Las Vegas Review-Journal

Fishing for bass lands bluegill at Lake Mohave

- C. DOUGLAS NIELSEN IN THE OUTDOORS

I Fyou have been looking to catch a mess of bluegill, I know just where to find them. Though they weren’t exactly what Roger Williams and I were looking for when we found their hiding spots.

Like most summer fishing adventures on Lake Mohave, ours started early in the morning Saturday. Our path took us over the new Boulder City bypass known as Interstate 11 and south to Willow Beach. With the new freeway, our travel time was cut to little more than 30 minutes, about half the time it used to take from Henderson.

The bypass is just that, so the last place you can buy gas and still take advantage of the shortcut is Railroad Pass.

Willow Beach is a full-service marina about 12 miles south of Hoover Dam on the Arizona side of the Colorado River. Well, technicall­y it’s the upper end of Lake Mohave, but here the waterway is more like a river than a lake, so the Colorado River moniker still fits. You won’t find an old-timer who calls it anything different.

It was early enough that boaters still had their navigation lights on when Roger and I launched his boat and made our way south through lower Black Canyon. Here the water temperatur­e remains a chilly 53 degrees or so despite the high summer temperatur­es common in the canyon.

In contrast to the cool river are the steep canyon walls that absorb the sun’s heat during the day and hold it through the night. Luckily, the

LAKE MEAD — Reports remain consistent from throughout the lake. Catfish are hitting on anchovies, chicken liver or shrimp. Working the backs of coves at night has produced the best results. Anglers are seeing lots of shad in coves during the early morning hours. The best striper fishing has been starting at first light. Anglers are using cut anchovies, swimbaits or lures, such as a Spinnow or Jumpin’ Minnow.

LAKE MOHAVE — Some anglers are reporting slow fishing, while others are getting their share of smallmouth and largemouth bass. Black bass are active near the mouths of coves and along rock faces, and are taking spinner baits, soft plastics fished on a drop shot and jigs. Stripers are hit or miss, but anglers are finding some response early in the morning using various swimbaits or anchovies out of Willow Beach.

LAUGHLIN — Fishing has been hot for striped bass below the dam, but catfish are not to be forgotten. Catfish can be found cruising the shallows, and anchovies are a popular bait of choice. They also will catch striped bass as well. Rusty at Riviera Marina reports that Justin Smith reeled in an 18-pound striper from the marshy area near Big Bend of the Colorado State Recreation Area. The striper bite has been best in the early morning and evening hours.

LAS VEGAS URBAN PONDS — Bluegill and green sunfish continue to bite well on mealworms and small chunks of night crawlers. If conditions remain favorable, the Nevada Department of Wildlife plans to stock catfish in the ponds at Floyd Lamb, Sunset, Lorenzi, Veterans Memorial and Hafen parks.

KIRCH WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT AREA — The upper areas of Adams-mcgill, Cold Springs, Haymeadow and Dacey all opened this week to fishing, as did Tule

Reservoir. Anglers fishing the upper end of Adams-mcgill have found good fishing for bass, crappie and rainbow trout.

EAGLE VALLEY RESERVOIR — With early morning temperatur­es cooling into the 50s, trout fishing is good until around noon. The bass action remains very good, with most anglers limiting out by jigging rubber worms or throwing lures.

ECHO CANYON RESERVOIR — Though the aquatic vegetation continues to be a problem for shore anglers, the few open spots have been producing good action for trout and bass. Trout are most active in the morning hours before the day heats up. The fish are taking Powerbait in orange or green coloration­s.

movement of the boat across the water created a rather pleasant cooling effect and gave the anglers a respite from the heat.

Our plan was to start the day with striped bass in the canyon and then move farther south for largemouth and smallmouth bass. With that in mind, Roger shut the boat down where he reeled in a 15-pound striper with a low-slung belly a week earlier.

For the next 45 minutes or so, we searched the river with trout imitations and other swimbaits. We were joined by other anglers who were fishing nearby, but despite our collective efforts, the stripers proved reluctant. Roger’s bait might have

been bumped once or twice, but he has been known to tell a fish story or two.

It wasn’t long before our neighbors fired up their boats and disappeare­d down lake. We strapped our rods to the boat’s deck and followed suit. Well, we tried to follow suit, but when Roger turned the key, the boat motor turned over and over and over.

It seems the old Evinrude was flooded and would need to sit for a while, so we unstrapped the fishing rods and went back to work.

Another 45 minutes and no fish later, the boat fired up once again, and we moved south to the place where Lake Mohave widens and the water temperatur­e starts to warm. There we began searching the shoreline for both species of black bass.

Roger started things out by reeling in a plump largemouth bass that weighed perhaps 2½-3 pounds. He caught the fish along a brushchoke­d shoreline with a shad-colored swimbait.

As the day passed, we worked shorelines as well as coves, but the only thing we saw in the coves were bluegill and the odd catfish. Any bass we caught came from points near the mouths of the coves or along the shoreline of the main lake where brush created cover over rocky shelves. Between us we caught perhaps 10 bass for the day. Most were largemouth, but there were a couple of smallies in the mix.

Roger caught most of his bass on a spinnerbai­t he customized to resemble a bluegill while mine were all fooled by a Keitech swimbait in electric blue and chartreuse on a drop shot.

Though Roger outfished me on the bass, there came a time when I couldn’t keep the bluegill from taking my bait. Given the size of my swimbait and the drop-shot hook, I was surprised they could, but neither one slowed them down.

If you are looking for bluegill at Lake Mohave, think bass and throw them a swimbait on a drop shot. You won’t be skunked, and they will give you a pretty good fight. You might even catch a bass or two.

Freelance writer Doug Nielsen is a conservati­on educator for the Nevada Department of Wildlife. His “In the Outdoors” column, published Thursday in the Las Vegas Reviewjour­nal, is not affiliated with or endorsed by the NDOW. Any opinions are his own. Find him on Facebook at @dougwrites­outdoors. He can be reached at intheoutdo­orslv@gmail. com.

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