
The Secret to Unlocking Bass Fishing's Big-Fish Potential Across the States
2025-12-09
0:00
3:50
Hey folks, Artificial Lure here – your slightly over-caffeinated, silicon-brained fishing buddy, checking in with this week’s bass buzz from around the States.
Let’s start in Texas, because of course we are. Wired2Fish reports that right after Thanksgiving, Clay Butler smacked a 12.55-pound largemouth out of Champion Creek Reservoir, breaking a 20-year-old lake record. That’s not just a fat fish, that’s “call your buddies and brag for the rest of your life” class. Texas Parks and Wildlife’s records also show Fort Phantom Hill kicking out a 13.33-pound largemouth in early 2024, reminding everyone that West Texas isn’t just dust and windmills – it’s big-bass country.
On the “future of the fishery” front, Louisiana is tuning up one of its sleeper spots. The Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries says they’re dropping 140 adult Florida-strain largemouth into Lake Buhlow in Pineville, on top of 77 they planted earlier this year. Those are retired brood fish from the hatchery, and the goal is simple: bigger bass in a convenient, city-side lake for years to come. Translation: in a couple seasons, Buhlow might be the spot where your “quick after-work session” turns into a personal best.
Up in Idaho, things are getting nerdy in a good way. Idaho Fish and Game just launched a new study on largemouth in the Chain Lakes connected to Coeur d’Alene Lake. They’re tagging bass with transmitters to see how much the fish wander between lakes and how that should change management. That Chain Lakes system is already known for trophy largemouth, and this kind of work is how you keep a big-bass factory running instead of burning out.
If you’re chasing hot current bites, Sam Rayburn Reservoir in Texas is still one of the most reliable factories for 5-pound-plus fish. Travel and fishing blurbs on Rayburn keep repeating the same thing: tons of cover, piles of quality bass, and legit trophy potential if you’re willing to grind. Over in Tennessee, Cordell Hull Lake is getting more attention too – clear water, pretty scenery, and solid bass fishing that flies just under the radar compared to the more famous Tennessee River reservoirs.
Now, for the fly folks lurking in the back of the boat: winter is lining up to be sneaky good if you think like a trout bum. The BassCast just talked about that “first taste of winter” pattern in Virginia – bass sliding between shallow and deep, feeding up, but getting moody. Gear guys are leaning on Alabama rigs, lipless cranks, and slow stuff, but the behavior is what matters. Early and late, when the sun barely bumps the water temp, bass slide shallow and eat. Sounds a lot like working a streamer along a warming bank for browns, doesn’t it? Same game: find the slightly warmer water, move a bait with some intent, and hang on.
Fly anglers who want to dabble: this is prime time for big articulated streamers on sinking lines around points, channel swings, and riprap. Think “olive and white Game Changer where that guy would throw an A-rig.” You’re not that far off from your favorite swing run – you’re just doing it from a jon boat instead of a gravel bar.
Big picture, between record-breakers in Texas, stocking projects in Louisiana, and telemetry work in Idaho, bass fishing in the U.S. is in a pretty sweet spot. More big fish, better science, and plenty of room for the fly crowd to sneak in and start sticking green torpedoes on 7-weights.
Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure – come back next week for more bass gossip, big-fish stories, and low-key peer pressure to try something new. This has been a Quiet Please production, and for 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 in Texas, because of course we are. Wired2Fish reports that right after Thanksgiving, Clay Butler smacked a 12.55-pound largemouth out of Champion Creek Reservoir, breaking a 20-year-old lake record. That’s not just a fat fish, that’s “call your buddies and brag for the rest of your life” class. Texas Parks and Wildlife’s records also show Fort Phantom Hill kicking out a 13.33-pound largemouth in early 2024, reminding everyone that West Texas isn’t just dust and windmills – it’s big-bass country.
On the “future of the fishery” front, Louisiana is tuning up one of its sleeper spots. The Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries says they’re dropping 140 adult Florida-strain largemouth into Lake Buhlow in Pineville, on top of 77 they planted earlier this year. Those are retired brood fish from the hatchery, and the goal is simple: bigger bass in a convenient, city-side lake for years to come. Translation: in a couple seasons, Buhlow might be the spot where your “quick after-work session” turns into a personal best.
Up in Idaho, things are getting nerdy in a good way. Idaho Fish and Game just launched a new study on largemouth in the Chain Lakes connected to Coeur d’Alene Lake. They’re tagging bass with transmitters to see how much the fish wander between lakes and how that should change management. That Chain Lakes system is already known for trophy largemouth, and this kind of work is how you keep a big-bass factory running instead of burning out.
If you’re chasing hot current bites, Sam Rayburn Reservoir in Texas is still one of the most reliable factories for 5-pound-plus fish. Travel and fishing blurbs on Rayburn keep repeating the same thing: tons of cover, piles of quality bass, and legit trophy potential if you’re willing to grind. Over in Tennessee, Cordell Hull Lake is getting more attention too – clear water, pretty scenery, and solid bass fishing that flies just under the radar compared to the more famous Tennessee River reservoirs.
Now, for the fly folks lurking in the back of the boat: winter is lining up to be sneaky good if you think like a trout bum. The BassCast just talked about that “first taste of winter” pattern in Virginia – bass sliding between shallow and deep, feeding up, but getting moody. Gear guys are leaning on Alabama rigs, lipless cranks, and slow stuff, but the behavior is what matters. Early and late, when the sun barely bumps the water temp, bass slide shallow and eat. Sounds a lot like working a streamer along a warming bank for browns, doesn’t it? Same game: find the slightly warmer water, move a bait with some intent, and hang on.
Fly anglers who want to dabble: this is prime time for big articulated streamers on sinking lines around points, channel swings, and riprap. Think “olive and white Game Changer where that guy would throw an A-rig.” You’re not that far off from your favorite swing run – you’re just doing it from a jon boat instead of a gravel bar.
Big picture, between record-breakers in Texas, stocking projects in Louisiana, and telemetry work in Idaho, bass fishing in the U.S. is in a pretty sweet spot. More big fish, better science, and plenty of room for the fly crowd to sneak in and start sticking green torpedoes on 7-weights.
Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure – come back next week for more bass gossip, big-fish stories, and low-key peer pressure to try something new. This has been a Quiet Please production, and for 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
Fler avsnitt från "Bass Fishing Daily"



Missa inte ett avsnitt av “Bass Fishing Daily” och prenumerera på det i GetPodcast-appen.







