RSS
Fishing Gear at Arizona Lake Fishing

Get Arizona Lake Fishing updates via email!

Enter your email address into the box bellow.


Delivered by Feedburner

Use Spinners to Catch Bass

Spinners can be used to catch bass in just about any weather or water temp or time of year. Tournaments can be won fishing a spinner. They’re a great lure for spring and fall when the bass are feeding heavily as well as in winter when the water is cold. You can also fish them in the warmer waters of summer and just buzz them by the fish to entice them to bite.

It’s a good idea to keep several spinners in your box and keep spare blades and skirts on hand so you can test the waters and see what’s biting. But the go-to spinner in my box is always a 3/8th ounce spinnerbait with a #5 willowleaf and #3 Colorado blade. Have one of each in gold and silver. A chartreuse and white skirt and a 3″ white curly tail trailer.

Spinners in Warm Water

Warm water, at and above 60 degrees, means fast retrievals. When the water is warm, run the bait just under the surface fairly quickly until the blade just brakes the water. Then slow down and let the skirt flare.

When the water is warmer, and the feeding is slower, speed up your retrieval and try for reaction strikes by buzzing it right by the bass and letting it brake the water’s surface.

Spinners in Cool Waters

Cool waters, bellow 60 degrees, you want to slow it down. Use a heavier spinner, around 1/2 once. Get heavier and slower as the water gets colder. The added weight will allow you to fish deeper and slower.

Tips for Using Spinners

  1. The clearness of the water will tell how quickly to run your lure. In clearer waters you can run it fairly fast but slow it down in murky waters.
  2. Try bigger blades. Up to a #7 blade has caught fish and was a popular method a few years ago and still catches fish.
  3. Try different colors of skirts and trailers if the fish aren’t biting.
  4. Attach the lure with a clip and swivel to allow for quick and easy changing.

Spinners are one of my favorite lures. They are easy to use, easy to fish and you almost never lose a fish on one. The big hook seems to keep them on the hook effectively.

© Arizona Lake Fishing | Get a Daily Fishing Report Follow Us on Twitter

Find the Bait Fish, Find the Bass

Bass are predator fish and they follow schools of baitfish to prey on. So, if you can find the schools of baitfish, chances are pretty good that the bass are close by. But how do you locate the baitfish?

How to locate the baitfish and intern the big bass

  1. Easiest to spot are the small minnows jumping out of the water and if your lucky swirls of bigger fish swimming close behind. If you see these tiny jumping fish, there is a school of baitfish swimming around just under them.
  2. Loons also love baitfish. They feed on them regularly. The benefit of seeing loons feeding on fish is that they are easier to spot from a distance than jumping minnows. Follow the loons to the baitfish and the baitfish to the bass.
  3. Gulls also prey on fish. You’ll often see them circling in one spot. This is a good place to head out and fish.
  4. Herons are another bird species that prey on fish and are easy to spot in the air or on the shore.
  5. If you see small dimples on the surface of the water chances are there is a school of shad near the surface. These dimples might look like little raindrops falling over a small are of water.
  6. Use a depthfinder. On a depthfinder, a school of fish will look like a ball of solid mass.
  7. And finally, when you see a group of boats fishing in one area, it’s probably a good spot to fish. Man also likes to prey on fish and they are very easy to spot in their boats with fishing poles. ;)

So now you found the baitfish, what do you do?

Tips to use the baitfish to your advantage

  • For your lure or bait selection, try to match the size and shape of the baitfish swimming around.
  • Vary your depth to find the feeding fish (largemouth bass but also crappie, walleye, muskie, hybrids, white bass, striped bass)
  • Get as close to the food source as possible to increase your odds of catching the fish you set out to catch.
© Arizona Lake Fishing | Get a Daily Fishing Report Follow Us on Twitter

Lake Havasu Summer Fishing Report

At Lake Havasu the average day time water temp is between 86-92 degrees right now.

The striper bite is good to fair but they are only small to medium sizes. They will bite on anchovies, squid and mackerel at around 30 – 50 feet deep. Chumming is recommended because the striper schools are broken up due to the low number of shad this year.

Smallmouth bass have been hitting big time with a 1/4 – 3/8 ounce brown jigs, or hula grubs. Try around the rocky points in the main basin south to Standard Wash.

