New Mexico Tournament Information New Mexico Fishing Report New Mexico Fishing Report Archives Pictures Sponsors & Partners Fishing Tips and Product Reviews Home

"Lures of the Month" from ABQ Sportfishing and Bob "Lucky" Lechel:
ABQ's pick is the Berkley 4" PowerGrub - Milky Salt and Pepper Popular for all species of fish, especially in colder water. A flexible bait for a variety of rigging options. Like Bob, we prefer a 1/4 ball head for our structure fishing.
Lucky's choice: Yamamoto Single Tail Grub - White or Chartreuse It’s hard to beat a 3 or 4” grub in chartreuse or white on ¼ to 3/8 oz jig head for the walleye, crappie, and bass this time of year. Look for deepwater near points anywhere from 20-40ft of water on the main lake. It helps to use your electronics to find them, but it’s a great way to brush up on your video gaming/fishing at the same time.

New Mexico Weekly Fishing Report
Week of August 14, 2010

NM Lake levels -- Click here for the latest water storage reports from New Mexico reservoirs.

If you have a catch of the week story or just want to tell us about your latest New Mexico fishing experience, send it to ABQ Sportfishing email. We may include your story in our next report. For catches of the week, include name, date, location, type of fish, length and bait used.

Catches of the Week

Abiquiu Lake: 4,000 acre lake on the Chama River Northwest of Abiquiu. Fish species- Smallmouth Bass, Walleye, Catfish, Crappie and Trout
Clarity:clear to stained
Water Temp:Mid 70s
There has been a lot of rain and the water is murky with lots of floating debris. Fishing is reported as slow for all species. Some smallmouth were reported on poppers, tubes and jigs.

Amistad Lake - Del Rio, TX: 64,900 acre lake on the Rio Grande, 12 miles northwest of Del Rio, TX in Val Verde County. Fish species- Largemouth and Smallmouth Bass, Channel and Blue Catfish, White and Striped Bass
Click here for the Amistad Fishing Report Sponsored by SW Texas Bass Guide - Kurt Dove

Conchas Lake: 16,033-acre lake on the Canadian River. Fish species - Largemouth and smallmouth bass, bluegill, crappie, channel catfish and walleye.
Clarity:Good
Water Temp:Low 80s
Walleye are good in the south end of the lake by Rattlesnake Island, but most are small with few keepers. No reports on other species.

Elephant Butte Lake: 40,000-surface acre lake on the Rio Grande formed by a dam created in 1916. Hundreds of miles of shoreline with a depth of 165 feet. When lake level is at capacity the lake is up to 40 miles long with an average width of about 1.5 miles. Fish species - Largemouth bass, catfish, walleye, flathead and channel catfish, crappie, smallmouth, white bass and striped bass (true stripers, not hybrid) and bluegill.
Clarity:2-3 feet
Water Temp:Low 80s
Still fishing for white bass is good with live bait or 1055 Sassy Shads. Smallmouth bass are fair using white or green bombers or shiners. Striped bass, in the 15–20 pound range, are fair trolling live bait or umbrella rigs. Catfish are fair with liver or shrimp. No reports on other species.
Fishing Report Sponsored by Marina Del Sur

Navajo Lake: 15,600-acre lake with a depth at the deepest part close to the dam of almost 400 feet. Three major arms of the lake, the Pine, the San Juan, and Francis gives fishermen plenty to enjoy. Fish species - Smallmouth and largemouth bass, crappie, bluegill, northern pike, rainbow trout, kokanee salmon, brown trout and channel catfish.
Clarity:Good, very light stain in areas.
Water Temp:Mid 70s
Pike are good in the Pine arm with spinners, jerk baits or crank baits. Largemouth and smallmouth bass are reported as fair to good in the early mornings with jigs, top water lures, and night crawlers. Kokanee are good trolling Arnie’s lures or double whammies. No reports on other species.

Santa Rosa Lake: 3,500-acre lake on the Pecos River. Fish species - Largemouth and Smallmouth Bass, Catfish, Bluegill, Crappie and Walleye.
Clarity:stained
Water Temp:Low 80s
Bass are fair with crank baits, plugs or jigs. Catfish are good with cut bait, worms or chicken liver. No reports on other species.

Sumner Lake: 2,800-acre lake with a maximum depth of 65' and an average depth of 20-30 feet on the Pecos River. Fish species - Largemouth, smallmouth and spotted bass, bluegill, walleye, catfish, crappie, white bass and winter trout.
Clarity:stained
Water Temp:Low 80s
Pressure has been light and fishing is slow for all species. There are reports of a few small catfish being caught on chicken liver or worms.

Ute Lake: 8,200-acre lake with a shoreline of approximately 45 miles with a maximum depth of 88 feet. Winds for miles through a rocky canyon up the Canadian River and Ute Creek. Fish species - Largemouth and smallmouth bass, bluegill, crappie, walleye, channel catfish and white bass.
Clarity:clear
Water Temp:High 70s
Click here for the Ute Lake Fishing Report Sponsored by The Tackle Box Catfish are good at 6-8 feet with chicken liver. White bass are fair at 30 feet with jigging spoons or trolling slabs or jigs. Largemouth and smallmouth bass are fair at 12-16 feet with tubes, Senkos or 4 inch worms. Walleye are slow with minnows. No reports on crappie.

Tight lines,

ABQ Sportfishnig


ABQ SPORTFISHING, New Mexico's premier warm-water fishing information website.

Email ABQ Website Advertising or Information Requests Here