
03 September 2025
Late Summer Fishing Challenges on Dropping Lake Mead
Lake Mead, Nevada Fishing Report - Daily
About
Hey anglers, Artificial Lure here with your boots-on-the-ground Lake Mead fishing report for Wednesday, September 3rd, 2025, coming to you straight from the Nevada shoreline.
We’re stepping into September under a blazing sun and long, dry spell. According to Coyote Gulch’s recent report, the Colorado Basin—including Lake Mead—has seen higher-than-normal temperatures and a weak monsoon so far. The rain’s been scarce, so reservoirs are low and water’s clear, with not much runoff coloring things up. Expect hot afternoons, light winds, and smoky skies from western wildfires hanging in the air, which can both spook and settle the fish as the daylight changes.
**Sunrise** hit around 6:18 a.m., and **sunset** will be close to 7:05 p.m. No tides out here, but with water levels at late-summer lows, shorelines are exposed and you’ll find baitfish pushing tight to deeper ledges and submerged brush.
The bite has been classic late-summer tough in the middle of the day, but don’t let that stop you. Early morning and just before dusk are your **prime windows**—get out there with topwater lures at first light. Local bass hunters on TikTok and in the marinas report big largemouth and striped bass schooling on shad; Z-Man ChatterBaits, soft jerkbaits, and poppers have been pulling in good numbers at dawn before the heat really sets in. Once the sun gets high, drop down with deep-diving crankbaits, Carolina rigs with watermelon or green pumpkin plastics, or even live shad if you’ve got it.
Catfishing is still worth your time, especially at night. Country Hookers reminds us that sturdy rigs baited with cut anchovy, chicken liver, or stinkbait near rocky dropoffs can yield nice channel and blue cats—reports have a few double-digit fish landed off the western coves this week. Bring a lantern and keep close to shore structure where cats are hunting for leftovers.
Trout are a tougher find in this heat, pushed deep and lethargic. Your best shot is targeting cooler inflows up at Willow Beach early with PowerBait or small spinners, but don’t expect any big numbers until the water cools.
**Recent catches**
- Striper schools are busting shad off Boulder Beach and near Hemenway early. Average fish have been 2–5 pounds with the occasional double-digit slab.
- Largemouth are a challenge midday but fish up to 4 pounds have been landed using shaky heads and Senkos in deep brush piles.
- Catfish activity is on the rise at night; best results from the Overton Arm and deeper coves.
- Panfish and crappie reports are thin—most anglers are targeting bass or cats right now.
**Hot spots**
- Boulder Beach: Topwater and cranks first light for stripers, decent bass holding below the surface.
- Government Wash: Classic staging area for stripers; deep points and rocky fingers are money around sunset.
- Overton Arm: Best for catfish at night and a solid shot at larger stripers cruising the edges.
Expect water clarity to be high, so finesse baits and natural presentations are out-fishing the flashiest hardware. Heavy gear isn’t necessary unless you’re specifically chasing monster cats or stripers.
That’s your on-the-water scoop for Lake Mead, September 3rd. Thanks for tuning in—don’t forget to subscribe for more local reports and tackle tips. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
We’re stepping into September under a blazing sun and long, dry spell. According to Coyote Gulch’s recent report, the Colorado Basin—including Lake Mead—has seen higher-than-normal temperatures and a weak monsoon so far. The rain’s been scarce, so reservoirs are low and water’s clear, with not much runoff coloring things up. Expect hot afternoons, light winds, and smoky skies from western wildfires hanging in the air, which can both spook and settle the fish as the daylight changes.
**Sunrise** hit around 6:18 a.m., and **sunset** will be close to 7:05 p.m. No tides out here, but with water levels at late-summer lows, shorelines are exposed and you’ll find baitfish pushing tight to deeper ledges and submerged brush.
The bite has been classic late-summer tough in the middle of the day, but don’t let that stop you. Early morning and just before dusk are your **prime windows**—get out there with topwater lures at first light. Local bass hunters on TikTok and in the marinas report big largemouth and striped bass schooling on shad; Z-Man ChatterBaits, soft jerkbaits, and poppers have been pulling in good numbers at dawn before the heat really sets in. Once the sun gets high, drop down with deep-diving crankbaits, Carolina rigs with watermelon or green pumpkin plastics, or even live shad if you’ve got it.
Catfishing is still worth your time, especially at night. Country Hookers reminds us that sturdy rigs baited with cut anchovy, chicken liver, or stinkbait near rocky dropoffs can yield nice channel and blue cats—reports have a few double-digit fish landed off the western coves this week. Bring a lantern and keep close to shore structure where cats are hunting for leftovers.
Trout are a tougher find in this heat, pushed deep and lethargic. Your best shot is targeting cooler inflows up at Willow Beach early with PowerBait or small spinners, but don’t expect any big numbers until the water cools.
**Recent catches**
- Striper schools are busting shad off Boulder Beach and near Hemenway early. Average fish have been 2–5 pounds with the occasional double-digit slab.
- Largemouth are a challenge midday but fish up to 4 pounds have been landed using shaky heads and Senkos in deep brush piles.
- Catfish activity is on the rise at night; best results from the Overton Arm and deeper coves.
- Panfish and crappie reports are thin—most anglers are targeting bass or cats right now.
**Hot spots**
- Boulder Beach: Topwater and cranks first light for stripers, decent bass holding below the surface.
- Government Wash: Classic staging area for stripers; deep points and rocky fingers are money around sunset.
- Overton Arm: Best for catfish at night and a solid shot at larger stripers cruising the edges.
Expect water clarity to be high, so finesse baits and natural presentations are out-fishing the flashiest hardware. Heavy gear isn’t necessary unless you’re specifically chasing monster cats or stripers.
That’s your on-the-water scoop for Lake Mead, September 3rd. Thanks for tuning in—don’t forget to subscribe for more local reports and tackle tips. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn