Captain
Kenneth Probst

Member since June 2022 Lake Havasu City, United States
Background
Capt. Kenne is a true native of the Colorado River and Lake Havasu, born and raised on these legendary waters. With a deep-rooted connection to the river lifestyle, his journey began early — his very first job was as a deckhand for local fishing guide legend, Capt. Doyel. Under Doyel’s mentorship, Kenne learned the art of guiding, boat handling, and reading the river like a seasoned pro. That early foundation launched a lifelong passion for fishing and adventure, eventually leading him to the wild waters of Alaska. There, he worked as a professional fishing guide and deckhand in Ninilchik, navigating the rugged coastline and targeting halibut, salmon, and other prized species. The experience sharpened his skills and reinforced his commitment to safety, professionalism, and exceptional customer service. Today, Capt. Kenne holds a 25 Ton USCG Master Captain’s License and is a licensed fishing guide on Lake Havasu. Whether you're looking for a relaxing day on the water, a guided fishing trip, or a private charter experience, Capt. Kenne brings unmatched local knowledge, experience, and passion to every trip — ensuring your time on the water is safe, memorable, and a whole lot of fun.
Techniques
We target large Flathead Catfish so using live Bluegil is out preffered method of catching these river monsters

Hey, I'm Captain Kenneth Probst

Lake Havasu City, United States
Background
Capt. Kenne is a true native of the Colorado River and Lake Havasu, born and raised on these legendary waters. With a deep-rooted connection to the river lifestyle, his journey began early — his very first job was as a deckhand for local fishing guide legend, Capt. Doyel. Under Doyel’s mentorship, Kenne learned the art of guiding, boat handling, and reading the river like a seasoned pro. That early foundation launched a lifelong passion for fishing and adventure, eventually leading him to the wild waters of Alaska. There, he worked as a professional fishing guide and deckhand in Ninilchik, navigating the rugged coastline and targeting halibut, salmon, and other prized species. The experience sharpened his skills and reinforced his commitment to safety, professionalism, and exceptional customer service. Today, Capt. Kenne holds a 25 Ton USCG Master Captain’s License and is a licensed fishing guide on Lake Havasu. Whether you're looking for a relaxing day on the water, a guided fishing trip, or a private charter experience, Capt. Kenne brings unmatched local knowledge, experience, and passion to every trip — ensuring your time on the water is safe, memorable, and a whole lot of fun.
Techniques
We target large Flathead Catfish so using live Bluegil is out preffered method of catching these river monsters

My Charter Listing

Excellent
4.9 / 5
(9 reviews)
Lake Havasu City
 2 bookings in the past week.
Trips from US $200

Fishing Reports

Lake Havasu Fishing Report โ€“ February 6
Lake Havasu Fishing Report โ€“ February 6
Feb 23, 2026 Lake Havasu City
Water temperatures have been holding in the high 50s, bumping up into the low 60s during the afternoons, especially in the shallow back coves. Sunrise is now around 7:15 AM with sunset stretching to about 6:30 PM, so weโ€™re finally gaining daylight. Weโ€™ve had several windy days and a wet weather system push through recently, which caused some unstable air and water temperatures, but looking ahead at the forecast, things appear to be trending warmer and more consistent. With longer days, a warming pattern, and the next full moon approaching on March 3rd, we should start to see more fish pushing shallow. Bass and redear are beginning to show signs of movement, although the redear bite hasnโ€™t fully turned on yet. I personally havenโ€™t dedicated a lot of time to hunting them down just yet, but I have received reports of anglers finding redear in the 5โ€“10 foot range around rocky points. That bite should improve quickly as temperatures stabilize. Striped bass fishing has been decent overall, especially on the south end of the lake, where quality fish have been coming primarily on live shad. The north end has been tougher in my opinion, but live shad has still been the key to getting bites when fish are present. Trolling for stripers is still producing, but itโ€™s been inconsistent and very dependent on timing and conditions. Iโ€™ve shifted gears a bit recently and started targeting smallmouth and largemouth bass in roughly 30 feet of water using live shad, and that approach has been producing solid results. Weโ€™ve been seeing quality fish hitting the deck consistently, which has been a fun change of pace while waiting for other seasonal bites to turn on. I plan to give this warming weather pattern another week or two to fully settle in, and then Iโ€™ll start doing some catfish scouting trips to get ready for flathead season. Once Iโ€™m confident the bite is on, Iโ€™ll be opening up our trophy flathead trips again.
Continue reading
Jan 12- Feb 6th Lake Havasu Fishing Repo
Jan 12- Feb 6th Lake Havasu Fishing Repo
Feb 6, 2026 Lake Havasu City
Lake Havasu continues to fish like winter, with water temperatures holding steady in the mid-50s and days slowly starting to get longer. While conditions havenโ€™t changed drastically temperature-wise, the biggest shift over the last few weeks has been in how weโ€™re targeting stripers. Weโ€™ve started throwing the cast net for shad and incorporating live bait into the program, which has made a big difference on certain days. My live shad setup has been simple and effective: 30 lb braid to a 24-inch 15 lb fluorocarbon leader, rigged with a small circle hook and as little weight as possible depending on the depth the fish are holding. Boils are still popping up periodically, and when they do, itโ€™s been game on. During those moments, Iโ€™m still throwing Rapala CrushCity swimbaits on a 1 oz jig head. In several of the same coves where stripers have pushed shad shallow, weโ€™ve also caught a surprising number of both smallmouth and largemouth bass mixed in with the stripers, all feeding aggressively on the same baitfish. Fishing over this stretch has been a true mix of highs and lows. The good days have been unforgettable, with fast action and aggressive fish that make winter fishing worth every cold morning. On the flip side, the tough days have been grind-it-out kind of days. Even when youโ€™re marking shad and stripers stacked together, it doesnโ€™t always mean the bite is on, which is just part of winter fishing on Havasu. I only have a few open dates left for February
Continue reading
Lake Havasu Fishing Report โ€“ January 1st
Lake Havasu Fishing Report โ€“ January 1st
Jan 12, 2026 Lake Havasu City
Lake Havasu has officially shifted into winter fishing mode, with sunrise now around 7:45 AM and the sun setting close to 5:45 PM. The weather has been all over the place, with wind, more wind, and even a little rain mixed in, but thatโ€™s been great news for the lake. All of that weather has pushed water temperatures down into the mid-50s, which is exactly where striped bass thrive this time of year. This temperature range is a sweet spot for stripers because it allows them to feed aggressively without burning too much energy, while shad also group up tightly in the cooler, oxygen-rich water, making them easier to hunt. The biggest change over the last couple of weeks has been the consistency of striper boils on the north end of the lake. I honestly havenโ€™t had much reason to run south because the action up north has been that good. Find the birds and youโ€™ll find the stripers. The boils have been lasting most of the day instead of just short windows, and some of our best fishing has happened on windy days. Weโ€™ve also been seeing better quality fish, with stripers regularly ranging from 2 to 6 pounds, and most of them are fat and full of shad. To stay on these roaming schools, Iโ€™ve adjusted my trolling program to match the conditions. When the birds are working, Iโ€™m typically running one of three lures: a ยพ-ounce Cotton Cordell silver jig with a feathered treble hook, a white Fluke on a ยผ-ounce Pulse jig head, or a Rapala CrushCity Mayor swimbait in shad color on a ยพ-ounce Dobyns extra-long shank jig head. Iโ€™m pulling these baits on leadcore line, usually letting out three to four colors, and trolling between 2.5 and 3 miles per hour to keep the lures right in the strike zone. We even wrapped up one charter recently by throwing those Rapala CrushCity swimbaits up shallow after the stripers pushed shad into tight water and pinned them for an all-out feeding frenzy. It was a bad day to be a shad. If you want to experience this winter striper bite while itโ€™s peaking shoot me a message
Continue reading
Lake Havasu Fishing Report โ€“ December 1โ€“
Lake Havasu Fishing Report โ€“ December 1โ€“
Dec 17, 2025 Lake Havasu City
Water temperatures are now hovering around 59โ€“60ยฐ in the early mornings, warming to roughly 62ยฐ by the afternoon thanks to light winds and above-average air temps. The lake is still in the process of turning over, especially in the backs of coves and bays, but overall water clarity has noticeably improved compared to earlier in the fall. Each week itโ€™s getting a little cleaner, and thatโ€™s helping the bite. Bird activity has been hit or miss, so Iโ€™ve been starting every charter with a clean slate and letting conditions dictate the game plan. I spend a lot of time glassing the water and watching bird behavior. You donโ€™t always need birds actively diving or circling to know shad are present. Pay attention to birds sitting on the water or stacked along the shorelineโ€”especially when multiple species of waterfowl are grouped together. They arenโ€™t there by accident; theyโ€™re feeding, and where thereโ€™s shad, stripers are usually close behind. So whatโ€™s been working? Trolling has been a strong starting point. Iโ€™ve been running 4" River2Sea D-Walker 100 paddle tails in pearl on 1 oz jig heads, along with white Zoom Super Flukes rigged on ยผ oz albino Pulse jig heads. Nearly every trip starts with trolling proven water from the previous few days. This allows us to cover ground and locate active schools. Stripers are a pelagic speciesโ€”they donโ€™t live tight to structure. They roam open water, and right now food is the main driver. Water temps are fair, spawning isnโ€™t a factor, so locating bait is everything. When I troll through a schoolโ€”especially one holding close to shadโ€”I mark it on the graph. If we hook up, weโ€™ll either circle back and work that mark with flutter jigs or continue trolling through the school, depending on conditions. What Iโ€™ve noticed is that a school is usually either fully active and feeding or completely shut down while digesting. If trolling and jigging donโ€™t produce, Iโ€™ll drop anchovies straight down. If that still doesnโ€™t trigger bites, we move on and find a more active group of fish. Overall, fishing has been steady, and with improving clarity and cooling temps, things should continue to trend in the right direction. If youโ€™re looking to get on the water, December is filling up fast, so give me a call or text to book your trip.
Continue reading
Capt Kennes Fishing Charter Lake Havasu
Capt Kennes Fishing Charter Lake Havasu
Nov 30, 2025 Lake Havasu City
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 weโ€™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 receivedโ€”and what I still live byโ€”is to always stay humble, stay curious, and keep learning from others. None of us will ever โ€œknow it all,โ€ and every angler brings something valuable to the table. The past two weeks have been packed with charters, and Iโ€™ve spent fifteen straight days on the water. Weโ€™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 thatโ€™s where this report will focus. In this stretch, water temps have consistently run about 1โ€“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 itโ€™s very much a matter of being in the right place at the right moment but the signs are there. Even when theyโ€™re not blowing up on the surface, birds circling low or making short dives tell you youโ€™re in the right neighborhood. During boils, our best producers continue to be white/pearl paddle tails on ยฝโ€“ยพ oz jig heads and ยพโ€“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, weโ€™re doing two things: โ€ข Vertical jigging when weโ€™ve got schools stacked directly under the boat โ€” 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. โ€ข Casting spoons by bombing them past the action, counting down 7โ€“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. Weโ€™ve made a few attempts to net shad in the Bill Williams River, but the schools arenโ€™t dense yet. Theyโ€™re thereโ€”just not in big numbers. You might have better luck, so take that info for what itโ€™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 weโ€™re just now entering my favorite stretch of the entire striper season. Itโ€™s only going to get better from here.
Continue reading
Lake Havasu Fishing Report โ€“ Nov 5 to No
Lake Havasu Fishing Report โ€“ Nov 5 to No
Nov 16, 2025 Lake Havasu City
Striper fishing on Lake Havasu has been steady as we move deeper into fall. Sunrise is now around 7:15 AM, and water temps are finally holding under 70ยฐ, sitting near 67ยฐ all day on the 16th. With the storm system that rolled in on the 15th and expected to linger until the 21st, plus daytime highs only in the mid-60s, we should see temps continue dropping and the lake gradually clearing. Iโ€™ve spent most of my time from Standard Wash to Havasu Springs, where Iโ€™ve consistently marked heavy bait schools. Yesterday my clients slid onto a quick morning boil at Standard Wash and landed 5โ€“6 stripers in about 20 minutes. Before the storm, I was getting reliable 2โ€“4 lb fish between Black Meadow Landing and Bluegill Cove by watching the birds and relying on the graphโ€”several mornings the screen was stacked top to bottom with striper. Reports up north have been mixed, with some anglers catching on jigs and others only on bait. During a recent three-hour trip with a family of six, the Sod Farm was loaded with fish, producing steady action even though size was smaller. Birds are becoming more aggressive each day, and with cooler water settling in, we should see the pattern tighten up soon. Most of our recent fish have come on jigging spoons and anchovies, though Iโ€™ll be adding paddle tails back into the rotation as clarity improves. Overall, conditions are shaping up for a strong late-fall bite.
Continue reading

