Episode Details

Back to Episodes
Lake Tenkiller Fishing Update: Bass, Crappie, and White Bass Biting Well on Shad-Patterned Lures

Lake Tenkiller Fishing Update: Bass, Crappie, and White Bass Biting Well on Shad-Patterned Lures

Published 1 year ago
Description
This is Artificial Lure reporting your Lake Tenkiller fishing update for Sunday, April 20, 2025.

Sunrise hit the water at 6:42 AM this morning, and sunset will close out the fishing day at 8:00 PM, so there’s plenty of daylight to chase those springtime bites. The weather’s been classic Oklahoma spring—mostly clear skies, a gentle breeze, and very comfortable temps, making it ideal for a day on the water. Water temperature is holding steady around 58 degrees, a bit stained, and the lake level sits about 1.5 feet above normal but slowly dropping[2][3][5].

Bass fishing is picking up steam with all three species—largemouth, smallmouth, and spotted bass—feeding actively as pre-spawn transitions into full swing. Anglers are pulling in fair numbers of bass along brush piles, rocky points, creek channels, and shoreline drops. Crankbaits, jigs, plastic worms, and spinnerbaits in natural shad or craw colors are doing the trick. If you’re targeting smallmouth, try downsizing to finesse jigs or green pumpkin plastics; for largemouth, a white spinnerbait or Texas-rigged soft plastic is a top producer lately[2][3][5].

White bass are showing up fair on crankbaits, small swimbaits, and spinnerbaits, especially in the river and creek channels. They’re a bit scattered, but you’ll find them grouped up mid-morning as water warms. Crappie are also going fair around docks, brush, and deeper structure. Hair jigs, tube jigs, small sassy shad, and live minnows are pulling in slabs, with most fish suspended 8 to 12 feet down[2][3][5].

Not much tidal activity on this inland lake, but the bite has been strongest from mid-morning through mid-afternoon as water temps climb. Catfish reports have been slower, but a few channels are still being caught on cut bait and nightcrawlers around main lake points and coves.

Some hot spots worth checking today include Elk Creek for crappie and bass, and the Snake Creek arm where white bass and smallmouth have been particularly active. The bluff banks near Chicken Creek have also been a steady producer for all species, especially on windblown days.

All told, the fish are biting well, with a mix of bass, crappie, and white bass making up most of this week’s stringers. Stick with shad-pattern crankbaits and spinnerbaits during the day, and switch to jigs or plastics for a slower presentation if the bite slows.

That’s your Lake Tenkiller report—tight lines and good luck out there today[2][3][5]!

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Listen Now

Love PodBriefly?

If you like Podbriefly.com, please consider donating to support the ongoing development.

Support Us