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Lake Champlain, Vermont/New York Fishing Report Today
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Lake Champlain, Vermont/New York Fishing Report Today

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Discover the latest fishing conditions on Lake Champlain with the "Lake Champlain, Vermont/New York Fishing Report Today" podcast. Get daily updates on fish activity, weather conditions, and expert tips for the best fishing spots around Lake Champlain. Whether you're a seasoned angler or a fishing enthusiast, this podcast keeps you informed with real-time reports, helping you plan successful fishing trips on one of the most beautiful lakes spanning Vermont and New York. Tune in and stay ahead with precise, up-to-date fishing insights.

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Artificial Lure here, with your October 30th fishing report for Lake Champlain, Vermont and New York. It’s a crisp start to the day, with sunrise at 7:23 and sunset coming early at 5:41 this evening. The weather’s holding chilly and overcast, with winds out of the northwest—expect temps to stay in the mid-40s, warming slightly by late morning, and light chop on the water. With the water cooling and low light, fish are starting to move tighter to cover and break lines.No tides to track on Champlain, but that drop in barometric pressure has the smallmouth and largemouth getting frisky. Just last week, tournament anglers were hauling good numbers of postspawn smallmouth, with fish pressing deeper in the morning—down in 15 to 40 feet—and moving shallower as the sun rose. Flats, secondary points, and the edges of grass beds are producing some of the best bites. According to the Major League Fishing reports from the Toyota Series, the bigger smallies are moving away from the banks and chasing alewives. If you can get on them, the average size has been excellent, with plenty of browns over four pounds caught and lots of healthy two- and three-pounder fish to fill out those limits.In addition to the bass action, walleye are starting to come on too, especially on the New York side, if you hit the deeper rock piles. Recent catches include smaller eyes, but the bite turns on near dusk.If you’re looking for a hot spot, don’t skip the Inland Sea area early, especially around the deeper breaks and flats. That stretch between Malletts Bay and the north end is prime right now. Another top producer has been secondary points with healthy grass lines, particularly in mid-lake—look for 8 to 12 feet, rock mix, and don’t be shy to drift across different spots till you mark fish.Best baits right now: it’s a minnow show. Tournament pros are throwing 5-inch Yamamoto Shad Shape Worms and Deps Sakamata Shads rigged on light jig heads, along with Ned rigs—think Picasso Rhino Ned Heads or Gamakatsu Horizon Heads. Finesse is king. If you want to change up, Berkley J-Walker and PowerBait MaxScent Flatnose Jerk Shads are working for topwater—especially in grassy evening zones—for both smallmouth and largemouth. A Swimbait Garage Hyper Shad glide bait or E-Factor pitchin’ jig rigged with a McCarty Baits Raptor makes for a solid secondary approach if fish are deeper or feeding on bigger forage.Live bait continues to produce for those on the hunt for multispecies—walleye and sturgeon have both come to a well-placed shiner or worm, according to guides working Quebec and Champlain. If you want to cast for brown bass, stick with the Ned, but try tipping it with a small chunk of nightcrawler to up your odds if the bite is slow.Boat control is essential today with those NW winds. Set up with an anchor or spot-lock if you’re working the breaks and deeper edges, as drifting can get tough on a breezy fall morning. Bring the layers: midday warms up, but the morning winds cut right through you.To summarize: fishing’s hot despite the cold. Focus on flats, secondary points, and grass lines; use finesse minnow baits and Ned rigs; don’t overlook topwater if the wind lays down. Inland Sea and Malletts Bay are your go-to zones, but don’t be afraid to hop mid-lake if fish get shy. Bass are prime, walleye picking up, and structure is your best friend.Thanks so much for tuning in to today’s Lake Champlain report! Remember to subscribe so you never miss what’s biting in the North Country. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure here on this fine October 29th morning, bringing you the true local rundown from Lake Champlain’s shores and bays. We kicked off at sunrise—officially 7:25 a.m. today, with sunset coming on at 5:46 p.m. According to the National Weather Service, we're looking at a chilly start, low 40s warming just shy of 56°F by afternoon. Winds are light from the west at 7 to 12 knots, giving the lake a little chop perfect for drifting, but not so rough you’ll need to stay tucked behind the breakwalls.Lake Champlain isn’t tidal, so no true tide charts to muck around with, just keep an eye on the wind for drift and wave action. Surface conditions this morning were partly cloudy, crisp, with pockets of fog on the Vermont side burning off around mid-morning.In terms of bite, it’s classic late October fall fishing—smallmouth bass and walleye are chewing hard, as reported by locals and podcast regulars on the Lake Champlain Daily Fishing Report. Recent catches have been impressive, with a lot of anglers boating smallies in the 2-4 lb range, and several chunky 5-pounders coming off rocky points and isolated humps. Walleye have started showing in the shallows after dusk, with some nice keepers landed especially near river mouths.Largemouth are mostly tucked into the dying weedbeds, especially in the south lake bays, but some surprising fish up to 4 lbs are still hitting if you find warmer pockets behind the islands. Northern pike are hot on the feed too—watch for those classic weed lines on the New York side.Best baits lately? Locals swear by **topwater walking baits** at first light for smallmouth, with poppers and walking stickbaits pulling double duty if you get any surface action. When the sun rises, switch to **Ned rigs**, drop-shotting soft plastics, and **green pumpkin tubes** over rocky transitions. For walleye: small jigs tipped with crawlers or Gulp minnows are putting fish in the boat, especially on current breaks after sunset. Largemouth have been falling for dark-colored flipping jigs and slow-rolled spinnerbaits.If you like artificials, the Toyota Series bass tournament just wrapped up on Champlain, and their “top 10 baits” rundown was all about Ned rigs, drop-shotting Z-Man and Yamamoto plastics, and Rapala jerkbaits fished slow as the water gets colder. Don't overlook blade baits for deep edges—they're money for hungry smallmouth right now.Two hot spots you should absolutely check today:- **The Gut near Grand Isle**: A reliable smallmouth haunt in autumn, with walleye cruising edges at dusk.- **Missisquoi Bay**: Largemouth stacked in the dying cabbage beds, plus some bonus slab crappie pulling off the edges.Sonar is helpful, but most folks are just working the classic structure—remember, tournaments may ban forward-facing sonar but the bite hasn’t slowed down for those fishing by feel and local knowledge. Shad have moved out, so the game is craws, perch, and whatever forage is dropping from dying weedbeds.Thanks for tuning in to Lake Champlain’s freshest fishing scoop. Subscribe to keep up with the bite all season long. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure here with your Lake Champlain fishing report for October 28th, 2025. Sun’s just up over the Green Mountains, with sunrise today at 7:25 AM and sunset coming at 5:45 PM. It’s a classic late October morning—cold bite in the air and a northerly wind carrying a little chop over the open water.According to Advanced Bassin’ Plus, we’ve just been through a stretch of frosty mornings and big winds, making for tough starts but producing excellent afternoon fishing once things warm up. Recent outings saw anglers hammering solid numbers of smallmouth with plenty of those chunky “football” bronzebacks in the mix. The morning bite’s been slow, but by midday the bass are firing up, with persistent folks pulling big smallies and even the odd sturgeon near deeper drop-offs.Weather-wise, bundle up for that early cast. We’re starting below 40°F and warming only into the low 50s this afternoon. The northwest winds are steady around 10-15 mph, so expect a little work keeping boat control, especially in open stretches like the Inland Sea and south of the bridge near Chimney Point.Now—Lake Champlain doesn’t have true tides, but you’ll still want to mind those wind-driven currents and seiche effects, especially after last week’s blow. As always this time of year, safety is paramount: two canoeists capsized just a week ago off North Hero, making a grim reminder to respect the lake and wear your PFD, especially as water temps drop fast (Vermont State Police and Environmental Wire Vermont).Most folks are targeting bass this week, and the winning lures are classic for the season. The big producers: - **Drop-shot rigs** with Berkley PowerBait MaxScent Flat Worms or Flatnose Minnow - **Marabou jigs** (1/6 oz, black or brown) along sunny rocky points - **Blade baits** and **finesse football jigs** over 15-30 feet of waterIf you’re working the flats or deeper edges near rock piles, a 3.5-inch tube jig—pumpkinseed or green pumpkin—on a 3/8 to 1/2-ounce head is a solid choice. A subtle swimbait bite is also producing, especially midday once the sun wakes up the baitfish. Carolina rigs with creature baits are another solid bet for deeper humps and current seams.For **live bait**, hard-to-beat a lively shiner hooked just off the bottom for smallmouth, or try a nightcrawler for bonus walleye around dusk if you set up near the mouths of the Missisquoi or Lamoille rivers.Walleye and the occasional northern pike are turning up, especially on jig-and-minnow combos fished on the edge of breaklines. Guides from the Montreal area report that when the wind stacks up bait, you’ll find bass and even an occasional big sturgeon, especially out by the Gut and the deeper holes north of Grand Isle.Best hotspots this week:- **The Gut** between South Hero and North Hero—rock piles and current edges stacked with smallies- **Valcour Island Drop-offs**—classic midday smallmouth bite, especially on the east banks- **Inland Sea, north of Savage Island**—great bet for deeper bass once the wind dies down after lunchIf you get blown off the big water, Shelburne Bay’s coves and docks are always good for a late fall swipe at largemouth, especially with a slow-rolled spinnerbait or jerkbait.It’s peak fall fishing—layer up, work slow and stay persistent. Most of all, take care out there: temps are dropping, winds are stiff, and the big lake demands respect this time of year. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for the latest Lake Champlain reports. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure here with your Lake Champlain fishing report for Monday, October 27th, 2025. Sunrise hit us right at 7:20 AM, and we’re looking at a classic crisp, late-October morning in the valley—mid-40s at dawn, highs creeping into the upper 50s as the day goes on. Wind’s light out of the north, five to ten, with a touch of fog along the shore that should burn off by midday. Sunset tonight is at 5:52 PM, leaving us with prime golden hour conditions to wrap up the evening bite.No tides to track on the lake today, but water level’s steady, and clarity is better than you’d expect after that last bit of rain—slight stain up north near the Missisquoi, clear as usual closer to Thompson’s Point and down by the broad lake[4].Fish activity has kicked up nicely. According to the latest podcast updates from QP Daily, **smallmouth bass** are on the chew—fall feeding frenzy with big, aggressive strikes, especially around rocky points and deeper breaks near North Hero and the inland sea. Folks are consistently boating smallies in the 2.5 to 4 lb range, with occasional bruisers pushing five. **Largemouth** are showing good numbers in the southern bays: Benson Landing, Larabee's Point, and Four Brothers Islands are hot. Most catches have been chunky, solid keepers around 15–18 inches.Walleye are reported moving shallow with the cooling nights—nightcrawlers and jigs tipped with chartreuse have brought in a handful of good eaters around the mouths of the Winooski and Ausable rivers. **Northern pike** are lurking edges in Malletts Bay and Missisquoi, slamming big spinnerbaits and swimjigs in the afternoon.Perch schools are thick off St. Albans and Isle La Motte, and the panfish bite is strong—yellow perch and pumpkinseeds, especially, are making for quick buckets on drop-shot rigs with bits of worm.Successful anglers have been throwing:- **Topwater walkers and poppers** early, especially “bone” or silver colors. The Heddon Super Spook and Rapala Skitter Pop are getting crushed at dawn by both bass species[1][4].- **Ned rigs and tube jigs** on rock piles, using green pumpkin and smelt hues.- **Deep-diving jerkbaits** (like the Megabass Vision) and suspending shad raps in 8–20 feet for actively chasing smallmouth.- In the weeds and thick cover, **jigs with trailers** (beaver-style or craw) in black/blue or natural browns.- For pike and pickerel: white/chartreuse spinnerbaits, and on cloudier afternoons, big swim shads.- Live bait continues to hook up: shiners and crawlers under slip-bobbers on the edges, especially at sunrise and dusk.Recent catch numbers have been especially impressive on the broad lake around Valcour Island and Shelburne Bay. Social posts and guide calls over the weekend confirm dozens of smallmouth in short outings, with boats reporting solid stringers of both species. A couple of local clubs even weighed in largemouths topping 24 lbs for five fish—one confirmed video from last week showing a single Champlain lunker tipping 8 lbs[9].For folks looking for hot spots today:- **Four Brothers Islands:** always reliable for mixed bags—strong largemouth and smallie action, plus a shot at pike.- **Thompson’s Point/Charlotte:** big smallmouth riding bait balls, especially on windier days.- **Missisquoi Bay:** top for panfish, bonus pike, and a decent perch haul.That’s the story for Lake Champlain, October 27th—classic fall conditions, big bites, and fantastic scenery to go with it. Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure’s Lake Champlain Fishing Report. Be sure to subscribe so you never miss the latest, brightest updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure here with your Lake Champlain fishing report for October 26, 2025. We’re deep into fall, and the bite’s reflecting the quick-changing weather—cold overnight dips are carving fog off the water, and those hungry smallies and lakers are on the move. Today, expect sunrise at 7:21 AM and sunset right about 5:47 PM. The morning saw dense fog, but it’s burning off to reveal mostly cloudy skies, temps climbing from the upper 30s into the low 50s, with a light north breeze that’ll pick up later. Water temps are hovering in the high 40s to low 50s, so dress in layers and watch for that chill.Lake Champlain doesn’t have true tides, but expect some subtle seiche movement and changing wind that can move water levels and bait. This week has seen stable conditions, which has kept the fish in typical fall staging zones—look for bass and perch around sharp drop-offs, rocky points, and lingering weedbeds, especially as baitfish school up.Fishing action has been solid. Most folks are reporting decent numbers and quality—earlier this week, local angler Corey Gillis bagged a limit of chunky smallmouth near Swanton during the American Fishing Tour, winning it wire-to-wire. He, like many, went finesse: drop-shots rigged with Berkley PowerBait MaxScent Flat Worms and smaller tubes did most of the damage. A 1/6-ounce marabou jig also caught big bronzebacks patrolling shallower flats on overcast afternoons, particularly near the Missisquoi Bay and the northern portion of the Inland Sea. If you’re after largemouth, chatterbaits and Texas-rigged creature baits dragged across remaining green grass (try the narrows near Ticonderoga) are still fooling good fish, though the window is narrowing as weeds die back.Walleye have been a bit trickier, but a handful are showing up during low-light hours on jerkbaits and blade baits off rocky shoals around the mouth of Otter Creek and near Crown Point Bridge. Perch are schooled up mid-depth (15–30 feet), and small jigging spoons tipped with a minnow head are putting numbers in the bucket.Best baits right now:- Berkley MaxScent Flat Worms or Lil’ General on a drop-shot- Marabou or bucktail jigs for finicky smallies- Swimbaits and blade baits for open-water roamers- Tubes and finesse football jigs for dragging along rock piles- For panfish, small spoons or tungsten ice jigs with waxiesTwo hot spots to check today: - **The Sandbar Causeway:** Smallies are stacking here on the rocks as baitfish bunch up.- **Port Henry to Crown Point:** The deeper humps off the flats are holding mixed bags of bass and the odd walleye at dawn.Recent catches show a good mix—anglers are pulling 3–4 pound smallmouth with the occasional 5+ if you grind it out, and perch buckets are filling quickly for the panfish crowd, especially in the Inland Sea.That’s it for today’s Lake Champlain round-up. Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure—don’t forget to subscribe for more local fishing insights. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure here, coming to you bright and early with your Lake Champlain fishing report for Saturday, October 25th, 2025. We’ve got a crisp, classic North Country fall morning on tap—with a lake temp hanging in the low 50s and surface fog burning off after a picture-perfect sunrise at 7:20 AM. Expect air temps finishing the day around the mid 50s, and only light southern winds, making for ideal, glassy conditions through the early bite. Sunset will be at 5:47 PM, giving you plenty of time to chase those last casts into twilight.As for tides—while Lake Champlain isn’t tidal like the coast, water levels are quite low this year. The Mountain Times notes the lake’s sitting at historic lows, so watch those shallow launches and rock piles, especially up north and in the bays.Now: onto what’s biting. Bass fishing is holding strong! According to the Lake Champlain Daily Fishing Report, the smallmouths are in their late October frenzy on the exposed flats and rocky humps. Fish are keying in on bait schools, so fan-cast any points and gravel drops from Plattsburgh Bay to the Epson Narrows. Captain Ryan Latinville, as reported by On The Water, boated a six-pound smallie last week, so there’s quality to be found with quantity! Largemouths are still cooperative in the milfoil edges in Missisquoi and Malletts Bay. The morning bite is hot, but big green bass are coming out of midday grass mats on slower presentations.For best lures: anglers are crushing smallmouths with topwaters like the Whopper Plopper and walking baits worked fast at first light. When the sun’s up, switch to jerkbaits (Smithwick Rogues, Rapala Husky Jerks), blade baits, and 3-inch swimbaits in alewife colors. For largemouths, try pitching a black/blue jig with a craw trailer into dying weeds, or work a slow Texas-rigged creature bait around docks and laydowns. If you’re after a mixed bag, live shiners and nightcrawlers under slip bobbers are still turning up perch, crappie, and the occasional walleye along the deeper drop-offs at dusk.Big northern pike, or “gators,” are starting to stack up near river mouths and marsh edges, especially in the Lamoille and Ausable river outlets. Cast big white spinnerbaits, or slow-roll a black/silver suspending jerkbait—you just might tie into a 36-incher before lunch.In terms of recent catches, Bass Fishing Daily reports that boats are finding solid stringers—groups reporting consistent catches of 10-25 bass a day, most in the 2-4 pound range, with the odd 5+ in the mix. Yellow perch are thick through the Inland Sea and South Hero, great for filling a bucket if you find the schools on sonar.For hot spots, don’t miss:- The rocky flats off Valcour Island—killer for early smallmouth action.- Missisquoi Bay south of the bridge, where weedbeds hold late-season largemouth and pike.- Converse Bay and Shelburne Bay for mixed bags—look for bait balls and be ready to rotate presentations.As always, safety first—water’s chilly, and with low levels there’s extra debris and surprise shoals, so keep an eye out and wear that PFD. Locals always recommend grabbing a midday bite at Shelburne Farms if you’re nearby; it’s got panoramic lake views and a real fall harvest vibe.Thanks for tuning in, anglers! If you enjoyed this update, make sure to subscribe and never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure here with your Friday, October 24th Lake Champlain fishing report—coming at you from the heart of Vermont and New York’s border waters, right as the sun pokes up at 7:18 this morning and ready to duck behind the Adirondacks by 5:54 this evening. We’re starting off in crisp fall conditions: the overnight lows stuck in the upper 30s, with the mercury warming to the low to mid-50s under partly cloudy skies. Winds are light from the north-northwest, barely ruffling the bays. No tidal action here, but if you’re planning a full day, expect steady lake levels—though that “steady” is below normal thanks to the extended dry spell. The drought is still biting, with lake levels down and coves drawing back from their usual marks. According to the “Late October Chasers” episode, that means the fish crowd’s packed tighter and the weeds are peeling back[3]. Water clarity’s exceptional, but some ramps are a touch trickier than normal.Fish activity has been strong for late October! Smallmouth bass are the headline, especially as water temps tick into the high 40s. Smallies are cruising rock points and mid-lake humps from 10 to 18 feet in the mornings, then sliding deeper as the sun strengthens[4]. The bite’s best early and again mid-afternoon—when that cold north wind lays down a bit.Northern pike are still on a tear in the shallower, grassy flats where any green weeds remain. Yellow perch are stacking up in the drop-offs around deeper weed edges, often biting furious just before dusk. Walleye have been a little scattered but are most active on rocky breaks at twilight and after dark.Talk on the docks and from the latest podcasts—like Lake Champlain, Vermont/New York Daily Fishing Report—has been all about finesse baits and moving baits. The most productive lures for smallmouth this week include:- Ned rigs and tube jigs in green pumpkin and subtle crayfish tones.- Small blade baits and jigging spoons like the Silver Buddy once the sun’s high.- On overcast days or mornings, a bone-colored or shad-pattern topwater can produce explosive hits in surprising shallows[4].Anglers after pike are throwing bright spinnerbaits and white chatterbaits off the remaining weed edges. For yellow perch, classic live minnows and small chartreuse jigs are putting plenty in the bucket.Recent catches are showing strong numbers: Several crews reported landing two- and three-pound smallmouth with some fours in the mix near Valcour Island and the Inland Sea. Pike up to 34 inches came from the Missisquoi Bay and St. Albans shallows, while perch buckets are filling fast around the mouth of Otter Creek[3][4].If you’re looking for hot spots, head to:- The rocky points around Valcour Island—always a fall magnet for hungry smallmouth.- The weed humps in Missisquoi Bay—perfect for pike, and you might tangle with a bonus bowfin.A quick local’s tip: With the lake so clear, lighten up your leader and use natural tones. The fish can get spooky in these conditions, so stealth pays off. And definitely don’t overlook the mid-lake humps, especially mid-day when boat traffic is light.Thanks for tuning in to the report today. Make sure to subscribe so you never miss a bite-by-bite update. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
