Powell Fishing Fiesta: Stripers, Bass, and More Biting Big at Lake Powell Podcast Por  arte de portada

Powell Fishing Fiesta: Stripers, Bass, and More Biting Big at Lake Powell

Powell Fishing Fiesta: Stripers, Bass, and More Biting Big at Lake Powell

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Artificial Lure here with your Lake Powell, Utah, fishing report for June 14, 2025.

Sunrise this morning kicked off at 5:02 AM, and sunset will slide in at 7:43 PM, giving you almost 15 hours to chase Lake Powell’s famed stripers, bass, and more. We’re seeing classic early summer weather: light winds at dawn, picking up by mid-afternoon, and temps rising into the mid-80s. Water’s holding steady at 66°F at Wahweap Bay, and the lake elevation is over 3558 feet, which means that fresh spring runoff is flooding new brush and structure—prime real estate for feeding bass and active stripers.

Fishing has been downright explosive all week. Striped bass are absolutely thick, with hundreds being hauled in daily and cleaned at Wahweap Marina. Most are running 2 to 5 pounds, though a few double-digit fish are still coming in for the patient or lucky. Big schools of striper are working shad balls from the Glen Canyon Dam through the main basin and up toward the pump station. Early mornings are prime for topwater action—watch for boils and toss a silver or gold spoon, or throw shad-imitating swimbaits and vertical spoons for some knock-down, drag-out action. If you want numbers, dead anchovies on a Carolina rig is still king, especially back in the canyons and striper haunts where shad are thick.

Bass fishing is solid, but you’ll want to fish a bit deeper with the water warming and the sun climbing higher. Smallmouths up to 2 pounds are sitting 10 to 30 feet deep—try trolling or tubing near cliff faces and around submerged brush. For largemouth, the San Juan Arm has lit up with solid action, especially where fresh brush meets deeper water. Zara Spooks have been killer early under overcast, while those working the bottom are scoring with the Yamamoto Hula Grub and the Megabass Vision 110 jerkbait. Don’t forget to rig a Neko Fat Worm in green pumpkin and add a chartreuse-tipped tail—it’s catching bass at every depth right now. Pitch chatterbaits or jigs into flooded brush for bonus bites.

Walleye reports are up this year, with anglers picking up a couple a day as bycatch, mostly on shad raps and flicker shad trolled at 15–20 feet. Crappie, catfish, and even the occasional fat carp are hitting for those who slow down and work the coves.

Top hotspots:
- Wahweap Marina and the stretch to Glen Canyon Dam for striper boils and non-stop action.
- San Juan Arm for largemouth and mixed bags.
- Navajo Canyon and Warm Creek for those looking to mix up bass and striper.

With the lake on the rise and fish on the chew, now’s the time to wet a line at Powell.

Thanks for tuning in to your daily report. Be sure to subscribe for the latest updates and tips to keep your stringer full. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.
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