Lake Havasu Fishing Report – October 23r
Oktober 27, 2025 Lake Havasu City 5 photos & 1 video
Bass (Striped)
Gestreepte Zeebaars
Catfish
Katvis

Trip Summary

Water temps over the last few days have been holding in the low 70s during the mornings and climbing to around 72° by late afternoon. Sunrise has been right around 7 AM, and overall conditions have been steady with light winds and mild fall weather. I’ve been all over the lake the past few days running charters and scouting, so here’s a breakdown by location and technique. Sod Farm to the Casino: I haven’t spent a ton of time up this way recently, but I did dedicate a morning to checking it out. We started working the Sod Farm and had mild success pulling fish on a 6” paddle tail. I marked a fair amount of bait, though the shad are still grouped in smaller pods rather than big, dense schools. Once the water cools off a bit more, we should see those shad bunch up tighter and attract more aggressive striper. Out in front of the Casino, the bite has been fast and furious right as the sun hits the water, but it slows quickly. You’ll often see a solid school on the graph one minute and it’s gone the next — they’re clearly chasing and feeding on the move. Thompson Bay to Steamboat Cove: There’s tons of bait in this stretch, and it’s been producing good opportunities for striper boils. Many of the fish in this area have been quality 2–4 pounders, especially if you can get on the boil early. The biggest fish this week actually came from this area — my 4-year-old son landed a beautiful striper just over 5 pounds! The boils here have been short-lived, firing up as soon as the sun breaks the horizon and tapering off within the hour. Once that happens, switch gears to bait fishing or throwing lures. The lake is still turning over, so visibility is limited, but as that clears, expect the jig bite to improve once the morning boil dies off. Be sure to keep a pair of binoculars handy — scanning for birds working the water is the best way to find active fish. On Sunday, despite 15 mph winds, I located a large group of birds over Thompson Bay. Even in tough conditions, we were able to throw lures and pull a few solid fish from those boils. From Pilot Rock to Steamboat Cove, I’ve been marking good striper schools working shad, and we’ve had excellent success casting jigs directly above them for quality fish. Black Meadow Landing, Three Dunes, & Cattail Cove: These areas have been producing boils with much more consistency. I’ve also been marking tons of bait, and they’re balled up tighter together than in other parts of the lake. My customers have been throwing blade baits, paddle tails, and jigs in all the coves throughout this stretch and continue to catch high numbers of striper of all sizes — even when we’re not directly on an active boil. Bonus Note – Catfish: Channel cats are starting to school up with the fall pattern in full swing. We’ve been catching back-to-back channels in the same holes — often while fishing for striper. Don’t hesitate to drop a bottom rig to take advantage of the opportunity. If you catch one, there’s a good chance another is nearby. Fishing is only getting better as the lake cools down!
Kenneth Probst
Lake-havasu-city, Arizona, United States
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Other reports from this charter

Capt Kennes Fishing Charter Lake Havasu
Capt Kennes Fishing Charter Lake Havasu
November 30, 2025
Water temps have now settled into the low 60s, fluctuating slightly depending on wind and daytime highs. Sunrise is around 7:30 AM, and with early December forecasted to bring highs in the upper 60s and lows in the upper 40s, I expect surface temps to continue dropping. Winter patterns are setting in, and the fishing is shifting right along with them. With a lake as large as Havasu (19,300 surface acres), this report reflects what I and my clients have personally experienced based on the areas we’ve focused on. There are several fantastic guides on this lake, and many fish different zones or use different techniques. The best advice I ever received—and what I still live by—is to always stay humble, stay curious, and keep learning from others. None of us will ever “know it all,” and every angler brings something valuable to the table. The past two weeks have been packed with charters, and I’ve spent fifteen straight days on the water. We’ve had some incredible action mixed with some tougher days that required grinding it out, but overall the bite has been solid. Most of my time has been spent from Twin Palms down to Cattail State Park, and that’s where this report will focus. In this stretch, water temps have consistently run about 1–2 degrees warmer than the north end. This zone has been holding plenty of shad and striper, and the bird activity has been steady every morning. The timing of the boils has been inconsistent, so it’s very much a matter of being in the right place at the right moment but the signs are there. Even when they’re not blowing up on the surface, birds circling low or making short dives tell you you’re in the right neighborhood. During boils, our best producers continue to be white/pearl paddle tails on ½–¾ oz jig heads and ¾–1 oz jigging or flutter spoons. With paddle tails, I have clients cast past the boil and work the bait through it with a mix of steady retrieve, pauses, and rod pops. For spoons, we’re doing two things: • Vertical jigging when we’ve got schools stacked directly under the boat — drop straight down, pop the jig a couple of times, then let it fall on a slack-ish line so it can flutter. Most hits come on the fall. If your line stops sinking unexpectedly, reel down and set the hook immediately. • Casting spoons by bombing them past the action, counting down 7–12 seconds, popping the jig upward, then letting it flutter back down before repeating. This is a deadly technique when the fish are spread out or the boil is small. We’ve made a few attempts to net shad in the Bill Williams River, but the schools aren’t dense yet. They’re there—just not in big numbers. You might have better luck, so take that info for what it’s worth, and feel free to share if you crack the code! Overall, clients have been extremely happy with the steady action and high catch rates. The bigger fish are starting to show, the water is cooling fast, and we’re just now entering my favorite stretch of the entire striper season. It’s only going to get better from here.
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Lake Havasu Fishing Report – Oct 28 to N
Lake Havasu Fishing Report – Oct 28 to N
November 5, 2025
Water temps have cooled off, sitting around 68° in the early mornings and warming to about 71° by the afternoon. Sunrise is just after 7 AM, and mornings have been calm with light wind—building out of the south later in the day. The lake is still turning over, leaving the north end pretty green and murky, while the south end is starting to clear up thanks to more wind and current flow. Trolling has been on the slower side overall, but the fish we’re catching have been solid quality. On Nov 5, I landed a fat, healthy striper just shy of 5 lbs on a 6" paddle tail. I’ve been running 4"–6" pearl and white paddle tails on 1 oz jig heads, as well as dark-colored lipless crankbaits early and white once the sun hits the water. With visibility still low, I’ve been adding a touch of Pro-Cure gel scent, which has made a noticeable difference in converting short strikes into hookups. Productive trolling and casting zones include Pilot Rock down to Standard Wash, The Sod Farm, and Copper Canyon up to Grass Island, all holding good bait and striper activity. Boils have been inconsistent—no solid pattern yet—but when they go off, it’s fast and furious. The Three Dunes area continues to produce the best morning action, with boils starting 20 minutes before sunrise and lasting about an hour. Fish there have been 2–4 lbs and hitting jigging spoons, paddle tails, and blade baits. Up north, Thompson Bay has seen smaller, 1–1.5 lb fish, but the boils there sometimes linger into the late morning, giving anglers more time to work them. When the bite slows, bait fishing with anchovies remains reliable and brings plenty of mixed catches—stripers and channel cats. Some of the best bait spots have been Grass Island, Thompson Bay, and out in front of the Casino. Clients have been catching non-stop schoolie striper mixed with a few quality fish throughout the day. Overall, fishing has been steady to strong, and with water temps continuing to fall, the bite should only get better!
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