This is Artificial Lure, your source for boots-on-the-ground, rod-in-hand insight from beautiful Lake Champlain, straddling Vermont and New York on this brisk Thursday, October 23rd, 2025.We’re starting off with the weather—a classic late-October chill has rolled in overnight, with temps hovering in the upper 30s at daybreak, reaching for the high 40s by midday. Expect partly cloudy skies and a steady north-northwest breeze at 10 to 15 mph, making for a brisk but fishable day. Sunrise was at 7:18 a.m. and sunset will fall around 5:55 p.m. No tides to report here, since Champlain isn’t tidal, but water levels are a story—drought conditions have dropped the lake to historic autumn lows. According to the Mountain Times and Mainely Fly Fishing, you’ll find exposed shorelines and rocky flats you’d rarely see without a boat in other years.With all that exposed structure, fish are bunched up tighter than a pickerel in a minnow trap. The “Lake Champlain Vermont/New York Fishing Report Daily” podcast confirms it’s been a banner week for smallmouth bass—think fat, bronze footballs schooling up on those rocky points and drop-offs. Some anglers are reporting catches of 20-30 smallmouth in a single outing, mostly in the 2-3 pound class with the occasional 4 to 5-pound hawg mixed in. Northern pike are active in weed beds and shallow bays, and there’s a steady walleye bite at first light and dusk, especially on the deeper edges near river mouths. Jumbo perch are also on the chew, with buckets being filled around the Inland Sea and Missisquoi Bay.Lure-wise, this is the time to slow things way down. Those smallies are hammering Ned rigs, tube jigs in green pumpkin, and brown, as well as suspending jerkbaits worked along rocky ledges—especially just after sunrise. For pike, big white spinnerbaits, chatterbaits, and classic red-and-white spoons are your ticket. If you’re targeting walleye, dusk til dark is money on 3-4 inch soft plastics fished on a jighead, as well as blade baits bumped along the bottom. Perch are gorging on smaller offerings: try live fathead minnows or perch-patterned jigs under a slip bobber.Don’t forget about the other players—trout are staging near cold tributary mouths, and, if you’re dedicated, there are still big lake-run salmon moving on cloudy, windy afternoons. Folks tossing blue and silver spoons at the Winooski or Ausable River outflows have picked up a few bruisers lately.My top hot spots for today: - Point Au Roche State Park on the New York side—shallow, rocky points and weedbeds are loaded with smallies and pike. - The Inland Sea’s north shore, near North Hero, boasting piles of aggressive perch and pike in the remaining green weeds. - The mouth of the Lamoille River in Malletts Bay is producing both walleye after sunset and some bonus smallmouth midday.In these drought conditions, stealth, light line, and picking apart visible structure are key—a slow, methodical approach will get you bit when others blank.That’ll do it for your Lake Champlain fishing fix today. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget—subscribe for your daily dose from Artificial Lure. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure here with your Lake Champlain fishing report for Wednesday, October 22, 2025. The North Country served up a crisp, classic Champlain autumn morning—air temps were in the low 40s at dawn, warming to a high just shy of 60 by midafternoon, with a light north breeze keeping things cool. Sunrise eased in at 7:15 AM and we’ll see sunset at 5:58 PM tonight. Surface water temp remains steady in the upper 50s, and after a chilly night, expect fish to stay deep until midmorning.There’s no tidal movement on Champlain, but these cooling trends and shorter days have definitely sparked the fall bite. According to Lake Champlain Daily Fishing Report, the smallmouth action has been terrific; anglers are reporting smallie blitzes along rocky points and drop-offs, especially on the Vermont side near Thompson’s Point and the New York bays around Willsboro[Lake Champlain Daily Fishing Report].Top lures this week have been natural-colored jerkbaits, blade baits, and soft plastics—Yamamoto Slim Senkos in green pumpkin or shad patterns are working wonders on the finesse rigs[Gary Yamamoto Slim Senko | Bass Pro Shops Canada]. Mix in a topwater walk-the-dog early in the morning if the water stays calm—anglers pulling in right at first light have been rewarded with some chunky bronzebacks pounding poppers and spooks[Lake Champlain Daily Fishing Report]. Once the sun is up, slow it down and work Ned rigs or tube jigs bounced along the bottom.Don’t sleep on the walleye, either. Several locals trolling crawler harnesses and deep diving cranks west of the Sand Bar and off the mouth of Otter Creek have landed keeper eyes this week. If you’re after toothy critters, pike and the occasional musky have been showing up in the shallow weed pockets—white spinnerbaits and big swimbaits get the nod there.Live bait—shiners and nightcrawlers—are still producing, but most are moving to lures as water clarity improves and weed growth drops back. The cooler water puts fish on the hunt, so covering water pays off, but patience with those slow drags will still beat speed most days in late October.Recent counts from local bait shops and the podcast crowd show plenty of smallmouth in the two-to-three-pound range, a pile of perch for the pan, and a handful of bonus largemouths in sheltered marinas and bays. Perch schools have piled up thick near the Shelburne and Colchester reefs. Drop a small jigging spoon or minnow-tipped ice jig just off bottom—limits are realistic in under two hours.Champlain continues to reward those who move around. Hot spots today: Thompson’s Point flats for smallmouth and perch, and Kingsland Bay for mixed bags. Deep humps near Valcour Island are another sure bet if you have electronics to find the bait.Thanks for checking in with your Lake Champlain report. Don’t forget to subscribe for tomorrow’s update! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Good morning, folks I'm Artificial Lure, your go-to guide for all things fishing around Lake Champlain. Today, October 21, the sun rises at about 6:55 AM and sets at 5:55 PM. While tides aren't a major factor here, the current weather is crisp with a gentle breeze, perfect for a day on the water.Recently, there's been some impressive smallmouth bass activity, with reports of catches smashing state records. The best lures for bass right now are soft plastics and crankbaits.For other species, try using live bait like minnows or worms. Notable catches include trout and walleye, especially in the deeper areas of the lake. The VT DEC has been working on reducing phosphorus pollution, which has helped improve fish populations.Hot spots include the Malletts Bay area and the Lake Champlain shoreline near Swanton. Be mindful of water quality notices, though, as some areas may still be affected by algae blooms.Thanks for tuning in Remember to subscribe for more fishing updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure here with your Lake Champlain, Vermont and New York fishing report for Monday, October 20th, 2025. Classic autumn air greeted anglers this morning along Champlain—mostly clear skies, a light south-southwest breeze, and air temps climbing out of the upper 40s into the upper 50s by mid-morning. Sunrise came just past 7:10 AM and sunset will be around 6:05 PM today, so if you’re planning an evening bite, keep that narrowing window in mind. Lake Champlain doesn’t get tides, but water is running a bit higher than average after last week’s rains. Water clarity is solid with shifting weed beds around the bays and some nice rocky drop-offs primed for action.Recent days have seen a flurry of activity, and fall patterns are in full swing. According to Advanced Bassin’ Plus, smallmouth bass are stacked tight to main lake points, rock piles, and deeper ledges. Anglers reporting from the Lake Champlain, Vermont/New York Daily Fishing Report say the action’s steady, with crews around Point Au Roche and the mouth of the Lamoille boating 30-plus smallmouth in a morning, most running 2 to 3 pounds with a handful up to the 4-pound range. Largemouth bites are scattered but quality’s high—weed beds near Sand Bar State Park, submerged cover in the southern lake, and the outside edges of docks have all given up bucketmouths edging past 5 pounds in recent outings. A notable catch to mention: last week, a 7.5-pounder was boated near St. Albans Bay on a white spinnerbait worked slow along the weed edge, a true Champlain trophy.Northern pike and walleye are showing up more for anglers trolling deep-diving crankbaits and harnesses in 20 to 35 feet, especially off the flats by Deep Bay and the mouths of deeper bays. Those chasing sturgeon and muskie haven’t fared quite as well, but big-fish folks grinding hard in the channels or around the bridges might still get lucky.Top lures right now: for smallmouth, the drop shot with 3" shad-hued plastics and brown pumpkin worms remains unbeatable on breezy days. Ned rigs and tube jigs worked along rocks add numbers and size, particularly on exposed main-lake structure. Largemouth are chomping green pumpkin jigs, black and blue creature baits, and chatterbaits pitched along grass edges. If you prefer moving baits, bladed jig patterns like Z-Man Chatterbait and white spinnerbaits, especially in the Inland Sea and St. Albans Bay, have scored chunky fish. Panfish are still biting, with bluegill and crappie plentiful in Missisquoi Bay and Bulwagga Bay—small jigs with worms are the ticket there.For live bait, local tackle shops strongly recommend medium shiners and nightcrawlers rigged on slip sinkers—especially near reeds and pilings for both bass species. If you’re chasing lake trout out deep, spoons or white/chartreuse tubes tipped with a hunk of cut bait have been catching.A couple of hot spots worth hitting today:- Main lake drop-offs west of Point Au Roche State Park and into Deep Bay for mixed bags of smallmouth, pike, and walleye.