
Iowa Fishing Report – July 9, 2020
With water temperatures now in the low 80s in many fisheries across the state, the bite remains fairly steady for most all species.

With water temperatures now in the low 80s in many fisheries across the state, the bite remains fairly steady for most all species.
For those who fish here, the draw is usually the expectation that they can put together a decent batch of sunfish or crappies and experience some quality largemouth bass fishing as well.

Walleyes have become tougher to catch with water temperatures now approaching bathtub-like temperatures and putting a few in the boat involves more work.

Water temps remain in the mid-70s, and the bite for most species is fair to good.

Newton Lake is changing and hasn’t produced one of its famous 10-pounders in a long time, but the 1,750-acre Jasper County cooling reservoir still ranks high among anglers.

Fishing might be slowing on your local lake because of hot weather, but there are tactics you can try to improve your chances of catching more fish.

The walleye bite continues to be pretty good, despite some bug hatches starting to occur on some larger lakes, and shorter periods of aggressive feeding activity.

There likely is not a bad place to be fishing anywhere in New York right now.

On Lake Erie, if you don’t catch your limit of walleyes in an hour, you’re doing something wrong. On inland waters, crappies are the name of the game.
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