Bass Fishing Daily

Best Bass Fishing Spots Right Now: Grand Lake Oklahoma and Louisiana Reservoirs Heating Up

2 min · 21 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Best Bass Fishing Spots Right Now: Grand Lake Oklahoma and Louisiana Reservoirs Heating Up

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Artificial Lure here, and bass fishing in the U.S. is cooking right now. If you like your fishing with a little chaos and a big topwater payoff, Oklahoma’s Grand Lake is the place to watch. Major League Fishing reported that Grand Lake has been producing bass in bunches through Stage 6, with fish biting both ultra shallow and out on the ledges, which is exactly the kind of mixed-bag pattern that keeps local sticks busy and visiting anglers guessing. Down in Louisiana, Alexandria angler Will Carstens hauled in a true monster at an Indian Creek Reservoir tournament on May 25, 2026. Louisiana Sportsman says the fish weighed 13.42 pounds, and that brute helped push the team to nearly 18 pounds for three fish and a win in both Big Bass and first place. That is the kind of catch that gets whispered about at every boat ramp in the state. For anyone chasing hot spots, the story is pretty clear: Grand Lake in Oklahoma is firing, and Indian Creek Reservoir in Louisiana just proved it can still kick out a giant. Those are the kinds of waters that get bass heads excited because they offer both numbers and the chance at a fish that stretches the scale. There is also some good news for the next generation of anglers. Bass Pro Shops is running its Free Kids’ Fishing Event this weekend, giving kids a chance to get hands-on with fishing and learn the basics. That matters because every bass hole in America depends on a fresh wave of curious anglers who want to throw a bait, feel a strike, and maybe figure out why a frog over matted grass can make a grown person yell in public. One more thing that should catch a fly fisher’s eye: the best bass action right now is showing that presentation still rules. Whether it is a fast-moving lure in shallow cover or a bait worked along deeper structure, bass are rewarding anglers who can read water, stay adaptable, and make the right cast at the right time. That is not so different from chasing trout with a fly, really. The game is still about matching the moment. Thanks for tuning in, and come back next week for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, and for me check out Quiet Please Dot A I. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

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2 episodios

episode Bass Fishing Guide: Pro Tour Tactics and Summer Hotspots for 2026 artwork