- Rocky ledges and breaks south of Juniper Island for big smallies, especially through mid-morning.- Sand Bar State Park and the mouth of Missisquoi Bay for shallow-water largemouth and piles of panfish.- The Burlington Ledges and between Westport and Cumberland Head if you’re targeting lake trout—look deep, 80 to 100 feet, trolling silver or green spoons.With the wind ticking up this afternoon out of the southwest, lean into the leeward shores and mouths of bays—baitfish pile up there, and the predators won’t be far behind. Layer up too, Champlain winds can have a bite this time of year!Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure’s Lake Champlain fishing report. Don’t forget to subscribe for more daily tips and local hot spots. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
This is Artificial Lure with today’s narrative fishing report for Lake Champlain, Vermont and New York, Sunday, October 19th, 2025.Conditions on the big lake are shaping up for classic autumn fishing. We’re waking to a balmy, crisp morning—mostly clear skies, light south/southwest winds, and comfortable air temps climbing from the high 40s into the upper 50s as the sun rises over the water. According to Zillow’s local property listings, sunrise on this side of the lake hit just after 7:10 AM and sunset tonight will be around 6:05 PM, so plan your trip with daylight in mind.Lake Champlain is a freshwater lake, so no tidal movement to report, but watch out for slightly elevated water levels thanks to last week’s rains. The clarity’s good after a few dry days, with shifting weed beds along the bays and rocky drop-offs setting the stage for an active bite.Turning to recent catches—reports from Advanced Bassin’ Plus just across the Canadian border confirm what Champlain anglers have been seeing all month: the smallmouth bass are reliably stacked up on the main lake points, rock piles, and deeper ledges. Fishers on local podcasts like Lake Champlain, Vermont/New York Daily Fishing Report have been getting into mixed bags: solid smallmouths, healthy largemouths pulled from the southern shallows near Sand Bar State Park and Missisquoi Bay, and a few bonus northern pike and walleye for patient trolling in deeper water.Numbers-wise, it’s been a respectable fall run. Groups fishing out from Point Au Roche State Park and near the mouth of the Lamoille River have reported mornings with 30+ smallmouth boated, plenty in the 2-3 pound class and a handful topping 4 pounds. Largemouths are less numerous, but the ones being caught are chunky, with a few over 5 pounds coming off grass beds and just beneath docks. Early bird sturgeon and muskie efforts up north have been slow, consistent with last week’s colder snap, but those willing to grind with heavy gear in the deeper channels might still strike gold.Best lures on deck right now: the drop shot with 3” shad-colored plastics or brown pumpkin worms is still king for the smallmouth, especially in windier conditions. Try Ned rigs on rocky bottoms and tube baits for that classic Champlain smallie action. For largemouth, green pumpkin jigs, chatterbaits, and black-blue soft plastics pitched along weed edges have been producing. If you’re trolling, deep-diving crankbaits and crawler harnesses are taking decent walleye and pike in 18–35 foot depths.Live bait is always a solid play—local shops are recommending medium shiners or nightcrawlers freelined or on slip sinker rigs for bass along reeds and near pilings.Local hot spots today:- The broad flats west of Point Au Roche State Park, especially off the drop into Deep Bay—good mix of smallmouth and pike, plus solid access if you want to troll for walleye.- The stretch off Juniper Island’s southern tip, targeting rock ledges and breaklines for bigger smallmouth.- The Sand Bar State Park area: largemouth action around submerged cover and plenty of panfish, with easy access for shore anglers and boaters alike.For those sneaking in an afternoon session, the wind looks to pick up slightly out of the southwest by midday—focus on leeward shores where bait fish pile up. Don’t forget to layer up, as lake winds can turn chilly!Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure’s Lake Champlain fishing report. Be sure to subscribe for daily updates, tips, and local insight. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure here, with your Lake Champlain fishing report for Saturday, October 18th, 2025.First light broke over the lake right at 7:14 AM, with sunset tonight coming around 6:09 PM. You’ll have about 11 hours of good daylight to wet a line. The sky is partly cloudy, with a few misty pockets lingering in the valleys and temps starting in the low 40s, warming to the upper 50s this afternoon – ideal for fall fishing. Winds are expected to stay calm out of the northwest, 5-8 mph. It’s been a dry stretch for our region, and Vermont Daily Chronicle notes water levels are lower than usual due to drought, so expect exposed shoreline and slightly tougher launches for larger boats.Lake Champlain isn’t a tidal lake, but those lower water levels will definitely nudge fish into deeper channels and along abrupt drop-offs. If you’re launching from the western edge around Plattsburgh, you’ll find good access and some protected coves, while New York’s Point Au Roche State Park offers plenty of natural shoreline and undeveloped habitat for casting from the bank.Recent catches have been mixed but encouraging. Bass anglers have been reporting a solid late fall bite, with smallmouth moving out to 15-25 feet and largemouth hanging near what weed edges remain. Local chatter plus this week’s Spreaker podcast recap mention “steady numbers” of smallies up to three pounds north of Valcour Island and scattered largemouth toward Missisquoi Bay. Walleye haven’t turned on strongly yet, but a few mid-October fish have come from the deeper holes near the ferry crossing and just outside the Cumberland Head area, mostly hitting jigs tipped with nightcrawler.Northern pike and pickerel are getting more active with cooling water. Several catches in the six to nine-pound range came from near the mouth of the Saranac River and the South Lake south of Crown Point, local Ticonderoga shops and Norm’s Bait & Tackle confirm. Perch and panfishing activity remains solid, especially in the protected shallows off Malletts Bay – folks are filling buckets with mixed yellows and a handful of slab crappie.Best lures for the conditions today: - For bass, downsize to **quarter-ounce football jigs**, **tube baits** in pumpkinseed or watermelon, and **drop shot rigs** with finesse worms. - For walleye, a **chartreuse jig head** with 3” paddletail or live bait (nightcrawlers especially) works best on the steeper ledges. - Pike and pickerel: **silver minnow spoons**, **white spinnerbaits** and **soft jerkbaits** mimic the late-season baitfish schools. - Perch and panfish: stick to **small hair jigs**, **Minnow-tipped ice spoons**, and classic bits of cut nightcrawler under a float.A couple hot spots to check out:- **Valcour Island’s east drop-off** for solid smallmouth action throughout the morning.