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Hey folks, Artificial Lure here, dragging the bottom for the freshest bass buzz across the States.
Let’s start out West, where Wyoming just muscled its way onto the largemouth map. According to K2 Radio in Casper, 12‑year‑old Tucker Bass (yeah, that’s his real name) set an International Game Fish Association junior world record at Lake Cameahwait, aka Bass Lake, with a 2‑pound, 4‑ounce largemouth on a 4‑pound line. He did it from a two‑person kayak, using a Northland tungsten jig that’s usually tied on for ice fishing, not bucketmouths. That kid is now Wyoming’s only largemouth world‑record holder, and he also punched his ticket as a Trophy Angler in the state’s Master Angler program.
Slide northwest and Idaho Fish and Game just kicked off a new largemouth study on the Chain Lakes connected to Lake Coeur d’Alene. Idaho Fish and Game reports they’re working with local bass clubs to tag and track fish in eight lakes to dial in how these bass use backwaters, weeds, and changing water levels. Translation: if you’re a structure junkie who likes to pick apart side channels with the fly rod or a finesse stick, that whole Coeur d’Alene chain is only going to get better as managers tune regs and habitat with real data.
Midwestern crew, don’t sleep on northern Wisconsin. The Minocqua Area Chamber of Commerce fishing report says Bassmaster recently named the Minocqua Chain one of the top 25 bass lakes in the central region and in the top 100 nationwide. Those dark, forest‑rimmed lakes fish a lot like big, still trout water—clear, plenty of edges, and tons of room to work a streamer or deer‑hair diver along wood and weedlines. Popular nearby lakes like Big Arbor Vitae and Clear and Madeline get love too, but if you’re a fly angler chasing smallmouth that act like river fish in lake current, the Minocqua Chain is a “locals know” hotspot.
Down in bass‑boat country, the tournament scene is still punching. The Bass Cast reports Matt Robertson just hammered 16.50 pounds of Lake Norman bass to win the CATT Fall Final in North Carolina with a five‑fish bag and a 4.69 kicker. Lake Norman keeps showing why it stays on national schedules: lots of bait, healthy spots and largemouth, and a ton of dock and brush structure that would be deadly for anyone swinging big articulated flies on sinking lines around shade pockets.
If you’re mapping out 2025 road trips, the National Professional Fishing League schedule reads like a greatest‑hits list of bass water. The League’s 2025 slate includes Santee Cooper in South Carolina, Lake Norman in North Carolina, Douglas in Tennessee, Lake Eufaula in Oklahoma, the St. Lawrence River in New York, and Logan Martin in Alabama, capped off with a championship on Lake Hartwell in South Carolina. Those stops tell you exactly where the big‑time pros think the best action is going to be—smallmouth on the St. Lawrence, offshore and brush bass at Hartwell, shallow grass and cypress on Santee. Any fly angler who likes covering water and reading current lines could have a field day on those systems outside of tournament chaos.
And for a quiet‑water changeup with bass DNA, On The Water magazine just highlighted a new New York state record white perch from Cross River Reservoir. White perch are close cousins to striped bass and crush little jigs in cold water. If you throw small clousers or jiggy baitfish patterns on a light fly rod, that’s winter “bass‑adjacent” fun while you wait for the largemouth and smallmouth bite to heat back up.
That’s it for this run. Thanks for tuning in, and come back next week for more bass talk from Artificial Lure. This has been a Quiet Please production. To find more from me, check out QuietPlease dot A I.
For more http://www.quietplease.ai
Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Let’s start out West, where Wyoming just muscled its way onto the largemouth map. According to K2 Radio in Casper, 12‑year‑old Tucker Bass (yeah, that’s his real name) set an International Game Fish Association junior world record at Lake Cameahwait, aka Bass Lake, with a 2‑pound, 4‑ounce largemouth on a 4‑pound line. He did it from a two‑person kayak, using a Northland tungsten jig that’s usually tied on for ice fishing, not bucketmouths. That kid is now Wyoming’s only largemouth world‑record holder, and he also punched his ticket as a Trophy Angler in the state’s Master Angler program.
Slide northwest and Idaho Fish and Game just kicked off a new largemouth study on the Chain Lakes connected to Lake Coeur d’Alene. Idaho Fish and Game reports they’re working with local bass clubs to tag and track fish in eight lakes to dial in how these bass use backwaters, weeds, and changing water levels. Translation: if you’re a structure junkie who likes to pick apart side channels with the fly rod or a finesse stick, that whole Coeur d’Alene chain is only going to get better as managers tune regs and habitat with real data.
Midwestern crew, don’t sleep on northern Wisconsin. The Minocqua Area Chamber of Commerce fishing report says Bassmaster recently named the Minocqua Chain one of the top 25 bass lakes in the central region and in the top 100 nationwide. Those dark, forest‑rimmed lakes fish a lot like big, still trout water—clear, plenty of edges, and tons of room to work a streamer or deer‑hair diver along wood and weedlines. Popular nearby lakes like Big Arbor Vitae and Clear and Madeline get love too, but if you’re a fly angler chasing smallmouth that act like river fish in lake current, the Minocqua Chain is a “locals know” hotspot.
Down in bass‑boat country, the tournament scene is still punching. The Bass Cast reports Matt Robertson just hammered 16.50 pounds of Lake Norman bass to win the CATT Fall Final in North Carolina with a five‑fish bag and a 4.69 kicker. Lake Norman keeps showing why it stays on national schedules: lots of bait, healthy spots and largemouth, and a ton of dock and brush structure that would be deadly for anyone swinging big articulated flies on sinking lines around shade pockets.
If you’re mapping out 2025 road trips, the National Professional Fishing League schedule reads like a greatest‑hits list of bass water. The League’s 2025 slate includes Santee Cooper in South Carolina, Lake Norman in North Carolina, Douglas in Tennessee, Lake Eufaula in Oklahoma, the St. Lawrence River in New York, and Logan Martin in Alabama, capped off with a championship on Lake Hartwell in South Carolina. Those stops tell you exactly where the big‑time pros think the best action is going to be—smallmouth on the St. Lawrence, offshore and brush bass at Hartwell, shallow grass and cypress on Santee. Any fly angler who likes covering water and reading current lines could have a field day on those systems outside of tournament chaos.
And for a quiet‑water changeup with bass DNA, On The Water magazine just highlighted a new New York state record white perch from Cross River Reservoir. White perch are close cousins to striped bass and crush little jigs in cold water. If you throw small clousers or jiggy baitfish patterns on a light fly rod, that’s winter “bass‑adjacent” fun while you wait for the largemouth and smallmouth bite to heat back up.
That’s it for this run. Thanks for tuning in, and come back next week for more bass talk from Artificial Lure. This has been a Quiet Please production. To find more from me, check out QuietPlease dot A I.
For more http://www.quietplease.ai
Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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