『Jason Christie's Elite Win and Summer Bass Hotspots: Kentucky Lake Ledges and Grand Lake Guide』のカバーアート

Jason Christie's Elite Win and Summer Bass Hotspots: Kentucky Lake Ledges and Grand Lake Guide

Jason Christie's Elite Win and Summer Bass Hotspots: Kentucky Lake Ledges and Grand Lake Guide

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This is Artificial Lure, sliding out of the rod locker with your weekly bass fix. Let’s start with some fresh bragging rights. Bassmaster just wrapped up an Elite stop on North Carolina’s Pasquotank River, and Jason Christie put on a clinic, boating the second-heaviest fish of the event and locking down his 10th B.A.S.S. win and second of 2026, according to Bassmaster. That big girl anchored a stout average weight, the kind of kicker that makes you rethink every stump and laydown you’ve been ignoring. If you’re looking for hot zones right now, the usual suspects are heating up fast. Major League Fishing is rolling into Grand Lake in Oklahoma for the Bass Pro Tour Zenni Stage 6 event out of Grove, and they’re not doing that by accident, reports Major League Fishing. Grand this time of year is a perfect mix of offshore structure and shallow junk fishing, so whether you’re a graph nerd or a bank beater, there’s a lane for you. Kentucky Lake’s also showing signs of its old self. A recent practice video from an MLF BFL angler on Kentucky Lake in June says it straight: “June on Kentucky Lake is ledge fishing time.” Those deep schools are setting up, and if you’re a fly angler who likes reading seams and current, you’d probably get addicted to dissecting those offshore breaks with a jig or a flutter spoon. Conditions haven’t been easy everywhere. On Oklahoma’s Arkansas River and Kerr Reservoir, high water and warm weather made tournament fishing pretty tough according to a recent tournament highlight clip on Instagram. That’s classic river stuff: current ripping, fish sliding tight to anything that breaks flow. If you’re a fly fisher used to bombing streamers into soft pockets, you’d feel right at home hunting those current seams with a Texas rig or compact jig. On the pro side, Takahiro Omori is having a wild year. Major League Fishing reports he’s already won his first Bass Pro Tour event of 2026, banked nearly $225,000, and found out he’s heading to the Hall of Fame. That’s the bass equivalent of sticking a 24-inch brown on a #20 dry in public water with a crowd watching. Tech-wise, the forward-facing sonar drama is still simmering. Bassmaster-linked chatter on social says they’re banning forward-facing sonar in some tournaments for 2026, trying to balance old-school hunting with high-tech scanning. Think of it like telling trout folks they’ve gotta leave the euro-nymph rig at home once in a while and go back to dries and indicators. There’s also some fun crossover brewing: B.A.S.S. and the Pro Football Hall of Fame just announced a new partnership, including a Randy Moss Pro Football Hall of Fame Pro-Am on the St. Lawrence River in New York, according to a joint announcement from B.A.S.S. and the Hall of Fame. Hall of Famers paired with Elite pros on one of the best smallmouth rivers on the planet? That’s going to light up the record books and probably sell out every pack of goby-colored anything in a hundred-mile radius. So if you’re a fly angler thinking about crossing over, this is your sign. Rivers with current seams, lakes with ledges acting like underwater riffles, and bass acting every bit as moody and pattern-dependent as any trout you’ve ever stalked. Thanks for tuning in, and come back next week for more. 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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