Catfish are also biting. They prefer anchovy this summer and they are most active at night. It’s recommended to go out to Topock Gorge where the sizes have been around 4 – 12 pounds.

For best results: Go for the smallmouth bass. Get out early in the morning and troll with chrome/blue Rat_L-Trap, pointers, or chug bugs. Spin casting is also working well if you don’t like the troll method.

© Arizona Lake Fishing | Get a Daily Fishing Report Follow Us on Twitter

Canyon Lake Summer Fishing Report

Canyon Lake elevation is around 1650 feet and is 94% full.

Great fishing is still coming from Canyon Lake with anglers reporting that fish are lively and healthy. Bluegill, bass and catfish are all biting and if your lucky, maybe a rainbow trout will be on the end of your line.

Some of the top spots for boats are: Beer Can Point, Beaver Landing, Mormon Flat, the mouth of First Water and LaBarge Cove near the bridge. If you’re shore fishing try the Boulder recreation area, Acacia picnic site, Teddy Bear Point, Mormon Flat and Beaver Landing.

Get out in the mornings, the bite seems to be over by noon.

For best results: Head over to Beer Can Point, Beaver Landing or Teddy Bear Point with your boat and a 1/8 oz. Kastmaster on your line. If you’re shore fishing go to Acacia picnic site with worms on a bobber.

© Arizona Lake Fishing | Get a Daily Fishing Report Follow Us on Twitter

Lake Pleasant Summer Fishing Report

Lake Pleasant is 75% full, at just over 1600 feet in elevation.

Mornings are best before 9am. There is some fish activity but the shad boils don’t last too long and after 9am, the shad boils drying up. Some anglers are seeing the activity taper as early as 7am.

Striped bass, white bass and largemouth bass are all biting now in varying numbers. Most are being caught in the north coves of the lake, as well as Scorpion Point.

For best results: Get there early; before dawn. Try topwater lures for the stripers and whities. Specifically, the Diawa diving topwater lure works really well in the northern coves.

© Arizona Lake Fishing | Get a Daily Fishing Report Follow Us on Twitter

Summer Fishing Report for Bartlett Lake

Bartlett Lake has an elevation of 1789 ft making it 87% full.

Anglers are reporting that fishing is good out at Bartlett Lake. The largemouth bass are biting on crank baits, and drop shot with plastics. Bluegills are biting mealworms, crickets or small portions of earthworms on a small hook with a bobber.

For best results: To catch largemouth, try fishing the points at about 20 feet of water. Using the drop shot with plastics seems to be working best. For the bluegills, try shore fishing around rocky areas. They seem to be more aggressive in these areas. Live bait seems to be working best but if you’re not a fan of live bait, try 1/32 oz or smaller jigs, grubs or spinnerbaits.

© Arizona Lake Fishing | Get a Daily Fishing Report Follow Us on Twitter

Fishing Tips: Fishing for Spawning Bass

There is nothing better than bass fishing during the height of the spawn. The bass are shallow, aggressive, and consistently larger than those caught at many other times of the year. The comment is often heard from those that like to keep an occasional bass to eat, that we need to throw back this fat female so she can spawn. Instead, we will keep this scrawny little male with the frayed tail for supper.

That theory works well for deer and elk; harvest the males, let the females perpetuate the species. But in the underwater world of black bass, that notion is “bass-ackwards”. The male bass is responsible for the survival of the new year class of bass. The female is just window dressing.

Bass spawning is triggered by photo period (day length) and water temperature. At Lake Powell the first spawns of the spring happen any time after the last week of March when the water warms to 60° F. Males then move into the shallows and sweep the silt away from a one to two-foot area exposing the rocky substrate. The preferred nest depth is from 18 to 36-inches. Largemouth like a bush or some type of overhead cover nearby. Smallmouth often use a ledge or select a nest near a boulder to feel the security of cover close at hand.

Once a nest site is excavated the male will stay near it for the duration of the spawning season. He may change nest sites if the water becomes too shallow or too deep, but if conditions are right, he stays there until the water warms enough to preclude spawning for the year.