Bass Fishing Guide: Pro Tour Tactics and Summer Hotspots for 2026

Name’s Artificial Lure, and if you like chasing bass almost as much as you like dropping a tight loop with a 5‑weight, you’re in the right place. Let’s start with the big-time stuff. Major League Fishing’s Bass Pro Tour just rolled into Grand Lake O’ the Cherokees in Oklahoma for Zenni Stage 6, and the place is fishing like a moody tailwater. Major League Fishing reports that heavy inflow and muddy water have guys scrambling, junk‑fishing docks, rock, and anything with current breaks instead of just roaming offshore structure. Grand’s got that classic southern-reservoir mix: shad, laydowns, brush, and a pile of boat docks that fish like one endless bass buffet line. According to Major League Fishing’s live coverage, banks-beating and shallow cranking have been hanging right there with forward-facing sonar offshore stuff, which should sound familiar if you’ve ever watched a river flip from clear to chalky and still found fish tucked behind seams and boulders. And yes, the weights are legit: MLF highlights show guys stacking 20‑plus scorable bass in a day and crossing the 70–80 pound mark in the Championship Round. That’s not a slow day on the pond. If you’re more “where can I fish” than “who just won,” a few U.S. hotspots are straight up on fire right now: Lake Guntersville, Alabama – The 2026 Bass Pro Tour opened here, and the schedule alone tells you everything: they keep coming back because Guntersville just keeps spitting out big largemouth. Major League Fishing’s schedule notes Guntersville as Stage 1 this season, and it’s classic grass fishing — hydrilla, milfoil, and eelgrass lines that set up just like a perfect nymph lane. Think lipless cranks, chatterbaits, or for you fly folks, big gamechangers and Meat Whistles slow‑rolled along weed edges at first light. Lake Conroe, Texas – Major League Fishing reports Jacob Wheeler recently put 35 scorable Conroe bass on the board for over 75 pounds in a single round. That tells you two things: lots of keeper‑size fish and a mix of shallow and offshore structure that reloads. Conroe fishes like a big western reservoir: points, brush piles, and docks. A sinking line and a big, neutrally buoyant baitfish fly around docks and timber? That’ll play. Lake Murray, South Carolina – On the 2026 tour schedule as the “Jewel of South Carolina,” Lake Murray keeps showing out with schooling spotted and largemouth bass blitzing blueback herring on points and over open water. It’s basically striper‑style power fishing with bass instead: keep your head on a swivel for surface feeds, bomb something shiny into the mess, and hang on. Fly anglers could absolutely get in on that with intermediate lines and long, slim baitfish patterns. On the more local side, fishermen on BassResource and similar forums have been bragging about insane numbers days on small ponds and local lakes — we’re talking 40‑plus bass mornings and year‑to‑date counts pushing 1,000 fish for the season. That’s not record-book stuff, but it’s the kind of “after work, two hours, non‑stop eats” that keeps us all hooked. If you’re fly‑curious, bass right now are in that awesome summer transition window: early and late they’ll crush poppers on the bank, mid‑day they slide to shade, grass edges, docks, and deeper rock. Translate your trout brain: shade lines = undercut banks, grass edges = drop‑offs, windblown points = confluences. Same reading-the-water skills, just swap mayflies for bluegill and shad. That’s it for this run, folks. Thanks for tuning in, and come back next week for more bass fishing stories, hot bites, and a few ideas you can steal for your own water. This has been a Quiet Please production, and for more from me, check out Quiet Please Dot A I. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

22 de jun de 20263 min
episode Best Bass Fishing Spots Right Now: Grand Lake Oklahoma and Louisiana Reservoirs Heating Up artwork

Best Bass Fishing Spots Right Now: Grand Lake Oklahoma and Louisiana Reservoirs Heating Up

Artificial Lure here, and bass fishing in the U.S. is cooking right now. If you like your fishing with a little chaos and a big topwater payoff, Oklahoma’s Grand Lake is the place to watch. Major League Fishing reported that Grand Lake has been producing bass in bunches through Stage 6, with fish biting both ultra shallow and out on the ledges, which is exactly the kind of mixed-bag pattern that keeps local sticks busy and visiting anglers guessing. Down in Louisiana, Alexandria angler Will Carstens hauled in a true monster at an Indian Creek Reservoir tournament on May 25, 2026. Louisiana Sportsman says the fish weighed 13.42 pounds, and that brute helped push the team to nearly 18 pounds for three fish and a win in both Big Bass and first place. That is the kind of catch that gets whispered about at every boat ramp in the state. For anyone chasing hot spots, the story is pretty clear: Grand Lake in Oklahoma is firing, and Indian Creek Reservoir in Louisiana just proved it can still kick out a giant. Those are the kinds of waters that get bass heads excited because they offer both numbers and the chance at a fish that stretches the scale. There is also some good news for the next generation of anglers. Bass Pro Shops is running its Free Kids’ Fishing Event this weekend, giving kids a chance to get hands-on with fishing and learn the basics. That matters because every bass hole in America depends on a fresh wave of curious anglers who want to throw a bait, feel a strike, and maybe figure out why a frog over matted grass can make a grown person yell in public. One more thing that should catch a fly fisher’s eye: the best bass action right now is showing that presentation still rules. Whether it is a fast-moving lure in shallow cover or a bait worked along deeper structure, bass are rewarding anglers who can read water, stay adaptable, and make the right cast at the right time. That is not so different from chasing trout with a fly, really. The game is still about matching the moment. Thanks for tuning in, and come back next week for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, and for me check out Quiet Please Dot A I. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

21 de jun de 20262 min