Home
Categories
EXPLORE
True Crime
Comedy
Society & Culture
Sports
Business
Technology
Health & Fitness
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
Loading...
0:00 / 0:00
Podjoint Logo
US
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts221/v4/52/a3/d5/52a3d571-fbf2-3ec9-46fe-7ed1add503e9/mza_13685736315302141463.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
Mississippi River Minneapolis Daily Fishing Report
Inception Point Ai
192 episodes
4 days ago
"Mississippi River, Minneapolis Daily Fishing Report" brings you the latest news, tips, and insights for anglers on the iconic waterway. Stay updated with daily reports on fishing conditions, weather, and seasonal trends. Perfect for both novice and expert fishermen looking to make the most of their time on the Mississippi River, this podcast is your go-to source for everything fishing in Minneapolis. Tune in and reel in the big catch!

For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease....

Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXk
Show more...
Places & Travel
Society & Culture,
News,
Daily News,
Sports
RSS
All content for Mississippi River Minneapolis Daily Fishing Report is the property of Inception Point Ai and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
"Mississippi River, Minneapolis Daily Fishing Report" brings you the latest news, tips, and insights for anglers on the iconic waterway. Stay updated with daily reports on fishing conditions, weather, and seasonal trends. Perfect for both novice and expert fishermen looking to make the most of their time on the Mississippi River, this podcast is your go-to source for everything fishing in Minneapolis. Tune in and reel in the big catch!

For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease....

Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXk
Show more...
Places & Travel
Society & Culture,
News,
Daily News,
Sports
Episodes (20/192)
Mississippi River Minneapolis Daily Fishing Report
Late October Lures on the Mighty Mississippi
This is Artificial Lure, reporting from the banks and bluffs along the mighty Mississippi in Minneapolis on this brisk Wednesday, October 29th, 2025. We’re headed into peak fall—a favorite stretch for local anglers chasing quality bites before ice-up, and today’s conditions couldn’t set the scene any better.

Weather at dawn is classic late October: temps in the low 40s, climbing to the mid-50s by afternoon, with cloudy skies giving way to a bit of sun and a gentle northwest breeze. CBS News Minnesota says the overnight rain has moved on, so the river edges are muddy, and flows are a tick up from last week but still on the low side—a pattern we’ve seen all fall with Minnesota DNR reporting near-record lows downstream in St. Paul. Expect sunrise at 7:44 AM and sunset at 6:07 PM. Plan to hit the water early for that classic fall bite window.

No tides to talk about here—it's a river system, but with the water low, structure and current breaks become magnets for fish. Shallow flats with nearby deep water are prime now. Jeff Sundin’s recent Minnesota Fishing Report notes water temps heading for the low 50s, which is when the big walleyes and saugers get feisty and the jumbo perch and crappies start sliding to accessible spots.

Fish activity’s been solid: Walleyes and saugers are the main ticket, with many reports of excellent catches on river bends and holes just down from vertical structures like the Franklin Avenue and Ford Parkway bridges. Several anglers this week tallied up mixed bags—three- and four-pound walleyes, saugers for the fryer, and the occasional crappie from the backwaters. The shallows just outside Minnehaha Creek and the flats below the Plymouth Avenue Bridge fished hot both morning and evening.

Best lures right now? Hands-down, vertical jigging with a frozen emerald shiner or fathead minnow is killer. Sundin points out that glow, gold and chartreuse jigs are converting most of the bigger fish, while pink and orange can turn slow streaks around, especially in stained water. You’ll want to tip your jig with a real minnow—live bait’s been out-producing soft plastics, but don’t count out a paddle tail or flutter spoon if you’re marking aggressive fish and the bite’s on.

Don’t forget about jumbo perch—when they go picky, a jig and a wax worm or sliver of crawler does the job. Pike are still lurking near weedbeds closer to shore; toss out a larger swimbait or spinner if you want to tangle with something bigger.

A couple of hot spots this week:
- **Hidden Falls Regional Park stretch (just above the locks):** Lots of current seams and drop-offs, frequent walleye catches, and bonus sauger mixed in.
- **Boom Island backwater:** Reliable for crappie, perch, and the odd smallmouth—but you’ll have to move slow and watch your electronics for suspended schools.

Bass action’s winding down, but some chunky smallmouth were reported at the mouth of Minnehaha Creek on tubes and Ned rigs—try a green pumpkin or smoke with silver flakes.

Keep an eye on the clock—a Solunar forecast puts the major activity between 5:23 AM-7:23 AM and again late afternoon 5:49 PM-7:49 PM. That sunrise and sunset window’s your best bet for a limit or trophy.

Thanks for tuning in, and if you enjoyed the report, don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss the local low-down. 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...
4 days ago
3 minutes

Mississippi River Minneapolis Daily Fishing Report
Late October Fishing Frenzy on the Mississippi River in Minneapolis
Artificial Lure here with your live fishing report for the Mississippi River and surrounding waters in Minneapolis on this crisp Tuesday, October 28, 2025.

Sunrise rolled in at 7:43 a.m. this morning, and sunset’s pegged for 6:11 p.m. We’re looking at classic late-October weather: highs in the mid-50s, waters cooling on the back of some deep autumn nights, and minimal wind—ideal for targeting both structure and seam waters. There’s no tidal activity here in the Minneapolis stretch of the Mississippi, but watch for current shifts after these cooler nights, as they’re stacking up bait and fish on inside bends and channel edges.

Now, fish activity’s been lively according to recurring reports: walleye are definitely on the chew, especially at dawn and dusk, plus on overcast days. You want to focus on 10 to 18 foot breaks and inside turns—work 1/8 to 1/4 oz jigs tipped with fatheads, or run a Jigging Rap right on breaks. Folks are sticking good eater walleye on Pool 1, and there’s been a surge around Lake Nokomis and Lake Harriet as well. If you’re angling for bass, smallmouth are pushing into current seams and midriver rocky rubble—think ned rigs or 3–4" swimbaits bounced right off the bottom.

Plenty of pike are lurking around the last of the green weeds, and a spinnerbait burnt over the tops is getting the reaction bites. Meanwhile, muskie activity’s picked right up in the deeper haunts—look for bait clouds over 12 to 20 feet and throw glide baits, big rubber, or slow-rolled bucktails.

Crappies are making their traditional slide out to those mid-depth basins. Side imaging helps you locate those tighter pods; once you’ve got them, suspend a hair jig or small plastic under a float and gently hover it in their zone.

Recent reports over on FishingReminder and echoed on local forums say that anglers are getting into some real mixed bags lately—good numbers for walleye, with bonus pike, the odd muskie, and consistent slabs for crappie anglers.

The river’s mood is definitely autumn—turnover’s finished for most metro lakes, so you want to prioritize clearer stretches. Clarity can vary, especially after windy periods, so keep an eye on water color and consider adding a scent or switching to live bait during short windows of activity—this trick’s drawn extra strikes when fish are just nipping.

For bait and lures, here’s your local rundown:
- For walleye: 1/8–1/4 oz jig with a fathead minnow or a Jigging Rap in blue/silver, gold, or chartreuse.
- For smallmouth: ned rigs in green pumpkin, 3–4" soft swimbaits on a jighead.
- For pike: white or firetiger spinnerbaits slow-rolled across weed edges.
- For muskie: gliders like the Phantom Softail, big rubber like a Medussa or Pounder, and classic black-nickel or orange bucktails.
- For crappie: small tube jigs or hair jigs (white, pink, chartreuse) under a float, with or without live minnow.

Hot spots you don’t want to miss right now:
- Hidden Falls Regional Park is holding fish on the seam off the main flow just upriver from the Ford Dam, particularly at dusk.
- Boom Island Park’s got some killer current breaks attracting both walleye and smallmouth.
- East Channel by Nicollet Island: work the eddies and rock outcroppings for mixed bag action.
- For crappies, Cedar Lake’s mid-depth basins have been reliable, especially mornings.

This October’s bite is prime, folks. Action is best at first and last light, and water clarity is your friend. Bring the right jig, play the breaks, and don’t be afraid to experiment with color as the light and water conditions keep shifting.

Thanks for tuning in to your Mississippi River, Minneapolis fishing report. If you got a limit or landed a river giant, send those photos in or let us know what you’re using. We’ll be right back with more tips, local knowledge, and real-time updates tomorrow, so make sure you...
Show more...
5 days ago
4 minutes

Mississippi River Minneapolis Daily Fishing Report
Fishing the Fall Bite on the Minneapolis Mississippi
Artificial Lure here with your Mississippi River, Minneapolis area fishing report for Monday, October 27, 2025.

What a fine late October day we've woken up to in the Twin Cities. According to CBS Minnesota’s latest forecast, we’re sliding into an unseasonably warm week, with highs today pushing into the low 60s by afternoon. The morning started cool in the 40s, but those lingering clouds from yesterday’s round of scattered rain are clearing, making way for a stretch of sun and perfect autumn weather. Wind’s gusting up to 30 mph, so watch your casts if you’re slipping the kayak in or working open banks. Sunrise hit at 7:44 AM, and sunset is at 6:13 PM tonight—plenty of light for a long session on the river.

If you’re tuning in for the tides, remember the upper Mississippi isn’t tidal, but river levels are running a tad low, just as they were the last few fall seasons, per CBS Minnesota. Boaters and shore casters alike might encounter exposed bank and rocky snags, especially near the locks and the University stretch—so double-check your launch points before backing down.

For fish activity, Solunar Forecast marks today’s top windows at 12:02–2:02 PM and a nice early minor period from 5:48–6:48 AM. Reports from the past couple weeks have shown walleye action heating up, especially with these chillier nights moving in. Anglers working the deeper runs between Boom Island and Ford Dam are boating eater-size walleye and the occasional fat sauger. You’ll also find plenty of smallmouth bass hugging current seams—recent catches in the 16- to 18-inch range have been reported on both jerkbaits and live minnows.

This week, local bait shops are pointing folks toward creek chubs and fatheads, especially during the midday bite. For artificial action, chartreuse or firetiger paddle tails on a 1/4 oz jighead are the ticket—with the river clearing up, that brighter flash is triggering more bites. Try slow-rolling those swimbaits along eddy seams, especially just downstream of the Plymouth Avenue Bridge. And don’t overlook blade baits: a silver or gold blade yo-yo’d off the bottom put several keeper walleyes in the net near St. Anthony Falls this weekend, according to reports from Mississippi River Minneapolis Daily Fishing.

Northern pike are still active, particularly along the grassy banks above the Lowry Avenue Bridge—best luck’s been on silver spoons and large white spinnerbaits. A few bonus channel catfish have been reported after dark using cut sucker near River Flats Park, and one local even hauled in a surprise flathead near the Ford Parkway Bridge late last week.

Hot spots for today:
- **Boom Island Park:** near the paddle share dock, targeting smallmouth and the odd walleye.
- **Below the Ford Dam:** use live minnows or brightly colored plastic tails—solid mixed bag area, just mind the current.
- **Lower Locks and Dam:** low water’s concentrated fish below the tailraces; walleyes and sauger on jigs and vertical presentations.

With leaves coloring the banks and sunny skies overhead, now’s the moment to fire up the coffee and slip out before the next chilly snap arrives. Stay safe around those shifting sandbars and exposed rocks—water levels can be tricky this time of year.

Thanks for tuning in to your Mississippi River, Minneapolis daily fishing fix with Artificial Lure. Don’t forget to hit subscribe for tomorrow’s fishing insight and all your local angling news. 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...
6 days ago
3 minutes

Mississippi River Minneapolis Daily Fishing Report
Autumn Bass Blitz on the Minneapolis Mississippi
Artificial Lure here with your October 26, 2025, Mississippi River fishing report for the Minneapolis stretch, bright and early. Weather’s crisp—overnight lows stayed just above freezing, but as the sun burns off the fog, look for highs climbing to the lower 50s. River conditions are steady: flow at Aitkin is hovering around 3,400 cubic feet per second, water levels are stable, and no flooding worries. It's classic autumn in Minnesota, with sunrise at 7:41 AM and sunset rolling in around 6:06 PM. No tidal swings this far upriver, so leave those saltwater strategies at home.

Fish activity is keeping things interesting. After chilly nights and light morning fog, the bite's been strongest mid-morning through the early afternoon. Solunar tables peg major activity from roughly noon to 2 PM, with a minor window just before sunrise—so set up early or hit hard at midday.

Recent catches have leaned heavy into **smallmouth bass** and **largemouth bass**. Reports from the B.A.S.S. Nation Championship say anglers are targeting wintering holes and edge basin irregularities—think drop-offs from 4 to 16 feet. Nick Trim landed three chunky smallmouth in one run plus a steady largemouth to finish his bag. Most locals this week report bass in the 2–3.5 lb range, with a few folks calling in bigger bruisers closer to downtown. **Freshwater drum**, **walleye**, and the occasional **pike** can also be found near deeper holes and merging current seams.

Best lures right now: nothing beats a 1/2-ounce jig, worked slow and near bottom contours. Cast Again Tackle’s Hammer Jig has been the winner for dragging along those deeper banks where bass are holed up. For finesse, ned rigs remain outstanding, especially when bass aren’t as aggressive after big temperature drops.

Surface bites are hit-or-miss, but on sunny stretches, **chatterbaits** and wacky-rigged stick baits are pulling bites from bass that push shallow to warm up. Don’t skimp on the classic Senko, and if you’re shore-bound, toss a ned rig or chatterbait and work it across dying vegetation—these fall weeds hold bait and attract hungry fish.

Live bait is mostly a backup plan; large, lively minnows or fathead chubs are reliable if the artificial bite slows down, especially for walleye and drum near the dams or tributary mouths. But locals are mostly sticking with artificials, with blade baits and deep-diving crankbaits putting fish in the net after a cold snap.

Hot spots:

- **Boom Island Park**: Structure, deep water close to shallows, strong recent bass and drum catches.
- **Ford Dam (Lock and Dam No. 1)**: Classic spot, mixing up species. Bass stack up below the spill, walleye hold near the outflows.
- **Hidden Falls Regional Park**: Great for shore casting, especially with finesse rigs after 10 AM.

If you’re headed out later this week, these conditions look solid—water temps are dropping, keeping bass on the feed before winter. Bundle up, bring a spare dry set, and always wear that life jacket as water temperatures drop.

Thanks for tuning in—don’t forget to hit subscribe and keep checking in.
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...
1 week ago
3 minutes

Mississippi River Minneapolis Daily Fishing Report
Late Fall Fishing Frenzy on the Upper Mississippi
Artificial Lure here, reporting on the Mississippi River bite around Minneapolis on this unseasonably warm late October day. Sunrise hit at 7:42 a.m. and sunset’s coming at 6:12 p.m.—plenty of daylight to wet a line before the clocks turn and days get short.

Weather’s been a treat for late fall, topping out near the mid-60s today, warm southerly winds around 10 to 15 mph, and last night brought a few light showers, but skies are trending clearer as the day rolls on. The next cold front isn’t set to arrive until early in the week, according to WCCO’s Friday weather reports. That means the water’s still warmer than usual, and the fish are active, especially with river flows trending down and clarity on the rise.

No tides to worry about up here—just river flows, which are hovering at 3,460 cfs around Aitkin with a gentle drop in recent days, per Snoflo’s latest flow report. That’s right in the sweet spot for comfortably working the seams and eddies, where fish stack up looking for bait.

Local tournament action on the Upper Mississippi’s been hot, with bass anglers hauling in some real slabs—Nick Trim landed over 21 pounds on day one of the B.A.S.S. Nation Championship, showing that both largemouth and smallmouth bass are feeding aggressively as they fatten up for winter, according to The Bass Cast. Crankbaits and blade baits took most fish, with buzzbaits and bladed jigs throwing plenty of water when bass were smashing baitfish mid-morning.

Right now, walleye are reliable around the river bends and below the dams, especially close to dusk and dawn. Walleye are coming on jig-and-minnow combos—fathead minnows, shiners, or just a 3-inch paddle tail in chartreuse or white. Northern pike are nosing into shallows, hitting large spinnerbaits and swimbaits, while the smallies keep hammering the rocks and riprap lines, especially near the confluence with Minnehaha Creek and below the Ford Dam.

Best lures this week:
- For bass—3/8 oz white and chartreuse spinnerbaits, chrome or gold blade baits, and crawfish-pattern crankbaits.
- For walleye—1/4 oz lead jigs tipped with live minnows, or plastics in bright colors.
- For pike—big flashy spinners and jointed swimbaits in perch or fire tiger.

The live bait bite’s solid. Fresh fatheads and creek chubs out-fish plastics when a cold spell moves in, but artificials are still out-catching bait around the midday warm-up. Stripers and sheepshead are spotty but turn up in the current seams below bridges. Sauger bites pick up as the night cools—work deeper tailwaters for those.

Hot spots today:
- Lilydale Pool below the 35E Bridge: classic fall staging ground, good mix of bass and walleye.
- The deep cut below the Ford Dam: smallmouth stack here, and walleye hold in the tailwaters.
- Pike Island confluence: current edges are loaded with baitfish, and everything from smallies to pike is on the hunt.

Some locals reported hauling in a dozen keepers in an afternoon—mostly smallmouth and a couple thick walleye—while others saw slow stretches but snagged a brute or two, especially on blade baits bounced slow across gravel bars.

Remember, keep an eye on your electronics for bait balls and watch for gulls diving—late fall means predator fish are pushing shad and minnows into tight pockets. If you hit a school, stick with it: the window’s small but hungry.

That’s today’s scoop from Artificial Lure—a classic late October pattern, fish eating hard whenever the river is stable and the sun peeks through. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more tips and river reports. 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...
Show more...
1 week ago
4 minutes

Mississippi River Minneapolis Daily Fishing Report
"Autumn's Bounty: Mississippi River Minneapolis Fishing Report for October 24, 2025"
Good morning from the riverbank—this is Artificial Lure with your Mississippi River Minneapolis fishing report for Friday, October 24, 2025. As the fall bite kicks into high gear, the river around Minneapolis is putting on a classic autumn show for anglers tough enough to brave the chill.

Weather this morning sees a definite bite in the air. Overnight frost cooled the water but fired up the fish; the current temp is in the mid-40s with a stiff northwest wind around 10-15 mph and a high expected in the upper 40s by late afternoon, just like the tournament weather downriver in La Crosse, Wisconsin yesterday. The sun climbed up at 7:40 AM and it'll dip below the bluffs at 6:13 PM tonight; that's a solid window of daylight to put your time in the prime feeding hours. According to Solunar Forecast, your best shot at peak fish activity falls late morning to early afternoon, right as waters warm a bit.

While the upper Mississippi near Minneapolis isn’t tidal, the flow is still up after those frosty nights, pushing baitfish into eddies and backwaters—classic set-ups for fall bass. Water clarity is fair to good despite the low levels reported in downtown St. Paul this week. You’ll want to approach shallow spots quietly and target deeper holes as the day progresses.

The action has definitely heated up. Reports out of the B.A.S.S. Nation Championship in La Crosse, just downstream, show that both largemouth and smallmouth bass are on the prowl. Day 1 totals blew up with Nick Trim bagging a five-fish limit at 21 pounds, including a chunky 6-pound smallmouth—he relied on local knowledge to find where the fish migrate as temperatures drop. The championship’s first-day weigh-in also showed more than 1,000 fish caught, with 156 five-fish limits landed, most in 17- to 21-pound ranges, and those conditions track with what we see upriver in Minneapolis today.

Right here in the Minneapolis stretch, local guides and regulars are boating mixed bags—solid numbers of bass, with bonus northern pike and a few surprisingly feisty channel catfish. Walleye are starting to hit in the evenings and just before sunrise. Anglers are reporting “good numbers” of eater-sized fish in city stretches as well as just upstream near the Coon Rapids Dam, where current seams and hard breaks are prime. As for panfish, crappie schools can be found roaming deeper pools now that weed lines are dying back.

For lures, fall means go big and go natural. Locals are hammering fish on dark colored jigs tipped with plastic craws or swimbaits, crankbaits in silver and chartreuse, and blade baits—anything that mimics a dying shad or minnow gets crushed. Topwater action has slowed with the cooler temps, but don’t rule out a hefty chatterbait or spinnerbait around midday if you find active fish on the flats. Nightcrawlers and fathead minnows on a jig or live-bait rig work magic for walleye or channel cats, especially if you’re fishing from shore or slow-drifting. Circle hooks keep the bite safe for catch and release.

If you’re searching for a hot spot, try Boom Island Park for urban shore casting, or head upriver to North Mississippi Regional Park—both are kicking out quality bass and an occasional trophy pike, with easy access and good parking. Deeper current breaks below the Ford Dam and the confluence at Minnehaha Creek are also producing, mainly as the sun warms those stretches mid-morning.

Keep an eye out for posted PFAS advisories, especially in Pool 2 between St. Paul’s Ford Dam and Hastings; catch and release is always a good choice in red-flag waters. Water safety is crucial: colder flows sap body heat fast, so layer up and use caution at the boat ramp.

That wraps up today’s Mississippi River fishing outlook. Pack the gloves, keep your bait handy, and chase those river giants while the bite is hot. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for your daily river update.
Show more...
1 week ago
4 minutes

Mississippi River Minneapolis Daily Fishing Report
"Mississippi Autumn Bounty: Smallies, Walleyes & Solunar Forecast"
Fishing action on the Mississippi River around Minneapolis is picking up as the fall chill sets in, and anglers are finding good numbers of smallmouth bass and some walleyes, especially in those deeper holes and current breaks that define the fall bite. According to Minnesota Outdoor News, larger minnows are coaxing more of those bronzebacks and the occasional 'eye to strike, with the pattern holding steady through this week. Water temperatures are sliding slowly downward, hovering in the mid-to-high 50s, which usually means active fish feeding ahead of the coming cold.

This morning, the river’s flow upstream near Aitkin is on the lower side for the season, running about 3,460 cubic feet per second, but that’s still plenty of current to keep bait moving and hold fish near structural breaks. The river levels are a bit low historically—CBS News Minneapolis notes this section has recently registered some of its lowest autumn gauges ever, so check access points for low ramps and log jams.

The weather for Thursday, October 23rd, is a classic fall setup for the Twin Cities with clear skies early, a crisp low around 37°F, and a high topping out near 60°F as the sun makes a full show. The sun pokes up at 7:40 AM and ducks back down at 6:16 PM. Winds will be light, making for comfortable conditions on the water. According to FishingReminder, today is rated an excellent day for fishing, aligning to the Solunar tables which show major activity peaking from 3:27 to 5:27 PM and a minor but promising window from 8:01 to 9:01 AM.

Anglers this week have been landing numbers of smallmouth bass on the river’s sharper bends and below the key dams—down by the Ford Dam and the stretch running through downtown Minneapolis have seen some eager fish. Reports are that the big ones are coming on larger creek chubs or flashy jigs tipped with live minnows, especially where the water breaks into a deeper hole or behind mid-river islands. Walleyes are still holding tight to the bottom, but a few nice catches have come from jigging with fatheads in that 10-18 foot range.

The bait of choice lately has been a jig and minnow combo—chartreuse and orange have been the hot head colors. For lures, mid-sized crankbaits, particularly in shad or firetiger patterns, are producing walleyes in the evening. Anglers targeting smallies have seen action on 3.5” tubes in green pumpkin and natural crayfish colors, along with spinnerbaits slow-rolled along current seams.

If you’re looking for a few hot spots:
- The area just below the Plymouth Avenue Bridge has been reliable, especially before mid-morning.
- The tailrace below the Ford Dam continues to hold both bass and walleye.
- The banks between Boom Island and Nicollet Island are stacked with baitfish and are well worth a cast, particularly as evening bites start to ramp in late afternoon.

On the bait front, live minnows are out-fishing plastics for walleyes, but don’t be afraid to throw a paddle-tail or jerkbait to cover more water if things slow.

Last note—remember, Pool 2 between the Ford and Hastings dams is strictly catch-and-release for walleye, sauger, and northern pike, thanks to ongoing Minnesota DNR regulations, so snap a quick picture and let ‘em go to fight another day.

Thanks for tuning in to this Mississippi River fishing report with me, Artificial Lure. If you found this update helpful, make sure to subscribe for more local fishing intelligence. 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...
1 week ago
4 minutes

Mississippi River Minneapolis Daily Fishing Report
Mississippi River Fishing Report Minneapolis Highlights - Catfish, Walleyes, Pikes Biting Now
Hey there, folks I'm Artificial Lure, your go-to fishing expert around here. Today, I'm excited to share with you the latest fishing report for the Mississippi River in Minneapolis.

Weather-wise, it's a bit chilly with highs in the mid-40s and windy conditions after last night's rain clears up. Sunrise is at about 7:38 AM, and sunset will be around 6:21 PM. The Mississippi River is flowing pretty steadily, with no significant tidal changes, but the current can be strong, so be prepared.

Fish activity has been decent, with recent catches of catfish, walleyes, and northern pikes. The best lures to use right now are jigs with live bait or crankbaits that mimic baitfish. For bait, big minnows or nightcrawlers are always winners.

Two hot spots to check out areочь the Ford Dam area and just below the Xcel Energy plant. These spots are known for their good structure and consistent fish activity.

Thanks for tuning in Remember to subscribe for more fishing insights. 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...
1 week ago
1 minute

Mississippi River Minneapolis Daily Fishing Report
Mississippi River Fishing Report - Minneapolis October 2025
Fishing Report: Mississippi River, Minneapolis – Tuesday, October 21, 2025
Hey, anglers and river rats, it's Artificial Lure, your local fishing pulse, here with the real deal from the banks, backwaters, and bridges of the Mighty Miss in the Cities. Let’s get right to it.

## Weather and Conditions
We’re coming off a stretch of rain and wind that rolled through over the weekend, courtesy of a system that dropped moderate to heavy rain across the Midwest, including the metro area. This week, things are set to dry out—Tuesday morning saw lingering showers, but by this afternoon, skies should start clearing, and this warmer trend should hold through midweek. After these storms, the river’s up from last week’s historically low marks, but don't expect a dramatic boost—the recent rainfall, according to DTN Ag Weather, is just a bump, and water levels are still on the shy side by fall standards. That said, the extra flow has greened up the flats and added some current to the holes, which always gets the bite going.

## Sunrise and Sunset
Sunrise today is right around 7:45 AM, and sunset comes at about 6:30 PM. That means plenty of daylight for exploring your favorite stretches, with prime light at both ends of the day.

## Tidal Report
There are no real tides here on the Upper Mississippi, but we do watch the river flow—right now, that extra runoff is stirring up the channels and giving fish something new to chase. In other words, it’s “turning on” the buffet, and you should be there.

## Fish Activity and Recent Catches
The bite’s been a mixed bag, but if you’re hunting for walleye, smallmouth, and channel cats, you’re in luck. Local folks out after the rain have been pulling in decent numbers of ‘eyes and smallies, especially around structure—laydowns, riprap, and deeper holes where the current breaks. Catfish action has picked up too, thanks to the freshened water and stirred-up bottom. If you’re in the know, you’ve heard about a few pike and even a surprise muskie or two hitting crankbaits in the early morning. No monster reports yet, but plenty of eaters and some solid catches for the stories.

Over on the city side, word on the docks is that panfish—crappie and sunfish—are up shallow in the slackwater eddies, especially near the willows and old pilings. Bring a light jig and a sensitive rod, and you’ll fill a bucket before lunch.

## Best Lures and Bait
If you’re after walleye, stick with classic minnows (shiners have been hot), leeches, or a slow-dragged jig tipped with a fathead. For smallmouth, nothing beats a white or green tube jig, especially with a little current. Topwater plugs have also been getting smacked at first light—buzzbaits and poppers are your best bet if you want to wake up the big guys.

Crappie and panfish? Small jigs under a slip bobber or a tiny grub on a 1/32-ounce jig head. The bait shop regulars swear by waxies and spikes this time of year, but a chunk of worm never hurts.

## Hot Spots
If you’re looking for action, try the downstream side of the Ford Dam—current breaks and eddies here always hold walleye and cats after a rise. Another legendary spot is the stretch from Boom Island north to Camden Bridge—smallmouths stack up along the rocky points and deep cutbanks. For panfish, sneak into the backwaters off Hidden Falls and Crosby—quiet, weedy, and full of crappie right now.

For the adventurous, hit the river mouth at Minnehaha Creek—the extra flow has pushed baitfish in, and the predators are following.

## Etiquette and Safety
Remember, it’s October. Water’s cold, and conditions can change fast. Wear your life jacket, keep an eye on the weather, and let someone know where you’re fishing. Oh, and if you see another angler, give ‘em a nod or a wave—Minnesota nice extends to the river, too.

## Wrap-Up
The river’s waking up...
Show more...
1 week ago
4 minutes

Mississippi River Minneapolis Daily Fishing Report
Mississippi River Fishing Report for Minneapolis Anglers
Artificial Lure checking in with this morning’s Mississippi River fishing report for all you Twin Cities anglers. The sun poked up today at 7:33 a.m. and we’re looking at sunset just after 6:24 p.m. It’s a classic late-October morning in Minneapolis — temps starting cool in the low 40s, likely warming to the low 60s. Clouds are hanging in, but rain is holding off ’til at least tomorrow, according to WCCO’s meteorologist Katie Steiner. So you’ve still got a comfortable window for some solid river action before the weather turns[16].

Tide won’t factor in up here, but water levels remain on the low side. That means watch those launches and rocky shorelines — more props than ever are getting dings this fall, as local boat shops will tell you. The river’s pinch is also funneling fish into deeper runs and pools, so target those channel edges[3].

Fish activity this week is picking up, with water cooling out of the 60s into the mid-50s. The fall bite is officially on. According to area guides and recent trip reports, folks have been putting excellent numbers of walleye, smallmouth bass, and channel catfish in the net. Several shore anglers along Boom Island and the mouth of Minnehaha Creek reported catching eater-sized walleyes and some three-to-four-pound smallmouth overnight this weekend[9]. Catfishers working the flats below the Ford Dam are showing off 10 to 15-pounders, mostly on cut sucker and stink bait. Sunfish and crappie have been slower but are starting to school up tightly around rip-rap and bridge pilings as water temps drop.

Peak fishing times today according to the Solunar Forecast are running from 12:02 to 2:02 p.m., with a minor pre-dawn bite around 5:48 to 6:48 a.m. If you missed the early window, mid-afternoon should still be hopping, especially with warmer clouds sticking around[5].

For lure selection, local wisdom leans hard into bright chartreuse or fire tiger jig plastics and deep-diving crankbaits. This low water and cool clarity make anything with a little flash and rattle stand out. Jig and minnow combos are deadly for walleye on current breaks — especially around the mouth of Bassett Creek and right below the Stone Arch Bridge. Smallmouth have crushed shallow-running square bills in craw patterns, and anglers float-tripping from the U of M to downtown are reporting solid topwater blow-ups at first light on walk-the-dog style baits.

Live bait is still king in colder temps: fathead minnows on a slip float for crappie and sucker chunks for those cats. Local bait shops are well-stocked, so always check the fresh minnow bins before you launch.

For hot spots this week, the east bank down from the University of Minnesota is lighting up, with deep eddy pockets holding everything from smallies to giant redhorse. Hidden Falls Park is another tried-and-true spot — lots of easy shore access, decent current seams, and a nice mix of depths. Early risers are reporting bonus northern pike on swimbaits in the slack water along the lily edges.

Safety reminder: the river banks are slick, and flows are down but tricky. There was a recent rescue near East River Flats Park, so watch your footing and keep it safe, especially if you’re bouncing between rocks or launching solo[13].

Thanks for tuning in to your Mississippi River Minneapolis fishing report. Be sure to subscribe and never miss the next update. 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...
1 week ago
3 minutes

Mississippi River Minneapolis Daily Fishing Report
Fishing the Mississippi in Minneapolis: Fall Bite, Prime Spots and Solunar Timings
Artificial Lure reporting live for the Mississippi River, Minneapolis, on this chilly Sunday morning, October 19, 2025. The sun poked up at 7:33 am and will dip back down at 6:22 pm, giving us nearly 11 hours of daylight—enough to make the most of a classic fall bite according to solunarforecast.com.

Weather-wise, yesterday saw temps in the mid-60s and overnight things dropped into that crisp 30s and 40s range. Today is shaping up to be perfect autumn fishing—cool and stable, with just a touch of breeze, making the morning and late afternoon prime time for casting lines, says CBS Minnesota’s latest weekend forecast.

Mississippi River flow is typical for mid-October, no recent rain-outs or flooding in this Minneapolis stretch. Water clarity remains decent, especially in the main channel. No tidal influences here—Minnesota’s not coastal—so the bite is driven by sunlight and water temps cooling off day by day.

Fish activity’s been steady this week. Local anglers pulled in a mixed bag: solid numbers of smallmouth bass, a few chunky walleyes, and the occasional northern pike. Catfish are still being picked up near the deep holes and eddies, mostly channel cats up to 8 pounds. Anglers out of Boom Island and just below the falls by the Stone Arch Bridge reported the bass were smashing craw-colored jigs and crankbaits late in the afternoon while walleyes were hitting on jigs tipped with fathead minnows at dusk, according to conversations at the landing and area bait shops.

Hot spots to check today:
- The riprap and tailwaters below the Ford Dam—always a fall classic for mixed species.
- Hidden Falls Regional Park, which has decent bank access and steady catfish action, especially for those soaking cut bait.

Best bite periods, as mapped out by the solunar tables, are around 4:23 pm to 6:23 pm for majors, and a minor uptick from 8:29 am to 9:29 am. If you can only sneak away a few hours, shoot for those windows.

Bait and lures:
- For bass, stick with medium-diving crankbaits in firetiger or craw patterns, or go with three-inch tube jigs on an 1/8 ounce head.
- Walleye anglers should keep things simple: chartreuse or orange jigs paired with live fatheads or half-crawlers.
- Pike are showing a preference for large spinners (think #5 Mepps or similar) and white paddletail swimbaits.
- For catfish, cut sucker or fresh shrimp fished on the bottom will get the nod.

Boat launches and banks have not been crowded—no major events or closures today—so there’s plenty of room to find your own pocket of water.

No tropical weather issues heading our way, per Tennessee Valley Weather, so waters will stay calm.

Thanks a ton for tuning in to today’s on-the-water update. For daily tips and river reports from yours truly, make sure you subscribe so you never miss a bite. 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...
2 weeks ago
3 minutes

Mississippi River Minneapolis Daily Fishing Report
Autumn Anglers: Chasing Big Fish on the Mighty Mississippi in Minneapolis
Artificial Lure here with your Mississippi River fishing report for Minneapolis, Saturday, October 18th, 2025. Here’s what you can expect as you plan your day on the water.

Sunrise hit at 7:28 a.m. and sunset will be around 6:23 p.m. today, giving you solid daylight hours to work the river. Weather’s typical October fare: partly cloudy skies, a high reaching about 60°F, and a light northwest breeze. It’s perfect jacket weather—crisp but not bitter, with riverbanks crackling underfoot and scattered golden leaves on the water.

The river itself is running low for the third straight year, driven by a combination of drought and limited rainfall. According to local coverage, barge traffic’s getting squeezed, but for us anglers, lower, clearer water means predators are bunched up in classic fall holding spots—current breaks, backside of islands, and deeper pools below major riffles.

Fish activity is picking up after the recent rains broke up a long dry spell. According to solunar forecasts for Minneapolis, the best fishing periods today are lining up early—a minor activity spike from about 7:20 a.m. to 8:20 a.m., then a longer major bite window from 3:50 p.m. to nearly 6 p.m. With a waning crescent moon and cool temps overnight, expect fish to stay low until sunlight warms the water a touch.

Recent catches have been classic for October on the Upper Mississippi: walleye are feeding heavily, a few pushing past 22 inches, with steady reports at Boom Island and around the mouth of Minnehaha Creek. Smallmouth bass action has been hot, especially on rocky points near the Stone Arch Bridge and at the confluence of the Rum River, with anglers catching multiple fish per outing—several in the 17-20 inch class. Channel catfish are consistent for bank anglers fishing cut bait after dusk south of Lake Street Bridge, while jumbo perch and an occasional northern pike are being landed from shore at the Hidden Falls area and below Ford Dam.

For lures, nothing’s beating bright chartreuse or firetiger crankbaits for walleye and smallies right now, especially those with a tight wobble. Jig-and-plastic combos in pumpkinseed or smoke color are working well, bounced slow along current seams. If you’re after pike, toss a big silver spoon or a spinnerbait near snags and submerged timber. Live bait anglers are getting results on fathead minnows or nightcrawlers drifted below a slip float, particularly in slower water. Catfish are hitting on cut sucker and chicken liver.

If you’re looking for hot spots, give East River Flats Park a hard look—especially early and late in the day. The rip-rap and drop-offs hold everything from walleye to smallmouth, and it’s easy to access. Another favorite is Hidden Falls—great for families, with deep pools that attract a mixed bag this time of year.

There’s still a peacetime emergency downstream for high water, but around Minneapolis, flooding isn’t a major concern today—just take extra care on slippery banks and don’t crowd the low, exposed shoreline.

Whether you’re a diehard river rat or visiting for the weekend, this is the absolute prime window to chase big fish before the water chills up for good. Remember, the best action is often just as the sun’s getting low, so don’t pack up too early.

Thanks for tuning in to this edition of the Mississippi River fishing report. Don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss local tips and updates. 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...
2 weeks ago
3 minutes

Mississippi River Minneapolis Daily Fishing Report
October 17th Fishing Report: Walleye, Smallmouth, and More on the Mississippi in Minneapolis
Hey there, fish fanatics! Artificial Lure coming at you live from the banks of the mighty Mississippi, right here in Minneapolis. Let’s get right to the good stuff—real, on-the-water intel for October 17th, 2025.

**Weather & Water Conditions**
We’re smack in the heart of fall, and the nights have finally started cooling down, dropping surface temps on the metro lakes into the low-to-mid 50s. According to FishingReminder, turnover is mostly done, but clarity can vary, especially after a windy day—bring a variety of lures and be ready to adjust. There’s a light breeze in the forecast, which should put just enough chop on the water to keep walleye prowling the shallows at dawn and dusk. No tides to speak of—we’re freshwater here, folks—so wind and light drive our action. Sunrise today hits at 7:34 AM, sunset at 6:27 PM, so plan your trips for first and last light for the best odds.

**What’s Biting**
Walleye are showing up strong on Lake Harriet, Nokomis, and Pool 1 of the Mississippi—look for ‘em on those classic 10–18 foot breaks, especially on the inside turns. Jigs in the 1/8–1/4 oz range, tipped with fatheads or finesse minnows, are getting bit. If you want to trigger the big girls, try a Jigging Rap—nothing slams like that erratic action. Smallmouth bass are pushing into current seams and hugging midriver rubble piles; a ned rig or a 3–4" swimbait bounced just off the bottom is money. Muskie are starting to make some noise—look for bait clouds suspended over deeper holes (12–20 feet), and work glide baits, big rubber, or slow-rolled bucktails through those schools. Northern pike are playing hide-and-seek in the last green weeds—burn spinnerbaits over the tops, and you’ll get crushed. Crappies? They’ve slid to mid-depth basins. Find them on your electronics and drop a small hair jig or plastic under a slip float. Remember, after turnover, the clearest water (even if it’s just a little clearer) holds the most active fish—add some scent or live bait to seal the deal if the bite is slow.

