『Spring Bass Fishing Hotspots: Grand Lake Oklahoma, Lake Murray South Carolina, Louisiana Pearl River Striped Bass Restoration』のカバーアート

Spring Bass Fishing Hotspots: Grand Lake Oklahoma, Lake Murray South Carolina, Louisiana Pearl River Striped Bass Restoration

Spring Bass Fishing Hotspots: Grand Lake Oklahoma, Lake Murray South Carolina, Louisiana Pearl River Striped Bass Restoration

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 tackle box with your weekly bass fix, U.S. edition. Let’s start down South, where the bass never really take a day off. Louisiana Sportsman reports that the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries just dropped 5,500 striped bass into the Pearl River to help restore the native population. That doesn’t mean you’re whacking them tomorrow, but it’s big news for the Gulf Coast scene and a good sign for long‑term river bass health in that whole corridor. Tournament world is heating up too. Major League Fishing is rolling into Grand Lake O’ the Cherokees in Oklahoma for Bass Pro Tour Stage 6, and the chatter is that heavy spring and early summer inflow has muddied things up and scattered the fish. According to Major League Fishing, pros are expecting junk‑fishing conditions: current, color changes, and roaming bass. If you’re a fly angler, think of it like fishing a big Western river in runoff — edge lines, little clear seams, and any rock, dock, or brush that breaks the flow could be the juice. Another hotspot to watch is Lake Murray in South Carolina. Major League Fishing’s coverage of the Phoenix BFL there points to roaming blueback herring and pelagic largemouth chasing bait over points and humps. That’s basically streamer heaven for a fly fisher: long points, schooling bait, and bass pushing shad up onto shallow breaks early and late. You could absolutely play the game with an intermediate line and a white baitfish pattern. On the grassroots side, local and charity tournaments are popping up everywhere. The Ouachita Parish Sheriff’s Office Big Bass Tournament on Lake D’Arbonne in Louisiana is pushing “big fish or bust” vibes, with locals gearing up with big worms, jigs, and shallow crankbaits. Classic southern stump‑field water: if you can flip it, pitch it, or roll a moving bait through it, it’ll eat. A fly person with a weed‑guarded jig hook crawler or a big deer‑hair diver around the timber would feel right at home. Not everything is full throttle, though. The Flora‑Bama Fishing Rodeo on the Alabama–Florida line announced its 2026 event is canceled, with plans to return later. And on the West Coast, the Golden Mussel Clear Lake Division has canceled the rest of its 2026 season after some tough number crunching. Clear Lake is still an absolute hammer factory for big largemouth, but the tournament calendar there is taking a breather. For a quick “locals only” hit list of current U.S. bass hot zones: - Grand Lake, Oklahoma: Off‑color, changing water, tons of shallow cover. Spinnerbaits, bladed jigs, and squarebills rule — or big, noisy surface flies around laydowns for that violent eat. - Lake Murray, South Carolina: Herring chasers off points and offshore structure. Run‑and‑gun schooling fish; perfect playground if you like hunting rising fish with big streamers. - Lake D’Arbonne, Louisiana: Cypress, stumps, and classic shallow bass junk. Pitch it tight, strip it slow, hang on. If you’re coming from the fly world, bass right now are basically trout with a mean streak: current seams on rivers, bait‑driven structure on lakes, and a whole lot of target casting around wood, docks, and grass. Same skills, louder takes. That’s it from Artificial Lure for this round. Thanks for tuning in, and come back next week for more bass buzz from around the States. 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
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
まだレビューはありません