
11 October 2025
Lake Mead Fishing Forecast: Mid-Fall Bass, Striper, and Catfish Action
Lake Mead, Nevada Fishing Report - Daily
About
Good morning anglers, this is Artificial Lure coming to you on this beautiful Saturday, October 11th, 2025.
Let me tell you, Lake Mead is fishing well right now as we roll into mid-fall. The cooler weather is bringing those fish back to life after a long, hot summer. We're looking at sunrise around 7:15 AM and sunset hitting near 6:30 PM, giving you solid daylight hours to work the water.
Temperature-wise, we're sitting pretty with daytime highs in the low 80s and overnight lows dipping into the 60s. Perfect conditions to get out there without melting. Water temps are dropping into that sweet spot where the bass start getting active again, feeding heavily before winter sets in.
Now, Lake Mead doesn't have tides like ocean fishing, but water levels have been stabilizing, which is good news for finding consistent structure and fish holding patterns.
Striped bass are the stars right now. These bruisers are chasing shad near the surface in the mornings and evenings. You'll want to throw topwater lures like poppers and walk-the-dog style baits early. Once the sun gets up, switch to deep-diving crankbaits or drop-shotting with live anchovies along the rocky points and drop-offs.
Largemouth bass are also cooperating. Work your jigs and Texas-rigged plastics around the submerged brush and rocky areas. Watermelon and green pumpkin colors are producing well. Live crawdads never hurt either if you can get your hands on them.
Catfish are always reliable here, especially at night. Cut bait, chicken liver, or prepared stink baits fished on the bottom will get you hooked up. These whisker-cats are active year-round and provide great action when other species slow down.
For hot spots, hit up Boulder Basin early morning. The coves and rocky points there are holding good numbers of stripers right now. Las Vegas Bay is another solid choice, especially for bass around the marina structures and submerged islands. Work those transition areas where deep water meets shallow flats.
Don't sleep on Callville Bay either. The main channel swings and rock piles out there are producing quality fish. If you've got a boat, cruise out to Government Wash where the old river channel creates great ambush points for predator fish.
Remember to stay hydrated out there even though it's cooling down, and always check your gear before heading out. Lake Mead is a big body of water with limited services in some areas.
Thanks for tuning in this morning. Make sure to subscribe so you never miss a fishing report. This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease.ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Let me tell you, Lake Mead is fishing well right now as we roll into mid-fall. The cooler weather is bringing those fish back to life after a long, hot summer. We're looking at sunrise around 7:15 AM and sunset hitting near 6:30 PM, giving you solid daylight hours to work the water.
Temperature-wise, we're sitting pretty with daytime highs in the low 80s and overnight lows dipping into the 60s. Perfect conditions to get out there without melting. Water temps are dropping into that sweet spot where the bass start getting active again, feeding heavily before winter sets in.
Now, Lake Mead doesn't have tides like ocean fishing, but water levels have been stabilizing, which is good news for finding consistent structure and fish holding patterns.
Striped bass are the stars right now. These bruisers are chasing shad near the surface in the mornings and evenings. You'll want to throw topwater lures like poppers and walk-the-dog style baits early. Once the sun gets up, switch to deep-diving crankbaits or drop-shotting with live anchovies along the rocky points and drop-offs.
Largemouth bass are also cooperating. Work your jigs and Texas-rigged plastics around the submerged brush and rocky areas. Watermelon and green pumpkin colors are producing well. Live crawdads never hurt either if you can get your hands on them.
Catfish are always reliable here, especially at night. Cut bait, chicken liver, or prepared stink baits fished on the bottom will get you hooked up. These whisker-cats are active year-round and provide great action when other species slow down.
For hot spots, hit up Boulder Basin early morning. The coves and rocky points there are holding good numbers of stripers right now. Las Vegas Bay is another solid choice, especially for bass around the marina structures and submerged islands. Work those transition areas where deep water meets shallow flats.
Don't sleep on Callville Bay either. The main channel swings and rock piles out there are producing quality fish. If you've got a boat, cruise out to Government Wash where the old river channel creates great ambush points for predator fish.
Remember to stay hydrated out there even though it's cooling down, and always check your gear before heading out. Lake Mead is a big body of water with limited services in some areas.
Thanks for tuning in this morning. Make sure to subscribe so you never miss a fishing report. This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease.ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI