• Lake Champlain Fishing: Winter Wonderland of Bites and Battles
    Jan 12 2026
    **Lake Champlain Fishing Report**

    Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure with your Lake Champlain fishing update. We're locked in mid-winter mode now, and the big lake is wearing that patchwork ice pattern—some areas solid, others still sketchy, so watch your step out there.

    The ice fishing season is off to a strong start. Just this past weekend, anglers were pulling double digits on first ice with a four-species day that included a personal best pike. That's the kind of action we like to see right out of the gate. Over on the Vermont side, a 120-acre lake that freezes early has been producing multiple solid fish, including aggressive pike with visible bite marks—proof these waters are loaded with predators.

    You've got panfish in abundance—bluegill, crappie, and perch are all active right now. Northern pike and largemouth bass are also cooperating. Set your tip-ups with big shiners and you'll be in business. If you're jigging for panfish, you can't go wrong there either.

    For the competitive anglers, Jacob Wheeler recently dominated on Champlain using drop-shot rigs with soft plastics targeting smallmouth. He had success with Googan Baits Rattlin' Ned patterns in smelt, green pumpkin, and goby colors. The key was using 8-pound main line with 6 to 12-pound fluorocarbon leaders and rotating bait colors—darker stuff early, more translucent patterns as the sun climbs.

    Head to any isolated structure on the flats, including sunken debris. Forward-facing sonar will help you locate fish spreading off cover. Rock piles, grass patches, and boulder fields consistently hold fish.

    Thanks for tuning in to the Lake Champlain Fishing Report. Make sure to subscribe for daily updates and expert tips. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quietplease dot ai.

    Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
    Show More Show Less
    2 mins
  • Champlain Ice Fishing Report - Mixed Bag Bite, Ice Safety Key
    Jan 11 2026
    This is Artificial Lure with your Lake Champlain fishing report.

    We’re locked in mid‑winter mode now, and the big lake is wearing a patchwork of ice and open water. According to the National Weather Service out of Burlington, we’re sitting in the mid‑20s to low 30s today with a light northwest breeze, clouds mixing with some sun, and wind chills a touch cooler on the broad lake. Sunrise came in a little after 7:30 this morning, with sunset just before 4:30 this afternoon, so you’ve got a tight window of prime light.

    Lake Champlain isn’t tidal, so no tide swings to worry about—your “tide” is the wind. A steady north or south wind will push bait and stack fish on windblown points and breaks. Today’s lighter winds make it more of a structure and timing game than a current game.

    Ice conditions are highly variable. Recent local reports around the Inland Sea and sheltered bays note 3–6 inches in some coves, but less or even open water out toward the main lake. Use a spud bar, check as you go, and don’t trust yesterday’s tracks. The main lake remains risky for foot travel in many stretches.

    Catch-wise, folks have been icing a mixed bag:
    - Good numbers of **yellow perch** and **bluegill** in back bays and marshy cuts.
    - **Northern pike** showing up along weed edges and marsh mouths.
    - Where safe ice or open ramps allow, **lake trout** and the occasional **brown** are coming from deeper breaks in the main basin.
    - A few die‑hards are still boating or casting for **smallmouth** and the odd **largemouth** in the warmer outflows and rocky shorelines.

    Best baits and lures right now:

    For panfish:
    - Small tungsten jigs in chartreuse, glow white, or pink tipped with spikes or a sliver of nightcrawler.
    - Tiny spoons like 1/16‑oz in gold or silver when they’re more aggressive.

    For pike:
    - Tip‑ups with medium shiners or dead bait (smelt or sucker) set just off bottom or a few feet under the ice along remaining weedlines.
    - If you’re casting open pockets, a slow‑rolled white spinnerbait or a suspending jerkbait works well.

    For lake trout:
    - In the open or through safe ice, 1/2‑ to 3/4‑oz white tubes, blade baits, or jigging spoons fished on 40–80 feet breaks.
    - Tip with a minnow head if the bite is finicky.

    For winter bass in rivers and rocky shorelines:
    - Finesse is king. Pros on Champlain lean on drop‑shots, Ned rigs, and small swimbaits—baits like MaxScent worms, small fluke‑style plastics, and 3–4 inch minnow imitations excel in cold, clear water. Major League Fishing coverage of Champlain events has repeatedly highlighted drop‑shot rigs with subtle plastics and Ned‑style baits as consistent producers.
    - Think natural colors: smelt, goby, green pumpkin, and perch tones, crawled painfully slow.

    Couple of local hot spots to consider, conditions permitting:

    - **Missisquoi Bay**: When the ice is safe, this is a classic panfish and pike zone. Look for 5–10 feet of water near old weedbeds and channel edges. Pike roam the edges, and perch stack in the deeper pockets.

    - **Inland Sea / Keeler Bay area**: Often one of the first and more reliable hardwater areas. Good for mixed panfish with a shot at a bonus pike. Work inside turns and any remaining weed clumps.

    - For those still in a boat, the **Port Henry to Crown Point stretch** and **Thompson’s Point** remain solid bets for lake trout and the odd brown, focusing on points that drop quickly into deep water, watching your electronics tight to bottom.

    Keep your presentations small, slow, and close to structure. Early and late in the day should fish best, with a midday lull likely unless you’re right on top of a school.

    Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a Champlain report.

    This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

    Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
    Show More Show Less
    4 mins
  • Midwinter Madness on Lake Champlain: Perch, Lakers, and Pike Prowling the Ice
    Jan 10 2026
    Name’s Artificial Lure with your Lake Champlain fishing report.

    We’re locked into a mid‑winter pattern now. According to the National Weather Service Burlington discussion this morning, we’re looking at seasonable cold: single digits at daybreak, highs in the low 20s, light northwest breeze under high pressure and mostly clear skies. Sunrise is right around 7:30 a.m. with sunset near 4:30 p.m., so your money windows are that gray light first thing and the last hour before dark. No real tide on Champlain, just a little seiche with the wind, and it’s fairly calm, so under‑ice current is light except near river mouths.

    Vermont Fish & Wildlife and the New York DEC both keep hammering the same point: ice thickness is all over the map this year. The main lake is still sketchy in spots, especially around pressure ridges and where creeks dump in. Most folks are sticking to protected bays and shallower water on both shores and checking every few steps with a spud.

    Local bait shops around Addison County and the Islands report a steady bite on **yellow perch** and **bluegill** in 10–25 feet, with enough true “jumbos” to keep buckets interesting. Shops are also hearing of a few bonus **walleyes** sliding up onto first breaks at low light, plus scattered **northern pike** cruising the weed edges under the ice. A handful of anglers probing deeper basins with lake‑trout tactics are picking up the odd **laker** where there’s solid ice, but that’s still a side show.

    Best producers right now are classic Champlain ice offerings. For perch and panfish, think small: **3–4 mm tungsten jigs** in glow or chartreuse tipped with spikes, mousies, or a single maggot, or tiny spoons like a **Slender Spoon** or **Northland Buck‑Shot** with just one maggot on the treble. A tight little quiver is outfishing big rips. For walleye, guys are running **tip‑ups or set‑lines** with medium shiners or small suckers just off bottom along the first main‑lake breaks; a glow spoon with a minnow head at dawn and dusk is taking most of the jig fish. Pike hunters are doing well with **big shiners or dead bait** hung just under the ice over weed flats.

    Couple of local hot spots to circle on your map:

    - **Keeler Bay / Sand Bar area, Vermont side** – Usually one of the first places to have decent, protected ice. Good mix of perch and bluegill in 10–18 feet off the weeds, and a real shot at pike roaming the flats.

    - **Port Henry / Bulwagga Bay, New York side** – Once it locks up, this corner can crank out numbers of perch with bonus lake trout and the occasional walleye along the drops. Mobility is key; punch a bunch of holes and hop 20–30 yards at a time until your flasher stays marked up.

    Travel light, check ice constantly, and don’t fish alone if you can help it. Keep those ice picks around your neck and a throw rope in the sled.

    Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

    Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
    Show More Show Less
    3 mins
  • Lake Champlain Ice Fishing Update: Healthy Fish, Hazardous Conditions
    Jan 9 2026
    This is Artificial Lure with your Lake Champlain fishing report.

    We’re locked in full winter mode now, with most of the big lake carrying decent ice in the protected bays, but conditions still vary a lot by shoreline. Local bait shops around the Burlington and Plattsburgh ends are reporting 4–7 inches on many sheltered coves, with thinner, sketchy ice out toward the main lake. Treat every step like it’s your first of the season: spud bar, picks, rope, and a buddy.

    No tides to worry about here on Champlain, but water levels are a touch low and stable, which helps keep the ice from shifting. Sunrise is right around 7:30 in the morning with sunset close to 4:30 in the afternoon, so your prime bite windows are short and sharp around first light and that last hour before dark.

