# Artificial Lure's Mississippi River Fishing Report
Well, folks, it's Friday, November 14th, and we're looking at some excellent conditions out on the Mississippi River here in Minneapolis. Let me break down what's happening on the water today.
**Weather and Light**
We've got ourselves a beautiful fall day developing. Sunrise was at 6:52 AM, and we're looking at a sunset around 7:41 PM, giving us just under 13 hours of good fishing light. The dry stretch continues with less wind than we've seen recently, and there's more of that fall warmth moving in. These are solid conditions for getting out there.
**Fishing Activity**
The solunar forecast shows us major feeding times between 2:51 AM and 4:51 AM this morning, with another excellent window from 3:21 PM to 5:21 PM this afternoon. If you're planning an evening trip, that late afternoon window is going to be prime time. Minor feeding periods hit around 7:48 AM to 8:48 AM. The overall day rating is sitting at average, but those major windows are where the action happens.
**What's Been Working**
Looking at recent tournament success on similar Mississippi River systems, anglers have been crushing it with swim jigs paired with PowerBait chunks in darker colors like black-and-blue. Forward-facing sonar has become a game-changer for targeting specific structure, particularly around docks and deeper areas. If you're targeting suspended fish, drop-shots with small flukes have been producing quality bites. Jerkbaits in shad patterns are also solid choices, especially early morning.
**Fish Species and Catches**
You're looking at solid populations of largemouth and spotted bass throughout this system. Walleye and pike are also hanging around these waters. Recent reports show anglers getting consistent action on bass fishing the deeper structure and suspended fish near main river channels.
**Hot Spots to Target**
Head up toward the deeper outside bends where the river channel cuts tight—that's where the bigger fish stack up this time of year. Also check out any dock structure near the lock and dam areas where baitfish congregate.
**Lures and Bait**
Swim jigs with dark-colored trailers, shad-pattern jerkbaits, drop-shot rigs with small flukes, and swimbaits are your go-to presentations. Live baitfish like shiners work great if you want to keep it simple.
That's your Mississippi River fishing report for today. Thanks for tuning in and make sure to subscribe for daily reports. This has been a Quiet Please production—for more, check out quietplease.ai.
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