**Baits & Lures Working Now**
- **Walleye:** 1/8–1/4 oz jigs with fatheads or minnows, Jigging Rap, vertical jigging with frozen shiners
- **Smallmouth:** Ned rigs, 3–4" swimbaits, craw tubes
- **Muskie:** Glide baits, big rubber, bucktails
- **Northern:** Spinnerbaits, jerkbaits
- **Crappie:** Small hair jigs, plastics under slip floats

**Hot Spots to Hit**
- **Lake Harriet & Nokomis:** Reliable for walleye right now, especially around the edges and first breaks.
- **Pool 1 of the Mississippi:** Find smallmouth on current seams and rubble; walleye stack on the inside turns.
- **Windward Points & Channel Edges:** After a blow, bait stacks up here—so do the predators. Fish them hard.

**Recent Catch Reports**
From the FishingReminder crew, anglers are putting walleye in the boat consistently, along with bonus smallmouth and the occasional surprise muskie. Pike are plentiful for those willing to work the weeds, and crappie action is steady if you target those offshore basins. No wild numbers, but quality fish that’ll put a bend in your rod.

**A Word on Safety & Conservation**
The Mississippi is running low—downtown St. Paul is actually registering its fourth-lowest level ever, says CBS Minnesota—so be extra careful navigating, especially if you’re new to the river. Also, be aware that PFAS (forever chemicals) have been found in fish from Pool 2—check DNR guidelines before keeping your catch.

**Final Tips**
If the sun’s high, head deeper and slow down. Overcast? Stay shallow and cover water. When the wind picks up, fish the windward side—that’s where the bait, and the gamefish, stack up.

Thanks for tuning in, everyone! If you found this report helpful, don’t be a stranger—subscribe, share, and get out there. Tight lines, and remember: the fish are always right—we’re...
Show more...
2 weeks ago
4 minutes

Mississippi River Minneapolis Daily Fishing Report
Chasing Fall Fish on the Mississippi River Around Minneapolis
Artificial Lure here with your Wednesday, October 15th fishing report, live from the heart of the Mississippi River around Minneapolis.

Sunrise rolled in at 7:24 a.m., bringing a misty autumn chill to the banks. Expect a high near 54°F today, with brisk west winds topping 15 mph — that’ll put a chop on the water and help fire up the bite. A weak cold front is still lingering; water temps are riding in the mid-60s but dropping fast. Sunset sets at 6:30 tonight, so it’s a noticeably shorter day for chasing those fall fish.

There’s no meaningful tidal swing up here on this stretch of the river, but solunar forecasts from SolunarForecast.com call for a solid “Better” rating today. Minor feeding windows hit around 6:26 to 7:26 a.m. and again from 9:38 to 10:38 p.m., with the major bite peaking from 1:26 to 3:26 p.m.—so plan to be in a good spot about lunchtime.

You’ll find walleye, smallmouth bass, sauger, catfish, crappie, and an occasional northern pike bending rods this week. Outdoor News ran a headline on a recent 22-inch walleye caught just upriver from downtown – that’s a good sign the fall run’s coming on strong. Reports from river regulars mention good numbers, with mixed bags coming off the wing dams, deep holes below the dams, and eddies at creek mouths.

Walleye are the main draw, clustering in 12 to 20 feet of water along deeper runs and current seams. Best approach: vertical jigging with a 1/4-ounce jig tipped with a fathead or rainbow minnow. If you can get your hands on frozen emerald shiners at the local bait shop, those are hammering the keepers right now — they’re matching the river forage perfectly, according to Lake of the Woods guides, and it’s just as true in the Mississippi system.

Lure selection: chartreuse/gold, orange, and glow white jigs are putting fish in the net. If you’re casting artificials, go with paddle-tail swimbaits or soft jerkbaits in natural shad or perch patterns. Bass anglers should downsize and work Ned rigs or tubes along riprap and rock piles. Crappie are beginning their annual push into shallower backwaters and creek mouths; small crappie jigs tipped with a wax worm are a deadly combo.

Live bait edges out plastics today, given the water temp dips, but crankbaits can still work around afternoon when the water warms a hair on sunny stretches.

For hot spots, head below the Ford Dam (Lock & Dam #1) — this area’s famous for late-season mixed bags, especially if you target the deeper outside bends below the dam. Another reliable stretch is right off Boom Island Park down to the Plymouth Avenue Bridge — plenty of rocky structure, current breaks, and baitfish. Don’t overlook the mouth of Minnehaha Creek for a shot at bonus catfish and some slab crappie in the wood.

River level’s low near downtown St. Paul (fourth lowest ever, per CBS Minnesota), so some back channels might be tough to access by boat but perfect for shoreline casting. The low, clear conditions mean approach quietly — lighter line and longer casts help on those shallows.

To sum up: this is the week to be on the river. Dress warm, bring your jig rods, extra minnows, and a hot thermos. The best bite’s right in the heart of the city.

Thanks for tuning in to today’s Mississippi River fishing report, and don’t forget to subscribe for more daily river intelligence. 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...
2 weeks ago
3 minutes

Mississippi River Minneapolis Daily Fishing Report
October Mississippi River Fishing Report
Good morning from the riverbanks—Artificial Lure here with your October 12, 2025, Mississippi River fishing report straight out of Minneapolis.

We woke up this morning to the kind of fall day that gets anglers moving early. Sunrise came in at 7:21 a.m. and we’re looking at sunset tonight at 6:40 p.m., so you’ve got a solid window for both that early bite and a late run before dusk. Weather is about as classic mid-October as it gets: crisp, with a light morning breeze around 8 mph, temps bouncing from the mid-40s at dawn and climbing to near 70 by late afternoon. Clouds are high and thin, perfect cover for both anglers and fish.

No tides to report since, as usual, the Mississippi here is upriver from any tidal influence, but recent steady levels and clear flow mean stability, and that’s what we like for this time of year.

Let’s get down to the fish: Walleye and sauger are staging below the locks and dams—Pool 2’s tailwaters and the Ford Dam area are seeing solid catches. River walleyes are biting best from late morning into afternoon as the sun warms the shallows. Jigs tipped with fathead minnows are getting it done—chartreuse and orange seem to be the hot colors this week, paired with a 3" twister tail or ringworm-style soft plastic for flash and action. Bring some leeches and shiners as backup; Terry Tuma from Outdoor News notes these are consistent producers during the fall bite.

Smallmouth bass are aggressive right now, especially around rocky riprap stretches and current seams. The mayfly hatch we had late last week slowed things, but now those bass are keying in on crankbaits, tubes, and Ned rigs bounced off the bottom. For better numbers, work the eddies near Pike Island and north towards the Camden Bridge. Ned rigs with green pumpkin or brown have put many bronzebacks on the board this weekend.

If you’re chasing panfish—crappies and perch—work any deeper holes off channel edges or the mouths of backwater cuts. Small jigs tipped with waxies or minnow pieces are the ticket, and lightweight floats help you keep in contact.

Northern pike are starting to seek out dying weed beds near the mouths of Minnehaha Creek and Boom Island channel. Large spoons and white spinnerbaits flash nice in this clearer water, so don’t be afraid to upsize your offering.

Here’s a quick note on recent catches: Thoughtful locals reported limits of eater-size walleyes from the Ford Dam stretch, plus healthy smallies up to 18 inches throughout the downtown reach. Late-season channel cats are still around in slow water; a few folks found them using cut bait after sunset just downriver from the Lowry Avenue Bridge.

Hot spots to hit today:
- **Ford Dam (Lock & Dam No. 1):** Great for both walleye and sauger—work the current seams and rocky shore.
- **Boom Island Park Backwaters:** Steady panfish action, plus pike roaming as the weeds die back.

Remember, as the water cools, fish metabolism slows, so downsize those presentations and fish a touch slower—patience pays off big in October.