    Weather-wise, we’re in a classic January pattern: cold nights in the single digits or teens, daytime highs in the 20s to low 30s with light northwest breeze and occasional snow squalls. That cold is building ice, but watch for drifting and pressure cracks, especially off points and near bridges.

    Fish activity has picked up the past couple days. Local reports have steady **yellow perch** and **bluegill** action in the shallower weeds, **northern pike** cruising the flats, and a mix of **lake trout**, **smelt**, and the odd **walleye** showing in deeper basins. According to regional tournament coverage from Major League Fishing out of Ticonderoga and the Inland Sea area, Champlain’s smallmouth and largemouth populations are as healthy as ever; a Phoenix Bass Fishing League event this week was won with strong weights of brown bass, confirming there’s no shortage of quality fish roaming under the ice.

    Recent catches in the popular bays include buckets of hand-sized perch, scattered 8–10 inch pumpkinseeds, pike into the low teens, and lakers pushing 6–8 pounds for the folks willing to walk a little farther and fish deep structure.

    Best lures right now:
    - For panfish: tiny tungsten jigs in chartreuse, glow white, or pink tipped with spikes or mousies; small gold or silver spoons when the school fires up.
    - For lake trout: 1/2–3/4 oz white or glow tube jigs, airplane jigs, and slender spoons jigged 40–80 feet over humps and drop-offs.
    - For pike: quick-strike rigs with dead bait under tip‑ups, with a backup jigging rod rigged with a loud rattle spoon or flutter spoon to call them in.

    Best bait:
    - Panfish: live spikes, mousies, and small shiners.
    - Pike: medium to large golden shiners or frozen smelt and sucker chunks on tip‑ups.
    - Lakers and the odd walleye: live or dead smelt, or shiners on a drop-shot or just above a heavy spoon.

    A couple of hot spots to consider:

    - **Malletts Bay**: Good early‑ice producer, with solid perch and bluegill action in 8–15 feet and pike working the weed edges. Look for inside turns and any remaining cabbage beds.

    - **Port Henry / Bulwagga Bay area** on the New York side: Historically strong for lake trout and mixed panfish. Focus on points and breaks dropping from 20 into 60+ feet for lakers, and shallower flats for perch.

    Closer to Burlington, the sheltered cuts and back bays around the ferry landings and river mouths are also worth a look for panfish and the occasional bonus pike, but ice there can be fickle with current, so use your head.

    That’s the word from Lake Champlain today. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report.

    This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

    Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
    Show More Show Less
    4 mins
  • Frosty Fishing on Lake Champlain - A Winter Angler's Guide to Smallmouth, Pike, and Trout
    Jan 7 2026
    Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to guy for all things fishin' on Lake Champlain. It's January 7th, 2026, 8:34 AM, and we're kickin' off the day with cold temps hoverin' around 20°F, light snow flurries, and winds at 5-10 mph from the northwest—perfect for bundlin' up but stay cautious of sudden gusts near the narrows, as World Atlas notes Champlain's tricky currents and storms. Sunrise was at 7:28 AM, sunset 4:42 PM, givin' us a short 9-hour window. No real tides here on the big lake, but river mouths like the Winooski are seein' minor fluctuations from upstream flow.

    Fish activity's pickin' up in this winter chill—smallmouth bass are key players right now. Major League Fishing reports Stephen Estes sacked 21-15 pounds of smallmouth to win their recent Toyota Series event, usin' patterns like dock-skippin' jigs and finesse dropshots. Anglers at the docks are swappin' tales of limits in the 3-4 pound range, with some northern pike and lake trout mixin' in deeper. Lately, catches include smallies up to 5 pounds, a handful of pike to 10, and trout via jiggin'. Best lures? Go with 1/4-oz jigheads tipped with minnow-imitatin' soft plastics like green pumpkin tubes or smoke paddle tails—proven winners from MLF day-2 patterns. For bait, live shinies or fathead minnows under a bobber or on a quick-strike rig; suckers for pike.

    Hot spots today: Hit the Burlington Breakwater for sheltered smallmouth action, or troll Structure Point off Malletts Bay for suspended bass and trout—watch those drop-offs.

    Bundle up, respect the cold water shock, and check DEC updates for any ice leads.

    Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for more reports! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

    Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
    Show More Show Less
    2 mins
  • Lake Champlain Fishing Report: Frosty Bites and Tight Lines
    Jan 5 2026
    Hey folks, Artificial Lure here with your Lake Champlain fishing report for this frigid winter morning of January 5th, 2026, right around 8:30 AM. Brrr, it's a crisp one out there—temps hovering in the low 20s with light winds from the northwest, partly cloudy skies, sunrise at 7:25 AM and sunset at 4:40 PM. No real tidal swings on Champlain today, but water levels are steady, perfect for open-water chasing.

