colors, nose‑hooked and worked painstakingly slow on steep rocky banks. - Football jigs in brown, green pumpkin, or brown/purple with a small craw trailer, dragged along 20–35 feet of water on points. - On calmer afternoons, a suspending jerkbait in a natural shad pattern, worked with long pauses, can wake up some nice smallies on wind‑blown points. A couple of local hot spots to consider: - **Boulder Basin / Hemenway area**: Good for stripers, especially near the marina and along the deeper breaks. Watch for gulls and loons bunching up – that usually means stripers pushing shad. - **Las Vegas Bay and the 33‑hole area**: Consistent winter striper action with some bonus largemouth. Graph for bait in the 40–60 foot range and fish just above the schools. If you’re willing to make a longer run, the **Overton Arm** can be excellent for both smallmouth and stripers when the wind cooperates, focusing on rocky points and submerged humps. Water’s clear, so keep line light – 8–12 lb fluoro for bass, 12–20 for stripers – and keep your colors natural. Think shad, smelt, and ghost patterns for hard baits, green pumpkin and brown for bottom stuff. The bite won’t be fast and furious all day, but if you grind through the slow stretches and hit those key windows, you can put together a solid box of fish. That’s it from Artificial Lure here on Lake Mead. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. 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

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