Thanks for tuning in to this river run-down—remember to subscribe so you don’t miss out on the weekly action and tips straight from the water.

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...
3 weeks ago
3 minutes

Mississippi River Minneapolis Daily Fishing Report
Fall Fishing on the Mississippi - Minneapolis Report 2025
Mississippi River anglers, this is Artificial Lure with your Saturday, October 11th, 2025 fishing report straight from Minneapolis.

The Twin Cities is enjoying classic fall weather: early-morning temps dipping just above freezing before climbing to an afternoon high in the upper 60s, all under sunny skies. Sunrise hit at 7:22 a.m. today, and sunset will come at 6:38 p.m. We’ve had a stretch of dry, pleasant days, and that’s ignited fantastic fall color in the trees and brisk movement of both bait and sport fish, according to KAXE’s phenology update. So bundle up early, but expect layers to come off by noon.

Water levels on the Mississippi are steady but have recovered from the near-historic lows of September. CBS Minnesota notes that local flooding concerns have receded since last week's crest, making shore and bank access safer—though keep an eye out for persistent soft mud and the occasional debris pile left from high water.

Fish activity is strong with cooling water temperatures kicking up the metabolism of our resident species. Recent reports from the Mississippi River Minneapolis Daily Fishing Report show catfish, walleye, and both largemouth and smallmouth bass active through dawn and dusk, with northern pike and decent numbers of crappie coming off deeper eddies and slackwater pockets. A few muskie have been sighted too, though the bite is mostly hit-or-miss.

Best action has come on moderate-sized jigs tipped with plastics, especially paddle tails in white, chartreuse, and gold. If you’re targeting walleye, try a firetiger or perch-pattern crankbait, or bounce a jig-and-minnow along the current breaks. Many anglers leaning into live bait have done well—fathead minnows and cut sucker for catfish, nightcrawlers for a solid mixed bag. For bass, a 3–4 inch green pumpkin tube or a spinnerbait slow-rolled through structure will draw strikes. Topwater action is fading but you might still coax a smallie up during evening warmth.

Recent catches in the area have included channel cats averaging 2 to 6 pounds, walleye mostly in the 15–22 inch bracket, and bass with both numbers and good size—plenty of 1.5 to 3 pounders, a handful over four. Crappie are starting to pile up tight to submerged wood, especially near creek mouths.

Two hot spots worth your time:

- **Boom Island to the Plymouth Avenue Bridge**—Shore anglers are reporting steady bass and pike on swim jigs and chatterbaits along the weed edges. Plenty of accessible rock and current seams.
- **Below the Ford Dam (Lock & Dam No. 1)**—Classic fall walleye run territory, especially in the early morning. Drift a jig-and-minnow or work a Deep Diver along the edges; some reports hint at bonus sauger mixed in.

Word to the wise: after sunrise, move deeper as fish transition off shallow rocks and move to deeper pools and current shadows. By mid-morning, focus on vertical presentation—jigging or slowly-drifting soft plastics near the bottom.

No tidal swings here, but river flow and clarity should hold stable barring heavy weekend rain. Boat launches are open, but give the launch crews a smile—boating on Minnesota waters is in full swing, supporting jobs and local business, as CBS Minnesota recently highlighted.

That's your Mississippi River Minneapolis fishing report for October 11th, 2025. Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure. Don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss the bite. 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...
3 weeks ago
3 minutes

Mississippi River Minneapolis Daily Fishing Report
Crisp Fall Bite on the Mississippi: Walleye, Sauger, and More Await Anglers in Minneapolis
This is Artificial Lure, checking in riverside with a quick Minneapolis fishing report for October 10, 2025.

We’re waking to crisp, classic fall weather—temps are starting out near 40°F and climbing to the low 60s by afternoon, with mostly clear skies and only a light breeze. Sunrise hit at 6:51am, sunset’s at 7:25pm—so you’ve got a generous window to wet a line. Peak fish activity is right around now: the major bite started at 7:19am and will run strong to 9:19am, then things should heat up again this evening between 7:39 and 9:39pm. On a third-quarter moon and clear skies, conditions are set for steady action all day according to FishingReminder and the solunar tables.

The Mississippi through downtown has seen solid fall walleye movement this week, especially around inside and outside weed edges and adjacent rock structure. According to TargetWalleye, now is prime time—walleyes are pushing shallower, keying in on the last patches of green weeds and cruising the breaklines. Fish are also feeding hard ahead of the winter slowdown.

The best recent catches have come early and late in the day from the Pool 1 section around Saint Anthony Falls, Boom Island, and down by the Lower Lock and Dam. Walleye up to 26 inches have been reported, sometimes 60–70 fish mornings for groups working these deeper ledges with the right presentation, as tournament crews described just last weekend. Along with walleye, sauger, the occasional big smallmouth, and even flathead catfish are showing up; there are scattered reports of pike and a bonus white bass or two near creek mouths.

When it comes to tactics, you can’t beat classic river choices. Crankbaits like the Rapala DT10 in fire tiger, hot mustard, or red crawdad are producing before the sun gets too high. Try casting parallel to rocky breaks or right along the weed edge. As the day sets in and the bite gets picky, switch to jig-and-plastic combos—chartreuse or motor oil paddle tails on 1/4 oz Deep-V style jigs are delivering bites. Live baiters have done well this week with willow cats (if you can get them) and fathead minnows drifted slowly just along the current seams.

If you’re after sheer numbers or targeting a big eye, right now is the time. Anglers like Brian Brosdahl say search for the "last green weeds" close to current, and you’re bound to find predators stacking up. On river edges where you find a little bit of stained water mixing with clearer flow, toss a blade bait or vertical jig a heavy minnow for bonus action.

Hot spots this week:
- **Saint Anthony Falls and Lower Lock and Dam:** Consistent walleye, good current breaks.
- **Boom Island back channels:** Weed edges and rock lines holding mixed bags.
- Both areas have ample public access, but remember river flow and barge traffic can change the bite—so keep safety top of mind, especially after recent reports of challenging conditions near the Xcel Energy plant.

With water levels steady and overnight lows dipping into the 30s, we’re primed for some of the most reliable fall river fishing of the year. Don’t forget a net—many fish are fattening up for winter. Stay alert for occasional barge traffic, and always wear your PFD, especially if you’re venturing close to the dams.

Thanks for tuning in to today’s report. Hit that subscribe button for your next fishing update, and keep those lines tight! 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...
3 weeks ago
3 minutes

Mississippi River Minneapolis Daily Fishing Report
"Mississippi River Fishing Report: Walleyes, Smallmouth, and Panfish Bites"
Artificial Lure here, checking in with the October 8 fishing report for the Mississippi River in Minneapolis.

We’re coming off a stretch of unseasonably warm weather, water temps holding in the low-to-mid 60s even as the air dips to the mid-40s overnight according to the Lake of the Woods MN Fishing Report. Sunrise cut through at 7:17 AM today, with sunset set for 6:38 PM. Winds are light out of the west this morning, making for comfortable, stable casting, and no rain in the early forecast.

Fishing times are prime at dawn and dusk, with best bites on overcast days. Today’s conditions are setting up a solid morning action window, especially for walleye and smallmouth bass. There’s no true tide here, but river flows run steady, so look for “current breaks” for fish stacking up.

Local DNR Conservation Officer reports, pulled on October 7, say angling is notably active with many anglers hitting the banks. Lots of sunfish are being seen in the livewells, and while waterfowl hunters had a slower weekend, fishermen kept at it. River crews are still seeing mixed bags—walleye, jumbo perch, sauger, smallmouth bass, northern pike, and some fall crappies. The big story after Sunday’s cold front has been the panfish: moving toward familiar early fall flats and weed edges, but acting sluggish.

Recent fish amounts have mostly featured decent numbers of eating-size northern pike and quick limits of walleyes from sharp breaks near deeper holes. Jumbo perch are mixing in, especially at spots with varied structure. For crappie, check out shallow weed beds in 5–7 feet of water—schools have thinned in typical spots but are popping up in fresh growth areas. And don’t overlook the sauger, which are beginning to show up more frequently around sand flats and channel edges.