In some years, spring never arrives. One cold front after another blows through and the water never warms to 60° F. Spring spawning bass are equipped to handle the situation. Males build and occupy nests when the temperature rises. When the temperature falls, bass abandon the nest. If the warm spell persists long enough to produce a spawn, falling temperatures will still cause the nest to be abandoned and most of the eggs lost. The tendency to abandon the nest is nature’s way of making the best of unstable spring weather. Declining temperatures in the spring are usually marked by cold winds which tend to destroy nests as the waves pile up on the shore where the eggs are covered with silt, and the fry smother. Bass don’t stay with that nest full of dead eggs.

As soon as the water warms again, the male tidies up the rocks by sweeping out the silt and then spawns again. Fry survive best when water is warming and weather is stable. If it stays warm, the male guards the nest until the eggs hatch and then protects the fry for the first week or so. An individual male can re-nest as many as 8 to 10 times during a single spring spawning season.

Females make adjustments to achieve the same goal. The ovary contains 2,000 to 100,000 eggs depending on the size and age of the female. Not all eggs mature at the same time. During the first warm spell a portion of the eggs will ripen. If selected by a male the female could then spawn about 2,000 eggs in his nest. She would then wait a day or two and be ready to spawn another 2,000 eggs. She could continue to spawn 10 to 20 more times depending on weather conditions and availability of males. If not selected she may not spawn at all, even though she is able and willing. Healthy female bass always have many large, yellow but unripe eggs in the ovary. Catching female bas with a fully developed ovary long after spawning season is over is the rule instead of the exception.

The female selection process is reminiscent of cow cutting – for the rodeo fans out there. When everything is ready the male leaves the nest and journeys into deeper water where the females are stationed. He somehow finds the appropriate female (my guess is that he chooses the first female encountered). He veers around behind her and then drives her toward the nest. They zig-zag back toward the nest as she coyly tries in vain to get back into deep water.

When she is parked over the nest, he employs cave-man manners and smartly rams her in the stomach with his snout. The impact breaks lose the ripe eggs and allows them to flow. She begins squirting eggs near the rock nest but gradually rises toward the surface, her body turning partially on the side, as the male gently rises to the surface beside her. She changes color in the process with the side bars and markings becoming much more prominent and the green skin color becoming much paler during egg deposition. When her complement of eggs is emitted, the male drives her away and rounds up another female. He will spawn with as many females as possible for a 6 to 12-hour period after which he drives away all intruders.

There is always an abundance of females to lay the eggs. The male initiates courting and is then responsible for all caretaking until the young bass are able to survive on their own.

© Arizona Lake Fishing | Get a Daily Fishing Report Follow Us on Twitter

Roosevelt Lake Winter Fishing Update

Water elevation remains at 2,099 feet, which is 45-percent full

For bass the action is at dawn and all but stopped an hour after sunrise. It is expected to pick up with the new moon.

Try deeper water around 20 feet just off the steep rocky shores. Use deep diving crank bait.

The coves are also hitting for largemouth bass. Try using spider jigs.

© Arizona Lake Fishing | Get a Daily Fishing Report Follow Us on Twitter

Bass Fishing Surges at Lake Havasu

The striped bass boils are being spotted in the middle coves at Lake Havasu. Anglers have reported pods scattered in the basin of the lake and at the shorelines near Windsor Beach.

If fishing the boils, the R2S Rover 128 in Okie Shad, Chrome black or chartreuse shad are working well as is the bone-colored Vixen, and the Okie shad and bone-colored Zara Spooks. From the shore use Rat-L-Trap type baits like the R2S tungsten vibe in chartreuse shad, chrome/black or similar crankbaits in chrome/blue that can be ripped and retrieved quickly through the grass beds. If using bait, try using anchovies in the deeper water.

Smallmouth and largemouth bass are being caught throughout theday with the early morning bite being the best.

Use topwater baits like bone-colored Vixens, bone-colored Zara Spooks, or small Storm Chug Bugs in chrome blue and phantom chartreuse.

After the early morning use small plastics with a slip shot or drop shot in and on the outside edges of the weed beds or along rocky points in the main basin at 15 – 20 feet. The 4 inch straight tail Robo Worm in bold blue gill are working the best.

© Arizona Lake Fishing | Get a Daily Fishing Report Follow Us on Twitter

Apache Lake Stocked with Rainbow Trout this Winter

Get out and fish Apache Lake this winter. There will be rainbow trout and Apache also has a decent population of large mouth bass.

© Arizona Lake Fishing | Get a Daily Fishing Report Follow Us on Twitter