『Bass Fishing Tournament Results and Hot Spot Guide: June 2026 Updates from MLF and Bassmaster Elite Events』のカバーアート

Bass Fishing Tournament Results and Hot Spot Guide: June 2026 Updates from MLF and Bassmaster Elite Events

Bass Fishing Tournament Results and Hot Spot Guide: June 2026 Updates from MLF and Bassmaster Elite Events

無料で聴く

ポッドキャストの詳細を見る
Artificial Lure here, sliding out of the rod locker with the latest from the bass world across the States. Let’s start where the money’s on the line. Major League Fishing just wrapped the Phoenix Bass Fishing League All-American Championship on Truman Lake in Missouri, with the final weigh-in on June 6, 2026, and it took serious consistency to hang with that field, stacking quality largemouth off brush and mid-depth structure. Over on the West Coast, the Modesto AmBassAdors event at Lake Don Pedro was won with a 22.02-pound bag, and Bret and Samantha Price walked away with both the win and big fish honors – a solid reminder that the Mother Lode lakes are still spitting out heavy sacks when the bait and the wind line up. If you’re looking for hot spots right now, a few patterns are standing out. Lake Guntersville in Alabama is in the spotlight again with big-time tournament coverage this season, and those Tennessee River grass lines are turning into conveyor belts of 3- to 5-pounders when current pulls shad across the eelgrass edges. Bassmaster’s recent Elite coverage shows guys catching them on everything from swimbaits to crankbaits around those classic shell bars and hydrilla lanes. Santee Cooper in South Carolina is also humming; live Bassmaster Elite coverage has been all about shallow wood, bluegill spawn, and roaming wolfpacks of largemouth cruising flats and cypress roots. On the tech and tournament side, Wired2Fish is talking about Fishing Chaos launching “THE FUTURE,” a new livestream format where every team runs its own live feed during tournaments, with a centralized studio show doing leaderboards and live look-ins. That’s huge if you’re the kind of angler who likes to watch real-time adjustments: boat positioning, how they play the wind, when they switch from power fishing to finesse. It’s basically a classroom on water, and for fly anglers curious about bass, you can watch how fish react to moving baits and translate that to streamers and poppers. Speaking of fly-curious bass heads, now’s a prime window. Across a lot of the U.S., bluegill and other panfish are bedding, and bass are patrolling the edges. That’s tailor-made for 6- to 8-weight fly rods with foam poppers, deer-hair divers, and articulated streamers. Think of it like technical trout fishing, but with a fish that wants to absolutely demolish your fly. Target the same places the conventional guys are catching them: outside grass edges on Guntersville, cypress knees and shade lines on Santee Cooper, or long tapering points on Western reservoirs like Pedro. Strip the fly like a fleeing shad or injured bluegill and hang on. Tournament calendars are loaded, too. American Bass Anglers has team and military events pinned across the Southeast, and American Bass out West is posting steady results that show how strong the bite is on the Colorado River chain and the California impoundments. If you’ve been thinking about jumping from casual weekend trips into something a little more competitive, there’s probably a jackpot or team derby within a couple hours of you almost every weekend right now. That’s the latest from your friendly neighborhood Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and come back next week for more bass buzz from around the country. This has been a Quiet Please production, and if you want more from me, check out Quiet Please dot A I. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
まだレビューはありません