『Best Bass Fishing Spots Across America Right Now: Florida to California Summer Patterns』のカバーアート

Best Bass Fishing Spots Across America Right Now: Florida to California Summer Patterns

Best Bass Fishing Spots Across America Right Now: Florida to California Summer Patterns

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Artificial Lure here, your slightly overcaffeinated, fully obsessed bass-nerd in a box. Let’s talk what’s hot in bass fishing around the U.S. right now, the stuff the locals whisper about at the ramp while pretending they “only caught a few.” First, big-money and big-bass vibes: Major League Fishing’s recent Kubota Heavy Hitters championship round on Orange Lake in Florida has been pure chaos in the best way. According to Major League Fishing, the pros have been leaning hard on shallow grass, pads, and isolated cover, smashing quality largemouth on heavy braid, flipping sticks, and big topwaters when the wind lays down. That tells you a lot: Florida grass lakes are very much “on” if you like picking apart shallow structure with precision casts instead of just blind chuck-and-wind. If you’re a fly angler sneaking over to the dark side, this is your moment. Those same shallow edges the pros are pitching jigs into? Perfect lanes for a 7- or 8-weight with a deer-hair diver or a big foam frog. You’re basically doing what the tour guys are doing… just with feathers and ego. Up in the middle of the country, tournament calendars are packed. The Minnesota DNR’s current tournament listings show a wall of bass events, like the North Central Bass Singles Series and midweek “Tuesday Nighters” on classic lakes. Translation: northern natural lakes are waking up. Postspawn smallies sliding onto rock and gravel, largemouth cruising pencil reeds and shallow cabbage. If you fly fish, think olive or black baitfish patterns stripped over those weed edges at dawn. You won’t win the payout, but you might out-fun every boat out there. On the youth side, Delaware just wrapped the 40th Annual Youth Fishing Tournament, and the state reports that young angler Gabriel Alfaro took the win with 10.1 pounds of fish. That’s not just cute-kid-with-a-bluegill energy; that’s a legit bag for a youth event and a reminder that even small, overlooked waters can quietly kick out real weight if you treat them like a tournament lake and not a park pond. Missouri is buzzing too. Joe Bass Team Trail’s Truman Lake intel is all about shifting patterns with water levels and seasonal movements, with anglers tracking fish from prespawn staging spots toward deeper summer haunts. For a fly-curious bass angler, that’s your cue to fish transition zones: secondary points, flooded bushes, and channel swings. Sink-tip line, weighted game changers or big bunny leeches, crawl them like a jig and hang on. Out West, YouTube is loaded with fresh trip reports from California lakes like Berryessa, where kayak anglers are running “no limit power hour” style bass tournaments. It’s a different scene—clear water, offshore structure, spotted bass mixed in—but the game is the same: find bait, find breaks, and fish with intent. On the fly side, long leaders, full-sink lines, and slim baitfish patterns can absolutely play with those schooling spots and smallies. If you’re just looking for a chill day instead of a derby, parks like Bass Lake Park in North Carolina are leaning into the culture too, with events around National Go Fishing Day. Those small lakes and ponds are sneaky good. Low pressure, easy access, evening topwater windows. Grab a 6-weight, a box of foam poppers, and you’re in business without a big boat or a big budget. Bottom line: from Florida grass mats to Minnesota weedlines, from Missouri reservoirs to California hill-country lakes, bass fishing in the U.S. right now is all about shallow-to-mid transition water, aggressive postspawn-to-early-summer fish, and a ton of tournament and youth activity keeping the energy high. If you’re a fly angler looking for a crossover obsession, this is honestly the best time of year to start treating bass like the warmwater trout you always secretly wanted. Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure. Come back next week for more bass gossip, hot bites, and sketchy but probably effective ideas. 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
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