Fresh Capt.Kenne Charters – Lake Havasu Fishing Reports
Lake Havasu Fishing Report – October 23r
Lake Havasu Fishing Report – October 23r
October 27, 2025
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!
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Lake Havasu Fishing Report – October 1st
Lake Havasu Fishing Report – October 1st
October 12, 2025
Fishing has been all over the place since October started! Water temps have dropped from the mid-80s at the beginning of the month to holding steady around 77 degrees as of October 12th. This cooling trend slowed the bite early on as the fish adjusted to the changing temperatures. We’ve also had two weather systems push through — the first dropped water temps and made fishing tougher, while the most recent one (around October 10th) seemed to turn things back on. Let’s talk bait and striper boils. There’s been tons of bait all over the lake, especially on the south end around Havasu Springs, Standard Wash, and between Pilot Rock and Ghost Mine Saloon. Just because you’re seeing bait doesn’t mean the stripers are feeding, but if you can find bait balls with active stripers on your graph, anchor or spot-lock and jig them up — that’s been very productive. If you’re anchored, chum the water to keep the school under the boat. Once they start hitting jigs, you can ease up on the chum — the action alone keeps them fired up. That said, marking bait and stripers doesn’t always mean they’ll hit artificial. Over the past two weeks, we’ve had mornings where trolling and jigging produced nothing, but cut bait on small circle hooks did the trick. If you’re missing fish due to light bites, switch to a small J-hook and set the hook yourself. Earlier this month, some anglers reported boils on the north end of the lake throughout the morning until around 2 PM. The recent full moon seemed to slow that bite down, but on October 9th, we got into a solid boil in Thompson Bay that lasted about 15 minutes — enough time to land a few nice fish. With the full moon behind us, I expect boils to start firing up again soon. We’ve recently started trolling 6" Z-Man pearl swimbaits and have been picking up some quality stripers in the 20–24" range. On smaller 4" River2Sea pearl swimbaits and rattle traps, the average size has been 14–17". Anchoring up and bait fishing continues to produce fish of all sizes. One group even had a big striper grab a live bluegill near the boat — we got it up alongside and realized it just had the bluegill in its mouth but not the hook! It ended up spitting the bait boat-side before we could get the net under it. Overall, fishing is improving and it’s only going to get better as water temps continue to cool! Most charters are seeing high-number striper days, and our catfish trips are producing steady action.
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Lake Havasu Fishing Report – September 1
Lake Havasu Fishing Report – September 1
September 21, 2025
We had several charters this past weekend, and instead of the usual play-by-play, I’ll break things down by location and species since it was a true multi-species weekend. A strong pressure system moved through on Thursday, bringing a heavy storm that lasted most of the day. This dropped surface temps to 79–80°F by Friday and dirtied up parts of the lake, which slowed the bite somewhat, but we still managed solid numbers and good action. Mesquite Bay: Plenty of fish in 20–25 feet of water. Most have been smaller “dinks,” though the occasional 2-pounder showed up. Large amounts of bait marked throughout the area. Sod Farm (North Side of the Island): Large schools of stripers holding in 35–50 feet. The upper water column is loaded with 12–14" fish, but if you work below them, there are solid stripers in the 15–19" range. Best bite has been mid-morning and again in the late afternoon. Bait has been a little thinner here, but still enough to keep fish around. Thompson Bay: Lots of activity here. Tons of baitfish and strong marks on sonar. We boated plenty of 16–18" stripers just off the no-wake buoy line in 30+ feet of water, with fly-lined anchovies and jigs being most productive. Pilot Rock – Standard Wash: Fewer striped bass schools but massive balls of baitfish everywhere. Trolling in 30–50 feet produced better quality fish in the 2 lb range. Havasu Springs: Loaded with bait and stripers, with some impressive late-afternoon boils starting to form. This spot is shaping up to be excellent as the fall pattern sets in. Striper Recap: Trolling has been slower overall but still producing quality fish. Anchoring up, heavy chumming, and either free-lining cut anchovies on small circle hooks or working jigging spoons paired with a wounded minnow fly on a dropper loop about 14" above has been the ticket. Anchovies are key right now—don’t be shy with the chum. Our total for the weekend was 83 stripers released and 2 kept. Catfish: We ran a catfish trip Friday night down on the south end. Bait fishing was solid with tons of sunfish caught, plus a few surprise largemouth bass and a channel cat while targeting bait. The evening bite was a little tough with the lingering pressure system, but action was steady. We landed a nice flathead and a solid channel cat, and both were safely released after a great fight. Overall, a productive night with quality fish despite lower numbers. Fishing is transitioning as temps cool, and things should continue improving as we move into fall.
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Kenneth Probst
Lake-havasu-city, Arizona, United States
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Welcome to Capt. Kenne Charters, based in beautiful Lake Havasu City! Book your next fishing adventure with us and discover what makes these waters so special. With Captain Kenneth at the helm, you'll benefit from years of knowledge and experience as...