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Lake Okeechobee Fishing Hot Bite Continues as Spring Arrives

Lake Okeechobee Fishing Hot Bite Continues as Spring Arrives

Published 1 year ago
Description
This is Artificial Lure checking in with your Lake Okeechobee fishing report for Wednesday, April 23, 2025. The fishing out here keeps rolling right along as we slide deeper into spring, and the bite is as lively as you could hope for.

First off, our day kicks off with sunrise at 6:53 AM and sunset stretching out until 7:46 PM, so you’ve got plenty of daylight to chase your catch. Weather is sitting pretty with highs reaching around 81 degrees. Skies are partly cloudy and we have a gentle breeze out of the west-northwest at about 10 miles an hour—that puts a light chop on the open main lake, so I’d recommend tucking into those sheltered reed lines and grass pockets if you want calmer water to fish[3].

Water levels have been gradually falling, now right around 12 feet. That’s pushed bass and panfish tighter to the vegetation, canal cuts, and drop-offs. Use your electronics to pick out isolated cover and don’t overlook newly exposed structure—those are hot spots right now[1][3].

Bass are still firing, hanging out shallow with the tail end of the spawn. The magic lures lately have been Texas-rigged plastics in watermelon and junebug, white swim jigs, and of course, topwater frogs for those early and late bites. Fish slow around hydrilla, dollar pads, and cattail edges. Plenty of anglers are reporting daily hauls of chunky 3 to 5 pound largemouths, and it’s not unusual to see a true trophy or two every week[3].

If you’re after crappie, get ready for some rod-bending action. The bite’s been as hot as we’ve seen all year, with multiple recent outings boating between 100 and 150 fish. Most are a solid 12 to 14 inches and pushing up to two pounds. Minnows and small jigs are doing the trick, especially around canal mouths and the clearer water out from the Kissimmee River and Harney Pond Canal. Look for them to be stacking up a little deeper on brush and around submerged vegetation[2][4].

For bait, wild shiners are still the gold standard for big bass. If you’re working artificials, stick with natural colors to match the forage. For crappie, live minnows on a slip bobber or tiny hair jigs in white, pink, or chartreuse will keep you busy.

A couple of the hottest spots right now include the Tin House Cove area and along the west wall from Harney Pond down toward Observation Shoal. Fish have been bunching up there with water on the drop and plenty of good cover.

That’s it for today’s Lake Okeechobee update. The bite is strong, the weather is fair, and with the lake low, now’s your chance to find those honey holes before the crowds do. Tight lines, y’all, and I’ll see you out on the water[1][3].

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