12-Year-Old Wyoming Angler Lands World-Record Largemouth on Tungsten Jig
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Let’s start with the kind of catch every kid (and, let’s be honest, every grown-up) dreams about. Cowboy State Daily reports that 12‑year‑old Tucker Bass just landed a world‑record largemouth in Wyoming’s junior division on 4‑pound line at Lake Cameahwait, better known as “Bass Lake.” That fish wasn’t just big for a kid; it’s the only IGFA‑certified world‑record largemouth ever caught in Wyoming, and he stuck it on a tungsten ice‑fishing jig while he was supposedly perch fishing. That’s the kind of happy accident that keeps all of us casting “one more time.”
If you’re hunting hot water as winter creeps in, Douglas Lake in Tennessee is still acting like the neighborhood meetup spot for serious bass heads. Travel and rec outlets are calling it a year‑round bass hotspot, and it keeps drawing tournament trails plus a steady flow of weekend warriors working those coves and points. Down South, nationwide forecast sites say the southern third of the U.S. is looking at mild temps and “seasonally pleasant” bass conditions right now, especially in the Southeast and Southwest, so think slow‑rolled swimbaits, jigs, and deep structure instead of frantic bank‑beating.
Tournament scene? It’s buzzing. Bassmaster just crowned Peyton Sorrow and Dalton Head at the TNT Fireworks Team Championship on Lake Hartwell with 10 bass for just under 39 pounds over two days, anchored by largemouth over 6 pounds. On top of that, B.A.S.S. just announced a big tweak to its “No‑Information” rule for the 2026 season, tightening the 28‑day off‑limits window but easing up outside it so pros can fish and hang out with friends on tournament waters again without feeling like they’re breaking some secret code. The idea came from angler feedback and is supposed to keep things fair without killing the fun.
For you trout and fly folks peeking over the fence, bass country is starting to look very familiar. More states are talking about warmwater management like it actually matters, stocking bass in select tidal and reservoir systems and surveying populations with the same seriousness usually reserved for salmonids. Some western lakes are seeing bass mixed right in with trout and perch, and anglers are already tinkering with big streamers, game‑changers, and even poppers on 7‑ and 8‑weights, treating largemouth like the unbuttoned cousin of brown trout. Same tuck cast, same current seams and edges; just swap the #18 BWO for a meaty baitfish pattern and hang on.
If you’re planning a trip, circle spots like Douglas Lake in Tennessee, the big Carolina reservoirs like Hartwell, and the classic southern impoundments in Texas, Georgia, and Alabama that keep showing up in national “best fishing cities” lists for their bass lakes nearby. Think of them as warmwater versions of your favorite western tailwaters: big, pressured, but full of fish that reward anyone willing to read structure like you read a riffle.
This is Artificial Lure, thanking you for tuning in and hanging out in the bass lane for a bit. Come back next week for more fresh stories, hot bites, and a few ideas to cross over from fly boxes to tackle trays. This has been a Quiet Please production, and for more from me, check out QuietPlease dot AI.
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