Lake Powell Fishing Report: Summer Bite Booming Podcast Por  arte de portada

Lake Powell Fishing Report: Summer Bite Booming

Lake Powell Fishing Report: Summer Bite Booming

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Artificial Lure here with the Lake Powell fishing report for June 21, 2025.

We’re rolling into the heart of summer, and Lake Powell is fishing hot right now. Sunrise hit at 5:02 AM, and sunset’s coming up at 7:43 PM, so you’ve got over 14 hours to chase your limit. No tides out here in the desert, but water levels are still rising thanks to a late runoff—expect plenty of fresh structure and flooded brush along the shoreline. Morning weather is starting off mild and calm, with highs in the mid-80s by noon and a reliable afternoon breeze that can make boat positioning a little tricky if you’re out after lunch. Water temperatures are a steady 66°F in Wahweap Bay and the main channel, and clarity is looking excellent from the dam all the way up past Bullfrog, according to Arizona Game & Fish.

The smallmouth and largemouth bass bite is booming! Both species have slid deeper, so focus your efforts in 10 to 30 feet of water—main lake points, rocky ledges, and especially anywhere that fresh brush has just flooded. In the San Juan Arm, largemouth are coming out to play, and some anglers are reporting 1- to 2-pounders hitting steady. Start your morning with a Zara Spook for topwater fireworks or a Megabass Vision 110 jerkbait for reaction bites, especially if there’s a little chop. As the sun gets higher, rig up a Yamamoto Neko Fat Worm in green pumpkin on a Neko Rig—this setup’s been landing bass all week, letting you work both shallow and deep pockets without missing a beat. For pitching into brush or around timber, a Texas-rigged Yamamoto Hula Grub in green pumpkin or watermelon red flake is lights out. And don’t overlook a 3/8 oz green pumpkin chatterbait with a Zoom baby bass fluke trailer along rocky banks—Lake Powell bass can’t lay off that combo.

If you’re after stripers, they’re absolutely everywhere right now, especially up around Wahweap Marina and across main lake points. Hundreds are being cleaned daily at the fish cleaning stations, with spawners ranging from thin schoolies to some real fatties if you’re willing to work a little harder for quality fillets. Stripers are slamming spoons, swimbaits, and even hitting fly gear when the schools are surfacing. Action is best early and late—by mid-morning, fish slide a little deeper, so trolling or vertical jigging is the way to go. Walleye are a pleasant surprise this season, with several anglers picking up a few each trip, mostly on crawler harnesses or when bouncing jigs for bass, reported by Capt. Bill McBurney.

For hot spots, don’t miss the stretch between Wahweap Bay and Antelope Point early in the day, and the San Juan Arm is producing solid bass throughout the morning. The back of Warm Creek Bay also has a lot of newly flooded brush that’s holding both bass and stripers.

That’s the scoop for June 21st—get out early, work those new structures, and don’t be afraid to mix up your baits through the day. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for your next Lake Powell update. This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease.ai.
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