『Great Bear Early Summer: Cold Water, Bright Spoons, and Midnight Sun Bites』のカバーアート

Great Bear Early Summer: Cold Water, Bright Spoons, and Midnight Sun Bites

Great Bear Early Summer: Cold Water, Bright Spoons, and Midnight Sun Bites

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This is Artificial Lure with your Great Bear Lake fishing report. Out here on Great Bear, the big story is the **steady early‑summer pattern** locking in. No tides to worry about on this inland giant, but water levels are stable and cold, and that keeps the lake trout high and hungry when the light is low. Over in the community of Deline on the southwest arm, locals report a cool, clear morning, light northwest breeze and air temps climbing from just above freezing at dawn into the low teens Celsius by afternoon. High, bright sun midday has been pushing fish a bit deeper and tighter to structure. Sunrise is right around four in the morning, with sunset brushing close to midnight now, so there’s a huge window to work with, but the best bite has been **pre‑breakfast and late‑evening** when the light softens and the wind riffles the surface. Fish activity has been classic early‑season Great Bear. Shoreline ice is long gone in most bays, but the water is still cold enough that lake trout are cruising the top 20–40 feet. Lodges and local guides around the Dease and McTavish Arms report solid numbers of **5–15‑pound lakers**, with a good sprinkling of **20‑ to 30‑pound** fish and the odd true trophy needing two hands for the tail hold. Whitefish and grayling have been active in the river mouths and current necks, especially on overcast spells and when the wind pushes a chop against the gravel bars. Best producers right now have been **bright, flashy hardware**. Think 3–5 inch silver or nickel spoons with a dash of chartreuse or fluorescent orange, trolled slowly behind the boat. Locals are also leaning on big white or smelt‑pattern soft plastics on 1–2 ounce jig heads, either slow‑rolled just off bottom or yo‑yoed along drops. On calm, clear evenings, a simple white tube jig with a bit of scent has been outfishing everything in some bays. For bait, when regulations and lodge rules allow it, a thumbnail‑sized strip of lake herring or cisco on a spoon or jig head has been the ticket, adding scent without killing the action. Where you’ve got moving water and grayling, small single‑hook spinners in gold or copper and tiny nymph patterns under an indicator have been putting up numbers. If you’re planning a run, here are a couple of **hot spots** to keep in mind: - The **points and saddles at the mouth of the Dease Arm**, where deeper water swings up onto broken rock. Work those transitions from 20 to 60 feet, especially if you’ve got wind pushing in. - The **current seams and adjacent shelves near the Whitefish River mouth** on the main lake side. Trout, whitefish, and grayling have all been stacking there when the flow is up and the wind is right. With the long Arctic light, you can chase that low‑angle sun twice a day: sneak out just after first light for the shallow cruisers, then head back out after supper and fish until your arms are rubber and the sky refuses to get fully dark. That’s the word from Great Bear Lake. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a trip. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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