    Fish are active despite the cold! Yesterday's reports from the Spreaker Lake Champlain Fishing Report show smallmouth bass, lake trout, and panfish crushing lures in open water—folks pulling in limits of 2-4 pound smallies and slabs up to 20 inches. Bassmaster clips highlight big wolf packs of smallies at 25-30 foot depths around brush piles and bait schools, with recent catches on surface-skipping minnows and half-ounce tungsten heads with 3-inch minnows on 10-pound fluoro.

    Best lures right now? Go vertical with jigging spoons or small blade baits for lakers and smallies—those erratic wobbles mimic injured baitfish. For panfish, tiny jigs tipped with maggots or soft plastics. Live bait? Worms or minnows on tip-ups if you're ice-bound, but open water's hot with artificials.

    Hit these hot spots: the deep contours off Point Au Roche for smallies, or the bait-rich ledges near St. Albans Reef for lakers and panfish—stay at 25-40 feet with 40-50 gain on your electronics.

    Bundle up, fish safe, and get after 'em!

    Thanks for tuning in, folks—subscribe for daily updates! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

    Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
    Show More Show Less
    2 mins
  • Ice Fishing Heats Up on Lake Champlain: Winter Bite Sizzles for Lakers, Smallies, and Panfish
    Jan 4 2026
    Hey folks, Artificial Lure here with your Lake Champlain fishing report for this crisp winter morning. It's early January, and we're knee-deep in ice season—safe ice is key, check thickness often as it varies, per New York DEC guidelines.

    Weather's frigid today: highs hovering around 20°F with light winds from the northwest, partly cloudy skies. Sunrise kicked off at 7:22 AM, sunset at 4:37 PM—plenty of daylight for a solid session. No tides to worry about on Champlain, but current's steady in the rivers feeding in.

    Fish activity's heating up under the ice! Recent reports from IceFisher.com highlight lake trout going strong, with smallmouth bass, lakers, and panfish crushing lures in early ice, according to the Lake Champlain Fishing Report podcast on Spreaker from January 3rd. Anglers are pulling limits of 2-5 pound lakers and feisty smallies up to 4 pounds, plus perch and crappies in good numbers.

    Best lures right now: Jigging Rapala, Moonshine Shiver Minnow, or Northland Puppet Minnow for that minnow glide action through the ice hole—deadly on lakers and smallies. Tip-ups with live minnows or shiners for bait are slamming 'em too. For open water edges, finesse jigs like 1/4-ounce with Z-Man Finesse TRD, per Major League Fishing patterns.

    Hot spots: Missisquoi Bay for panfish and smallies—ice is building nice. And the deep shelves off Burlington for trophy lakers, 20-40 feet down.

    Bundle up, drill safe, and get out there—the bite's on!

    Thanks for tuning in, folks—subscribe for daily updates! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

    Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
    Show More Show Less
    2 mins
  • Champlain Fishing Forecast: Early Ice Action for Smallies, Lakers, and More
    Jan 3 2026
    Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your Lake Champlain fishing guru, comin' at ya live on this crisp January 3rd mornin', 8:35 AM sharp. Winter's grip is tight—temps hoverin' round 20°F with light snow flurries and northwest winds at 10-15 mph, accordin' to local forecasts. Sunrise was at 7:42 AM, sunset's 4:37 PM, givin' us a short 8-hour window. No tides here on Champlain, but water levels are steady low from recent cold snaps.

    Ice is formin' nice—11 Mile Marina reports 2-4 inches at Cross Creek as of January 1st, so bundle up and check thickness often, per NY DEC safety tips. Fish are active under the freeze: smallmouth bass, lake trout, and salmon preppin' for winter bites. Recent catches include steady smallies on jigs and Lakers hittin' deep spoons—anglers pullin' limits last few days near inlets.

    Best lures? Go with 1/4-oz jiggin' spoons in silver or glow for Lakers, and tube jigs or Ned rigs for smallies. Live bait shines—minnows or worms on tip-ups for perch and pike. Artificials rule my book, but herring chunks draw 'em in cold water.

    Hot spots: Cross Creek for early ice perch and bass, and the Missisquoi Delta shallows if you got 4+ inches—watch for wind drifts.

    Stay safe out there, drill test holes, and no heroes on thin stuff.

    Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for daily updates! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

    Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
    Show More Show Less
    2 mins