- The **South Bay marshes and weedlines** for big pike and occasional largemouth in shallower pockets.Remember, launch early for the best chance before sun warms the shallows. Stay alert to changing wind, especially mid-afternoon.Thanks for tuning in – be sure to subscribe for tomorrow’s report and send in those bragging-rights photos. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Howdy, anglers. This is Artificial Lure with the latest hot scoop on fishing Lake Champlain, where the water’s crisp, the colors are turning, and the fish—well, they’ve been putting on a decent show. We’re just shy of peak foliage, but the action out here has had its moments.Sunrise today is a little after 7 a.m., and sunset’s just a tick past 6 p.m. You’ll have all the daylight you need, but this time of year, mornings and evenings are when the bite happens—so plan accordingly. Weather-wise, we’re looking at a clear, cool day—good jacket weather, but don’t let that fool you; the fish like this just fine. Water temps have dropped into the low 60s, and while Lake Champlain isn’t tidal enough for you to worry about those charts, the winds can stir things up, so keep an eye on wind direction for drift and presentation.Lately, the fish have been a mixed bag, but it’s always interesting on Champlain. Smallmouth bass are active, especially around rocky points and drop-offs. Largemouths are still holding in protected coves and near docks—anywhere with a little warmer water and some structure. Northern pike are always a good bet, and the colder mornings have them moving into shallower areas, though they’re not quite as aggressive as a few weeks back. Walleye are around, but you’ll want to work deeper edges and slow down your presentation. Salmon—and this is important—are getting set for the fall run, and Vermont Fish & Wildlife says some spots may see temporary closures for spawning efforts, so check regs before you go if you’re targeting trout or salmon.Now, what’s working? For smallmouth, finesse is the game. Drop-shots, Ned rigs, tubes in green pumpkin or bluegill colors—slow and low, folks. Chatterbaits and jerkbaits in shad patterns are drawing strikes when burned over flats and wind-swept points. For largemouths, jigs and soft plastics dragged along the bottom or flipped into the thick stuff are still getting bites. Northern pike? Bucktail spinners and large swimbaits are your best bet, especially early and late. As for live bait—shiners remain king for the picky eaters, and nightcrawlers will fool just about anything on the right day.Some hot spots to try: up north near Missisquoi Bay for a shot at both bass and pike; the mouth of the Winooski for late-season smallies and the occasional walleye; and around the islands near Grand Isle for a shot at everything—including those rogue salmon. Windy days? Head to any of the rocky points on the eastern shore—the fish stack up there when the breeze gets going.Chatting with local guides and listening to the chatter at the docks, lots of 2-4 pound bass have been caught, with a few five-plus smallies making the rounds. Northerns up to ten pounds have been landed, and a handful of walleye in the 22-26 inch range have shown up in the creel reports. Most catches are coming on artificials, but don’t be shy about tipping your jig with a piece of crawler—sometimes that’s the difference.Tight lines, be safe, and remember: every day on the water is a good day. Thanks for listening, Champlain faithful. If you found this report helpful, throw us a subscribe and tell a friend. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Good morning anglers, Artificial Lure here with today’s Lake Champlain fishing report for October 15th, 2025.We’ve got a classic, crisp mid-October setup on the lake. Local sunrise is 7:07 AM with sunset at 6:09 PM, giving you plenty of daylight to chase those fall trophies. The current weather is typical for upstate this time of year—cool mornings in the low 40s, highs climbing into the mid to upper 50s. Skies today are partly cloudy with a light southwest breeze at around 6 to 8 knots, so expect manageable chop out there—just enough for a good drift.Now, about the water: flows near Burlington remain steady and clear, water temps are dipping down into the upper 50s. Fall turnover is on in most bays and coves, which means baitfish like shad are on the move, and the predator bite is ramping up. Tidal influence is negligible on Champlain, but if you’re venturing down to the mouth of the Richelieu, note some minor fluctuations—otherwise, focus on those wind and weather patterns to strategize your outing.Let’s talk fish. The big bass story of the week comes from Saturday’s Vermont high school tournament, where White River Valley High boated five largemouth and a stud smallmouth for just over 21 pounds, with a kicker 4.52-pound lunker setting the tone. Smallies up to 4.92 pounds were also landed by other teams. Most of the top bags were a mix of largemouth and smallmouth, targeted in 10 to 15 feet around wood and rock with slow, deliberate presentations, notably big jigs dragged across sand and gravel.Word from the piers and ramps is that bronzebacks are schooling up off rocky points and humps, especially from Malletts Bay down to the islands, and the largemouth are cruising the deeper weed edges and wood—think Sand Bar State Park, North Hero bridge pilings, and the bays at St. Albans and Missisquoi. Anglers are reporting active pike and pickerel near weedlines, and a few folks trolling deep have hit decent lake trout and brown trout, particularly by the Split Rock area.As for what’s catching: The Megabass Super-Z Z3 crankbait is seeing solid action for both smallies and largemouth—especially in shad pattern, cashing in on the seasonal migration. Football jigs with green pumpkin skirts tipped with craw trailers are producing on transitions from sand to rock. FishLab’s Bio-Shad flutter spoons are also making waves when worked above bait schools, especially along deeper breaks where smallmouth are corralling shad.If you like to keep it classic, a lively emerald shiner or nightcrawler drifted on a dropshot rig will get bit, especially during the low-light windows and off deeper weed clumps. For pike and pickerel, big spoons and spinnerbaits burned along the outer weed edges have been reliable.Top hot spots this week: try the outer edge of Malletts Bay for mixed bag bass and pike action—work the 10–14 foot breaks with those crankbaits and jigs. The rock piles and points around The Gut and North Hero are lighting up for smallmouth—especially on windblown days. Missisquoi Bay is still holding largemouth near dying pads and wood, a good bet for a shallow bite. And for bank anglers, the causeway bridge areas have been giving up perch, crappie, and the occasional bonus walleye on live bait under floats.One side note: The local hatcheries, like Dwight D. Eisenhower in North Chittenden, are running skeleton crews due to the ongoing federal shutdown, so don’t expect much stocking until things open back up.That’s the scene today on Lake Champlain. Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure’s report. Remember to subscribe to keep up with the latest, and good luck on the water—those autumn giants are feeding. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Sun’s just starting to cast golden streaks across the misty expanse of Lake Champlain, and here’s Artificial Lure with a boots-on-the-dock fishing report for Sunday, October 12th, 2025.Let’s hook into the details, starting with the weather. This morning, the air’s crisp, but there’s not a breath of wind stirring—mirror-flat water right off the bat, perfect for the early rodders. The Lake Champlain, Vermont/New York Daily Fishing Report says the day will be mostly sunny with highs in the mid-60s, so dress in layers—you’ll want to shed a jacket once you get into the groove. Sunrise lit up the lake about 7:08 this morning, and we’ll see sunset fade around 6:13 tonight, giving us a solid day to play the water from dawn to dusk.Now, if you’re used to saltwater, you might be scanning for tidal action. Truth is, Lake Champlain’s a natural, freshwater jewel—no tides here, just wind and waves to set your rhythm. But that’s not a drawback; it’s what makes October fishing so reliable. The lake’s all about water temps, structure, and forage patterns now.Fish activity is living up to Champlain’s autumn reputation. We’re in the heart of the classic October bite. Topwater blitzes at daybreak are fading, but smallies and largemouth are still hammering reaction baits in the shallows. Deeper, the walleye and lake trout are staging off rocky points and humps. From late September to now, local guides and shore anglers alike have been landing good numbers of smallmouth bass, some tipping the scales at 3-4 pounds on a steady chew. The Daily Fishing Report also notes healthy pickups of largemouth, especially off the outside edges of weedlines. Pike are lurking, too, with a few solid catches in the last week, mostly hitting big, flashy spinnerbaits and jerkbaits ripped through cabbage beds.Heard a rumor the salmon are turning it on at the mouth of the Winooski, and a couple of die-hards nailed lake trout just north of Valcour Island fishing cowbells on the downrigger. Panfish, well, they’re playing second fiddle, but a slip bobber and a wax worm suspended over a deep weedbed can still pull up a mess of perch or crappie for the fryer.Best lures for the current vibe? For bass, it’s all about the drop shot with a wacky-rigged senko in natural greens and browns, or subtle swimbaits fished slow, ticking the rocks. Walleye slayers are scoring with deep-diving crankbaits in perch patterns, fished along the edges of those deeper shelfs, especially out from Bulwagga and Mallets Bay. Trout and salmon? Try running spoons off boards or long-line trolling, silver and chartreuse have been hot.Live bait? If you’re anchoring, nothing beats a big fat golden shiner for trophy bass, and crawlers fished on a slip-sinker rig are still putting walleye in the boat after dark. For the catch-and-release types, artificials are killing it—just match the hatch and keep your retrieves slow, especially as the water cools through the day.Let’s talk hotspots. For bass, head to the rocky banks just south of Crown Point—structure’s prime for smallies right now. If you’re after walleye, work the drop-offs around Appletree Shoal or the boulder fields south of Westport. Lake trout anglers, don’t miss the deep channel runs between Valcour and Keeler Bay. And for pike, the muddy flats around St. Albans Bay are holding some aggressive fish among the dying weeds.Remember, this is the season when the big fish go on the feed before winter sets in. Fish hard, fish smart, and always check your regs—limits and slot sizes are there for tomorrow’s fishing.Thanks for tuning in to your Lake Champlain fishing report. If you like what you’re hearing, make sure to subscribe so you don’t miss a bite. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure here with your Lake Champlain fishing report for October 11, 2025.We’re waking up to a cool fall Saturday, with sunrise rolling in at 7:04 AM and sunset set for 6:13 PM. The weather forecast promises mostly sunny skies, brisk southwest winds around 15-20 mph, and high temps near 61°F—so throw on an extra layer and expect a little chop out there. Water levels across Vermont are low for this time of year, with flow in major rivers about 25% of normal, thanks to the dry spell we’ve been having. That said, Lake Champlain’s depth keeps things steady for the big bite.Let’s talk fish activity. The fall bite is on, and bass are on the feed. Last week’s Newport Bassmaster Kayak Series on Lake Champlain saw 158 anglers bring in impressive limits—37 limits over 90 inches, and two topping the 100-inch mark, by Bailey Eigbrett from New York and Nick Audi out of Pennsylvania, who finished first and second. While day two of that series got knocked out by weather, day one made it clear: there are plenty of big smallmouth and largemouth bass still hungry and aggressive.Local tales from the ramps have focused on bass, but don’t count out northern pike and lake trout, which are showing a little more activity with cooling temps. Salmon are still running in connected waters, especially in feeder rivers like the Saranac, drawing anglers looking for that fall ritual, as reported in the Adirondack Explorer.Now, what’s working best for lures and bait? Kayak anglers and local pros agree: jerkbaits, Ned rigs, and finesse swimbaits have been hot. Top performers in the tournament favored soft plastics in watermelon and green pumpkin on drop shots and Ned rigs. Don’t be afraid to throw a suspending jerkbait along rocky slopes or a white spinnerbait if the wind picks up. If you’re after smallmouths, focus on hard-bottom humps in 10-20 feet of water off Valcour Island or the Four Brothers, dragging a small paddle-tail or working a tube.For bait, shiners are the ticket if you want multi-species action—especially for pike or a bonus walleye at dusk. Local shops are keeping minnows in stock this weekend, anticipating the classic fall bite.A couple of hotspots to put on your GPS: - The Inland Sea’s Sandbar Bridge to north of Grand Isle is producing both size and numbers for smallmouth, with some bonus largemouth in the weed pockets. - The bays around Ticonderoga are firing for largemouth right now, especially early and late—work the edges of milfoil and scattered rock with a jig or chatterbait.No tidal report is available for the lake itself—Champlain isn’t tidal—but wind-driven current can play a role, especially in open sections, so keep an eye on wind direction while you set up.That’s it for today’s report. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for daily updates! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Lake Champlain is putting on her classic October show—crisp air, low water, and the leaves just about at their fiery peak along the Vermont and New York shoreline. Today, October 10th, sunrise hit at 6:57 AM, with sunset on tap for 6:13 PM. Winds this morning are light out of the north-northeast around 5 to 7 knots, but should swing more northwest by midday, keeping wave heights down to a gentle 1 to 2 feet—prime conditions for boaters hugging the shoreline or prowling the bays. The National Weather Service is calling for mostly sunny skies and highs rising to the mid-60s by afternoon.We’re still deep in drought territory—Lake Champlain’s water levels remain at historic lows, which has meant anglers have to adjust: rocky points are more exposed, weed edges are tighter to deeper water, and shallow flats that typically hold late-season largemouth are much thinner than usual, so think deeper than you might expect for this time of year. Locals are reporting solid clarity despite the drought, and water temps are hovering in the upper 50s to low 60s depending on what bay you’re probing.Bass fishing is what Champlain’s known for, and this week’s been textbook fall: smallmouth are stacking up on deep rock piles from Split Rock south to the Four Brothers, with tube jigs and drop-shot rigs doing damage—especially in green pumpkin, smoke, or goby patterns. Folks working swimbaits and blade baits along the channel edges have been connecting with fish up to 4 pounds, and there’s a rumor of a 5-plus landed near Juniper Island just yesterday.Largemouth catches have slowed compared to September, but don’t rule them out—main lake bays like Missisquoi and South Bay are still producing on jigs tipped with craws, and frogs pitched to the remaining lilies at first light. The bite’s been best on slow, natural presentations. Champlain’s classic black and blue skirted jig is hard to beat this week, and chatterbaits in white are fooling both green and bronze backs when the chop picks up later in the day.For multispecies folks, walleye have started feeding more reliably at dusk, especially around the mouth of the Winooski and Otter Creek. Jigging with chartreuse or fire tiger paddletails right at twilight seems to produce best as these fish push shallower for prey. Northerns are lurking in deeper cabbage, and a well-chucked jerkbait will get you bit—don’t be shy to go big.There’s word from locals fishing the Vermont side that perch schools are thick near the ferry landings, and they’re responding to small spoons and fathead minnows under slip bobbers. Trout activity is limited now as the water cools, but an occasional steelhead shows at the mouths of tributaries—if we get rain soon, expect this to improve.Hot spots this week? The Inland Sea east of Savage Island is holding big smallmouth, and the area just outside Converse Bay is a classic October staging point where you can catch both species in the same drift. If you’re chasing walleye, give the weed edge drop-offs near Crown Point a pass just after sunset.Bait shops across the region are moving plenty of shiners and nightcrawlers, but the savvy stick to artificials now—hard plastics in shad or perch color, tubes, and Ned rigs have all been top sellers. The bluebird conditions and angler pressure mean a subtle approach pays off this week.That’s your Lake Champlain fishing update for October 10th, 2025. Grab that extra hoodie for the morning, keep an eye on the steady winds, and enjoy the lights show from both the fish and the foliage. Thanks for tuning in—don’t forget to subscribe for your regular dose of local fishing intelligence.This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure here with your Lake Champlain fishing report for October 8, 2025, coming to you bright and early before daybreak. Today’s sunrise in the Burlington-Plattsburgh stretch was at 6:56 AM, with a sunset coming up at 6:19 PM, so you’ve got a solid window for those golden hour bites.Weather’s the big talk this morning: after a streak of blustery days, we’re starting cool—mid-40s at dawn—and forecasted to warm to the upper 50s by afternoon. Winds are moderate out of the west at 8-12 mph, dying off after noon. No rain in sight, and the water’s holding steady in the low 60s. Overall, classic Champlain fall conditions and the fish are tuned in to the season.Lake Champlain isn’t tidal, but south winds combined with outflows on the north end can push a little current, especially around bridges and narrows. That’s when you want to target points and drop-offs adjacent to weedlines.The bite is solid this week with multiple sources—including Advanced Bassin’ Plus and recent YouTube fishing diaries—reporting feisty smallmouth action and pockets of largemouth on the Vermont and New York sides. Walleye catches picked up over rocky humps from Isle La Motte to the Inland Sea, and yellow perch are stacking up along the deeper ledges.Yesterday’s afternoon trip, as recounted by Advanced Bassin’ Plus, saw “bass after bass” coming boatside, with most fish taken on drop shot rigs and Ned rigs pitched to transition zones where weeds meet gravel. Most smallmouth are running 2 to 3 pounds, with several fish over 4 especially in slightly deeper water—think 15–25 feet. Largemouth are hugging what’s left of the pad beds and milfoil mats closer to shore, key in Missisquoi Bay and the Ti shoals.Lure selection is making the difference. The hottest ticket this week has been:- Drop shot finesse worms in green pumpkin or smoke with gold flake.- Ned rigs in brown or green pumpkin.- Football jigs with craw trailers for the deep humps, especially brown/orange.- For topwater, a bone-colored walking bait like a Zara Spook or Berkley Choppo is still drawing late-season blowups early and at dusk, particularly when there’s a ripple on the surface.Bassmaster’s Davy Hite confirms that keeping it simple on color—think shad, craw, pumpkin, and black/blue—works best. Confidence matters more than chasing fancy patterns.Hot spots? You can't go wrong working:- The Four Brothers Islands for mixed smallmouth and bonus pike.- Missisquoi Bay and pelagic flats north to Swanton for big largemouth and late-moving schools of perch.- The narrows around Colchester and the mouth of the Winooski for consistent smallmouth staging on rocks.Recent restrictions: Vermont Public mentioned a temporary closure around a key Lake Champlain salmon tributary to help with spawning. Double-check local signage, especially around river mouths—stick to the main lake and you’ll be good.Bait of choice: live shiners or medium golden shiners on slip bobbers are lights out for multi-species action. But for those chasing quality, plastics are king and drop shot is putting even pressured smallmouth in the net.Report any invasive catches and be mindful of bird migration as New England’s waterfowl are moving through—keep those navigation lights on at sunrise.Thanks for tuning in to today’s Lake Champlain fishing update with Artificial Lure. Don’t forget to subscribe for daily reports and tips—there’s plenty more action to come as fall primes the lake. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Well, howdy, anglers—Artificial Lure here, coming at you live from the shores of Lake Champlain, where the fishing’s finer than a crisp Vermont maple leaf on a sunny autumn day. Let’s dive into your local fishing roundup for Sunday, October 5, 2025.## Weather & Water ConditionsFirst off, the weather’s in our favor today. After morning rain cleared out late last night, we’re looking at a mix of sun and wispy clouds—perfect for keeping both the fish and you comfortable. The water’s calm, still holding onto some summer clarity, but the air’s got that unmistakable Adirondack nip. According to FishingReminder, sunrise lit up the lake at 7:15 am, and we’ll see darkness roll in around 4:14 pm. That gives us a solid window to hit the water before the evening chill settles in. Moon’s a waxing crescent, but don’t put too much stock in moon phases this time of year—it’s all about the right spot and the right bait as we transition toward fall.## Tides, Timing, & TacticsLake Champlain, of course, isn’t tidal like the coast, but the old-timey bite times still matter. For today, FishingReminder pegs the major bite windows from 2:34 am–4:34 am and 2:48 pm–4:48 pm, with minor bites around 10:15 am–12:15 pm and 7:22 pm–9:22 pm. Whether you’re an early bird or a sunset chaser, these are the sweet spots to focus your casts. The best advice I ever got? “If you ain’t catchin’ at sunrise, move deeper.” As the sun climbs, so do the fish—slow-rolling swimbaits and Carolina-rigged craws along the drop-offs can turn a slow morning into a hot afternoon.## Recent Catches & What’s BitingLocal charters, especially from outfits like Irish Raider Outfitters out of Cumberland Head, have been slaying the smallmouth and largemouth bass all summer, and they’re not slowing down now. The Wood family, regulars with Captain Scott Thurber, landed more and bigger fish than ever on their recent trip. Kids have been out-fishing the adults, proving that sometimes fresh eyes and enthusiasm matter more than years on the water. Lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) are going strong, too—double-digit lakers are getting hooked, and jigging is the ticket for numbers and size. Northern pike (Esox lucius) and yellow perch (Perca flavescens) are putting up a good fight, especially on warmer afternoons. And don’t sleep on rainbow trout—they’ve been showing up in the catch photos, especially for those trolling early or late.## Hot Lures & BaitsLet’s talk gear. For smallmouth, topwater poppers and crankbaits at first light have worked magic all season. As the day warms, switch to soft plastics—Senkos, Ned rigs, and creature baits—dead-sticked near rocky structure. Largemouth? Try flipping and pitching jigs and creature baits into the slop and submerged timber. Lake trout? Vertical jigging with heavy metal, like KastKing Speed Demons and Kodiak Custom Jigs, gets you down to the depth where the big ones lurk. Northerns are hammering spinnerbaits and jerkbaits, while live bait—shiners, worms, and crawlers—never fails for mixed-species days. Remember, the water’s still holding plenty of baitfish, so match the hatch with silvery, shad-patterned lures.## Don’t Miss These Hot SpotsCumberland Head, NY, is a classic for both bass and trout. Work the rocky points and nearby drops—boats and kayaks both do well here. For lake trout, drift the depths off Maquam and St. Albans bays—plenty of double-digit lakers reported there this week. If you’re shorebound, King Bay and Catfish Bay are sneaky-good for smallmouth and pike, especially at sunrise and sunset. And, heads up: Hatchery Cove, a Grand Isle honey hole, is temporarily closed through November 30—so stick to the open water for now.## Local Color & NotesCaptain Scott Thurber says the best days are those when you’re catching memories, not just fish. Beginners, families, and old salts are all getting on the board. The boats are clean, the gear’s quality, and the folks are friendly—just what you’Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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