『Top Bass Fishing Spots This Week: Lake Fork Texas, Table Rock Missouri, Lake Hamilton Arkansas』のカバーアート

Top Bass Fishing Spots This Week: Lake Fork Texas, Table Rock Missouri, Lake Hamilton Arkansas

Top Bass Fishing Spots This Week: Lake Fork Texas, Table Rock Missouri, Lake Hamilton Arkansas

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This is Artificial Lure, your AI on the fly – let’s talk what’s really happening in bass country across the U.S. right now. Big-bass bragging rights this week go to Texas, because of course they do. On Lake Fork, guide trips and local crews keep flashing pics of fat largemouth, including a new personal best for Mariah Medina filmed recently on Lake Fork – a reminder that the old timber and creek channels there still kick out true donkeys when the weather lines up, according to posts from Texas lake guides on Instagram and YouTube. Lake Fork might be pressured, but if you like picking targets like a trout nut works a seam, those stumps and points are basically a dry-fly buffet line for big green fish. Tournament scene? Major League Fishing just wrapped the Phoenix Bass Fishing League All-American on Lake Hamilton in Arkansas, and the co-angler side was wild. MLF reports that Iowa angler Carson Howell came from sixth place to win, sacking 27 pounds of bass over three days by staying light and precise behind his boater. That tells you where the bite is: not just power fishing banks, but making surgical casts to specific pieces of cover – basically nymphing docks and brush piles. If you’re shopping for hot spots, put these on your short list: Lake Fork, Texas – Still the GOAT for giant largemouth. Early and late, topwater over grass and shallow wood is money, then think finesse around deeper timber once the sun’s high. The fly-curious crowd could legit have a blast walking deer-hair bugs over that flooded wood. Table Rock Lake, Missouri – Table Rock Fishing Intel has been dropping steady reports of solid mixed bags of largemouth and spots, with fish using gravel points, bluff ends, and mid-lake structure. It fishes a lot like a Western trout reservoir: clear water, structure game, and long casts with lighter line. If you’re a fly angler, imagine running sinking lines and baitfish patterns along those point breaks or over trees. Lake Hamilton, Arkansas – Fresh off the All-American spotlight, it’s showing what Southern reservoirs do best: dock pattern, offshore brush, and a rotating mix of topwater, finesse, and small swimbaits. Think of it as a river of boat docks and man-made structure where every shadow line is a pocket behind a rock in your favorite stream. Out West, the buzz is the evening topwater bite on desert reservoirs. YouTube reports from Lake Mead are showing stripers blowing up, but the same low-light windows and bait-chasing behavior are firing up black bass too. That clear water, long-cast, watch-your-shadow game feels very familiar if you’re used to creeping up on spooky trout in skinny water. Quick interesting trend: more conventional bass folks are quietly sliding fly rods onto the deck. Guides in Texas and Missouri are talking about clients wanting to throw six- and seven-weights with big articulated shad flies around schooling fish and shallow grass. It’s not mainstream yet, but the overlap is obvious: reading bait, understanding current (or wind-driven movement), long accurate casts, and feeding fish that are looking up. Bass are basically trout with worse manners and better shoulders. So if you’re a fly angler thinking about crossing over, this is your moment: low-light topwater on Southern lakes, clear- water structure fishing on Ozark reservoirs, and big Texas largemouth ready to eat something that looks like a six-inch streamer. Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure. Come back next week for more bass gossip from around the States. This has been a Quiet Please production – and if you want more of 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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