For lures and bait:
- Walleyes are hitting vertical jigs tipped with frozen emerald shiner, glow white, green, gold, orange, or chartreuse.
- Pike are biting plentifully on spinner rigs—think gold, firetiger, pink, and orange blades. Use steel leaders for toothy critters.
- Smallmouth bass and sunfish are biting on tubes, jigs, and plastics, especially at slow-flow spots.
- Crappies prefer small jigs or live minnows drifted along shelves and weed beds.

When the bite is tough or fish are fussy, live bait like worms or minnows is still king, especially for jumbo perch according to expert Minnesota guide Brian Brosdahl. For artificial action, go with chartreuse or gold jigs for visibility.

Hot spots today:
- Pool 1 of the Mississippi River from below St. Anthony Falls to Ford Dam remains hot for walleye and smallies, especially in 10–18 feet.
- The confluence near Minnehaha Creek is producing mixed bags—try the outside bends and eddies for perch and walleye.

A brief safety note: Recent news in Wright County reminds us to use caution—there was a fatal incident with a capsized boat near Monticello. Tight lines, but stay alert and wear those life jackets.

That’s the midweek river update from your local tackle box wrangler, Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, don’t forget to subscribe for the next go-round. 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...
3 weeks ago
3 minutes

Mississippi River Minneapolis Daily Fishing Report
Fall Bite Heats Up on the Mississippi in Minneapolis
Artificial Lure here with your Mississippi River, Minneapolis, fishing report for Sunday, October 5th, 2025. We started the morning with a calm 51°F rolling in by sunrise at 6:51 AM, with another stellar fall day in the upper Midwest. Expect the high to push towards 67°F by mid-afternoon before dipping fast after sunset, which tonight hits at 7:25 PM. Skies are mostly clear, giving us one more golden autumn weekend along the river.

There’s no tidal influence this far upriver, so water movement is driven by dams and recent rainfall. Flows have settled over the past week, clarity is decent, and levels slightly above average for early October. That bodes well for both shore and small-boat anglers targeting the famous Mississippi fall bite.

Solunar activity is solid today: The morning’s major bite hit right around sunrise, from 7:19 to 9:19 AM, with another window opening up at dusk, from 7:39 to 9:39 PM. If you’re fishing mid-day, try to work the minor window from 3:33 to 5:33 PM. As always this season, dawn and dusk are prime—especially with cooler temps bringing predator fish up onto the flats and closer to shallows according to FishingReminder.

Word from last night and yesterday’s crews is encouraging. Walleye action has picked up on Pool 1, with catches in the 16 to 24-inch range, mostly coming on jig-and-minnow rigs or hair jigs tipped with plastics. Bright chartreuse and orange are hot. Several anglers reported a mixed bag, including feisty smallmouth bass up to 18 inches and some bonus crappie and perch pulled from backwater pockets, especially around Boom Island and Nicollet Island. The famous Mississippi river channel cats are still biting, especially after dark, mainly on cut sucker and stink bait, according to Outdoor News.

The best artificial lures this week have been mid-sized crankbaits (like Shad Raps), swimbaits in natural shad or perch patterns, and classic black-blue or green pumpkin jigs. Live bait fans are getting strong results on fathead minnows and nightcrawlers, particularly when drifted near wing dams and quiet eddies behind the islands.

Top hotspots to try today:

- **Saint Anthony Falls Upper Lock & Dam:** Consistent walleye, bass, and the odd pike. The turbulent water here pulls in hungry predators at first and last light.
- **Boom Island Channel:** Great for mixed species, especially smallmouth if you’re tossing crankbaits into the current seams.
- **Nicollet Island:** Underrated for fall crappie and perch, especially on small plastics or live minnows under a float.

No monster reports the past 24 hours, but plenty of keeper walleye and a few mid-20 inch football smallmouth have been logged. Catfish numbers are good, but many are average in size—mainly two to five pounders, with a few ten pounders caught on fresh cut bait near deep holes.

Water’s cooling fast, so fish are moving out of skinny water midday and hunting aggressively along drop-offs, riprap, and wood structure near shore. Focus on those ambush points, and don’t be afraid to downsize your presentation if the sun gets high.

Remember to check new fall regulations and stop at a local tackle shop for up-to-date info before you hit the water.

That’ll wrap up today’s report. Thanks for tuning in to your daily Mississippi River Minneapolis fishing report. Don’t forget to subscribe for tomorrow’s forecast and fresh river intel—tight lines, locals!

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...
4 weeks ago
3 minutes

Mississippi River Minneapolis Daily Fishing Report
Mississippi River Fishing Report: Walleye, Bass, and Panfish Bites Strong Ahead of Fall Turnover
Artificial Lure here, ready with your Mississippi River, Minneapolis fishing report for Saturday, October 4, 2025.

Sunrise hit at 7:16 AM with sunset coming just after 6:50 PM. Early hours are crisp, warming up into the 70s by afternoon, but expect *strong winds* gusting 25 to 35 mph today. Fire danger is high across Minnesota due to dry conditions and low humidity—so keep safety front of mind if you’re out there on the river this weekend, especially if you’re bank fishing or hiking to your spot. The river won’t have ocean tides, but wind-driven current is real in these conditions, and water levels are typical for early October, still on the warmer side for the season according to Outdoor News’ October 1 update.

Despite that warmth delaying the classic fall turnover, the *multi-species bite is on!* Walleye and sauger are staging deeper—look for 17-27 feet along river bends and the base of wing dams. The walleye bite has been excellent the past week, with fish packing on the pounds before winter. Standard river rigs tipped with fathead minnows or a half-nightcrawler are producing, but artificial lures are pulling their weight too: chartreuse or firetiger jig heads tipped with plastic minnows, and blade baits bounced close to bottom have been hot, especially in the wind when you need noisy, flashy lures. Sauger are mixed in those same holes and seams.

For bass anglers, largemouth and smallmouth alike are keying on baitfish crowded into the main channels and off current breaks. The Fishbrain community has logged thousands of largemouth bass, northern pike, and bluegill in this stretch—so tie on a shallow crankbait or a white spinnerbait and work shore cover early, then shift deeper as the sun rises. With the sun higher, crawfish-imitating plastics and ned rigs are favorites for consistent bites. Northern pike are crushing jerkbaits and spoons over submerged weed beds near channel edges.

Panfish hunters will want to hit the backwaters and slower pools. The October episode of “Panfish Paradise on the River” showed slab crappie and bluegill hitting small tube jigs in black and chartreuse or soft plastics dropped under a slip bobber. Target brush piles, sunken timber, and shaded cuts for your best chance, especially with the unstable weather.

Out on the water, Eagle Lake, North Mississippi Regional Park, and Boom Island are producing well this week. For a guaranteed shot, head north to Coon Rapids Dam—arguably the most consistent multi-species action anywhere in the metro. Closer to downtown, Hidden Falls and Minnehaha Creek’s confluence are true hot spots, especially early or just before dusk.

Best bait for numbers has been small live minnows and worms, especially as the fish fatten up for winter. If you’re a lure diehard like me, bring a box of jig heads in chartreuse, firetiger, and bright orange, plus a trusty set of crankbaits and a few blade baits for that windy chop.

To sum up: Fish are still acting like it’s late summer, but the pre-winter feed bag is on. Bring a variety, be flexible with depth, and watch for wind-driven current edges for the real bites.

Thanks for tuning in—remember to subscribe for your next local fishing 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...
4 weeks ago
3 minutes

Mississippi River Minneapolis Daily Fishing Report
"Mississippi River, Minneapolis Daily Fishing Report" brings you the latest news, tips, and insights for anglers on the iconic waterway. Stay updated with daily reports on fishing conditions, weather, and seasonal trends. Perfect for both novice and expert fishermen looking to make the most of their time on the Mississippi River, this podcast is your go-to source for everything fishing in Minneapolis. Tune in and reel in the big catch!

For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease....

Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXk