Artificial Lure here with your Lake Mead fishing report for Saturday, June 14, 2025.
The desert sun is back in full force, and we’re already seeing triple digits by midday, so the name of the game right now is beating the heat. Sunrise came in at 5:20 AM and sunset isn’t until 7:57 PM, but trust me—your best shot at big catches is in those early morning or late evening hours before things get sizzling. There’s no meaningful tidal swing on Lake Mead, but wind can be a factor, so keep an eye out for afternoon breezes picking up around 15 mph today.
The fishing action is classic June—bass are moving into their deep summer haunts, and stripers are on the prowl. Black bass, both largemouth and smallmouth, are mostly done spawning and are sliding off beds into 20 to 30 feet of water. Anglers are having good luck on drop-shot rigs with creature baits and deep-diving crankbaits. If you’re not fishing deep, work those shade lines—one lone bush, a boulder, or a shadow near the shore can hold a fat bass, even if the rest of the cove looks dead. For the best largemouth action right now, I recommend working the weedy shorelines and shaded pockets near Calville Bay and Hemenway Harbor, just as reported by Sportsman’s Warehouse and fellow YouTube guides.
The striped bass bite is hot, especially at first light. Best bait choice is still cut anchovies—stripers are stacking up outside Hemenway Harbor and over at Boxcar Cove. Don’t overlook tossing a three-inch silver swimbait, Kastmaster, or Jumpin’ Minnow for those subsurface fish. Early mornings are when the striper boils pop off, so get out before the sun’s high.
If you’re after panfish, crappie are peaking in the Overton Arm. Chartreuse and white jigs or small tubes are your go-to—just bounce them near submerged brush or rock piles and you’ll find some action.
Other reports say bluegill and catfish are firing around 33-Hole, with nightcrawlers and even good ol’ hot dogs pulling in steady numbers.
For lures, stick with what’s proven—topwater poppers and ploppers at dawn, white and silver paddle-tail swimbaits, deep-diving crankbaits, and confidence plastics like drop-shot roboworms in shad or baitfish colors. For bass, nothing wrong with a bright neon worm in deep water—you want to see those bites. Spinnerbaits and buzzbaits are worth a try for bigger bites if clouds roll in or the wind picks up.
Hot spots: Calville Bay and Hemenway Harbor for bass; Boxcar Cove, Hemenway Harbor, and Vegas Wash for stripers; Overton Arm for crappie. If you’re shore fishing, don’t skip those little pockets of shade—there’s often a fish there.
That’s it for today’s Lake Mead report. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a bite. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.