Customer reviews

Rating summary
Excellent
4.9 / 5
out of 5 stars from 9 reviews
Boat
Excellent
4.9 / 5
Crew
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Experience
Excellent
4.8 / 5
Photos & videos by reviewers (14)
Captain Kenny Charter
My fishing line was not wrapped around the prop while writing this review
knowledgable guide who worked hard
+11
Angler rating
8
1
0
0
0
Anglers claimed
Good experience
100%
Friendly captain
100%
Recommend this charter
100%
Appropriate for children
100%
Satisfied with the boat
100%
Caught fish
73%
Sort by:
Featured  
Showing:
5 of 9 reviews
Steven D.
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Experience:
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Boat
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Crew
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Overall

Fishing with Kenneth

VERIFIED   NEW  3 Hour Trip โ€“ Striper Only (AM) - 9:00 AM on February 26, 2026
Steven D. recommends Capt.Kenne Charters โ€“ Lake Havasu
Mark review as helpful
You found this review helpful
  Kenneth Probst Captain replied

Carrie H.
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Experience:
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Boat
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Crew
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Overall

Great Captain!

VERIFIED   6 Hour Striper Trip on September 19, 2025
Very knowledgeable about the lake and very friendly in guiding us novice fishing enthusiasts.
Carrie H. recommends Capt.Kenne Charters โ€“ Lake Havasu
Mark review as helpful
You found this review helpful
  Kenneth Probst Captain replied

Larry W.
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Experience:
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Boat
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Crew
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Overall

Boys had fun!

VERIFIED   3 Hour Trip โ€“ Striper Only (PM) - 4:00 PM on November 23, 2025
Kenne is patient and knowledgeable!
Larry W. recommends Capt.Kenne Charters โ€“ Lake Havasu
Mark review as helpful
You found this review helpful
  Kenneth Probst Captain replied

Seth L.
Excellent
4.3 / 5
Experience:
Very good
4.0 / 5
Boat
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Crew
Very good
4.0 / 5
Overall

Knowledgable guide who worked hard

VERIFIED   6 Hour Striper Trip on December 23, 2025
fishibg wasnt great but captain Kenne worked hard to put us on as many fish as possible
Seth L. recommends Capt.Kenne Charters โ€“ Lake Havasu
Mark review as helpful
You found this review helpful
  Kenneth Probst Captain replied