DiscoverLake Mead, Nevada Fishing Report TodayWintertime Patterns at Lake Mead: Stripers, Bass, and More in the Desert
Wintertime Patterns at Lake Mead: Stripers, Bass, and More in the Desert

Wintertime Patterns at Lake Mead: Stripers, Bass, and More in the Desert

Update: 2025-12-20
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This is Artificial Lure with your Lake Mead fishing report.

We don’t worry about tides out here in the desert, but water level and weather are driving the bite. According to the National Park Service and Bureau of Reclamation updates, Mead is still low but stable, with clear to lightly stained water and surface temps sliding into the upper 50s in most open basins. Early winter patterns are locked in.

Weather this morning is cool and calm around the Boulder Basin: light north breeze, morning temps in the 40s rising into the low 60s under mostly sunny skies, with only a slight chance of clouds building this afternoon based on NWS Las Vegas forecasts. Sunrise is right around 6:45 local, sunset near 4:30 , so your prime windows are that first hour of light and the last 90 minutes before dark.

Fish activity has shifted deeper. Stripers are grouping up on main-lake points, creek mouths, and along the old river channel breaks. Recent angler reports on Nevada Fish Reports and Western tournament boards say most schoolie stripers are running 1–4 pounds, with a few 6–10 pound fish mixed in for guys willing to graph and stay on bait balls. The bite’s not wide open, but once you find them, you can put a decent box together.

Best producers this week have been:
- For stripers: 1–2 ounce white or pearl jigging spoons, silver Kastmasters, and 4–5 inch soft plastic swimbaits on 1/2–3/4 ounce heads. Vertical jig those spoons under birds or bait in 40–80 feet.
- When they’re finicky: drop‑shot flukes or small paddletails just above the marks on your graph.
- For cut bait: anchovies and sardines on a simple Carolina or three‑way rig, dropped to suspended marks or soaked on ledges. Night and pre‑dawn anchor soaks are still turning a mix of stripers and channel cats.

Largemouth and smallmouth are in classic winter mode. According to recent WesternBass-style tournament chatter from Mead, most bass are coming off rock in 15–35 feet, especially where chunk rock meets deeper water. Think finesse: dropshot worms in shad or morning dawn, ned rigs, and 3-inch tubes dragged slow. A few better smallmouth are eating 3.8 swimbaits slow‑rolled along bluff walls when the wind puts a little chop on the water.

For bait anglers on shore, PowerBait-style dough and nightcrawlers are taking stocker trout and the occasional bonus striper near coves that have been recently planted. Local YouTube anglers fishing the Boulder area ponds and marina have been reporting consistent action on garlic PowerBait and small feather jigs under a bobber when the sun is low.

A couple of hot spots to keep in your back pocket:
- **Boulder Harbor and Hemenway area**: Good for shore and small‑boat anglers. Troll or vertical jig around the old river channel edge, and shore soak anchovies off the points at first and last light.
- **Government Wash and Fishers Landing**: Classic winter striper water. Idle around with your electronics until you see those spaghetti marks stacked mid‑column, then drop spoons or drop‑shots right on their noses. When the wind pushes bait into those cuts, the bite can turn on in a hurry.

If you head out, bring good electronics, light fluorocarbon leaders for bass, and heavier main line for those striper schools. Work slow, trust your graph, and time your trips around low‑light periods for the best shot.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a Lake Mead update.

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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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Wintertime Patterns at Lake Mead: Stripers, Bass, and More in the Desert

Wintertime Patterns at Lake Mead: Stripers, Bass, and More in the Desert

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