Lake Havasu Fishing Report – October 1st
October 12, 2025 Lake Havasu City 8 photos
Bass (Striped)
Bass (Striped)

Trip Summary

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.
Kenneth Probst
Lake-havasu-city, Arizona, United States
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Other reports from this charter

Lake Havasu Fishing Report – December 1–
Lake Havasu Fishing Report – December 1–
December 17, 2025
Water temperatures are now hovering around 59–60° in the early mornings, warming to roughly 62° 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 it’s getting a little cleaner, and that’s helping the bite. Bird activity has been hit or miss, so I’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 don’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 shoreline—especially when multiple species of waterfowl are grouped together. They aren’t there by accident; they’re feeding, and where there’s shad, stripers are usually close behind. So what’s been working? Trolling has been a strong starting point. I’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 ¼ 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 species—they don’t live tight to structure. They roam open water, and right now food is the main driver. Water temps are fair, spawning isn’t a factor, so locating bait is everything. When I troll through a school—especially one holding close to shad—I mark it on the graph. If we hook up, we’ll either circle back and work that mark with flutter jigs or continue trolling through the school, depending on conditions. What I’ve noticed is that a school is usually either fully active and feeding or completely shut down while digesting. If trolling and jigging don’t produce, I’ll drop anchovies straight down. If that still doesn’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 you’re looking to get on the water, December is filling up fast, so give me a call or text to book your trip.
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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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