
Lake Powell Fishing Report June 2025: Bass Booming, Stripers Wild, Walleye Biting
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First light cracked over the red rock canyons at 5:02 AM and you’ll have until sunset at 7:43 PM to get after it—plenty of daylight for the weekend warriors and the die-hards alike. No tides to consider, just the steady summer see-saw of the reservoir; water elevation's still on the rise after a lush spring, flooding shoreline brush and bringing new structure into play. Water temps are holding right around 66°F and visibility’s prime from Wahweap Bay up through the main channel, according to Arizona Game & Fish.
Weather today is spot-on for a June outing. Calm, cooler mornings with highs pushing into the mid-80s by afternoon. Expect a fresh breeze as the day wears on, which’ll put some ripple on the surface—perfect for keeping fish cruising in the shallows and active.
The bite is on and the bass are booming. Smallmouth and largemouth bass have slipped a little deeper with the warming water but they’re plenty hungry. You’ll find smallmouth in that 10-30 foot zone, especially around main lake points and those newly flooded brushy pockets. The better largemouth bags are still coming out of the San Juan Arm—definitely a hot spot to hit.
Topwater action has been explosive first light, especially with Zara Spooks and the Megabass Vision 110 jerkbait. Once the sun’s up, most folks are switching over to a Yamamoto Neko Fat Worm in green pumpkin, rigged on the Neko or Texas rig, and pitching into the brush. For those fishing deeper structure, green pumpkin chatterbaits with a Zoom baby bass fluke trailer and classic green pumpkin jigs with a bama craw trailer are putting plenty of fish in the boat. And don’t sleep on the Yamamoto Hula Grub; it’s a perennial favorite here for a reason—Texas rig it and crawl it slowly along the bottom, or pitch it right into the middle of that flooded cover.
Striper action is wild right now, with hundreds being cleaned daily at Wahweap Marina. Most fish are average size, but the fatter ones are there if you’re willing to hunt—trolling remains key. Fly anglers are also getting in on the action, especially early before the heat really drives the fish deeper. Walleye catches are up compared to past years too; a slow-trolled bottom bouncer or crawler harness around rocky points can produce a few keepers each morning.
Hot spots today? San Juan Arm for big largemouth, and the freshly flooded brush lines between Wahweap and Padre Bay for smallmouth. Don’t skip the main channel points, especially with moving water and some breeze.
That’s your Lake Powell rundown for June 21. Thanks for tuning in—make sure you subscribe for all the latest reports and tips. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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