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Tenkiller Topwater Tackle Tips: Tempting Bass, Crappie, and Cats on a Summer Day in Oklahoma
Published 10 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
Artificial Lure here with your Lake Tenkiller, Oklahoma fishing report for Saturday, June 14, 2025.
The lake’s sitting a little high but steady—USACE reports elevation about 2-4 feet above normal, with water temperatures ranging 65 to 75°F depending on where you’re at. The water’s stained overall, but clarity improves as you head south toward the dam, reaching up to 5-10 feet in the lower end, while the upper stretches remain murky. No tidal swings here, as Tenkiller’s a landlocked reservoir.
Weather’s shaping up nice: expect mild early-summer temps today, mostly clear skies, and a gentle south wind around 8-12 mph. Sunrise hit at 6:11 AM, and sunset will come at 8:39 PM. That gives a long day for topwater and finesse action.
Fish are definitely active. This week’s bite has been best early and late, especially for bass. Anglers are reporting largemouth up shallow, especially around flooded buck brush and willows, hitting Texas-rigged plastics and compact jigs. Smallmouth are showing on chunk rock points and deeper ledges, especially with drop shots and swimbaits. Spotted bass are schooling off secondary points and chasing baitfish in the mornings.
Crappie catches have picked up mid-lake around submerged timber in 10-18 feet, with nice numbers coming in, mostly on minnows and chartreuse jigs. Catfish remain steady—go deep with cut shad or punch bait near creek channels. Flatheads are prowling rocky banks in the evening as the water warms up.
For bass, the best lures this week have been Yum Spine Craws for punching bushes and Strike King swim jigs in white and chartreuse, especially around shallow cover. If you like topwater, Heddon Zara Spooks and Strike King Sexy Dawg walking baits have provoked some explosive strikes around schooling fish, especially where bluegill are bedding. Don’t overlook spinnerbaits if the wind picks up.
Two top hot spots today:
- The upper end near Standing Rock and Cookson Bend—find those flooded willows and work them slow.
- Lower end main lake points and bluffs, especially between Snake Creek and the dam—great for smallmouth and big spotted bass on topwater and soft plastics.
According to recent angler reports and the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation, solid numbers of bass were caught this week, with most fish ranging 2–5 pounds, and some limits brought in during club and guide outings. Crappie slabs are biting well for those willing to probe a bit deeper structure.
That’s the scoop for Lake Tenkiller this Saturday—conditions are prime, the fish are biting, and all you need is the right presentation and a little persistence.
Thanks for tuning in! Don’t forget to subscribe for your next Lake Tenkiller report and stay ahead of the bite. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
This episode includes AI-generated content.
The lake’s sitting a little high but steady—USACE reports elevation about 2-4 feet above normal, with water temperatures ranging 65 to 75°F depending on where you’re at. The water’s stained overall, but clarity improves as you head south toward the dam, reaching up to 5-10 feet in the lower end, while the upper stretches remain murky. No tidal swings here, as Tenkiller’s a landlocked reservoir.
Weather’s shaping up nice: expect mild early-summer temps today, mostly clear skies, and a gentle south wind around 8-12 mph. Sunrise hit at 6:11 AM, and sunset will come at 8:39 PM. That gives a long day for topwater and finesse action.
Fish are definitely active. This week’s bite has been best early and late, especially for bass. Anglers are reporting largemouth up shallow, especially around flooded buck brush and willows, hitting Texas-rigged plastics and compact jigs. Smallmouth are showing on chunk rock points and deeper ledges, especially with drop shots and swimbaits. Spotted bass are schooling off secondary points and chasing baitfish in the mornings.
Crappie catches have picked up mid-lake around submerged timber in 10-18 feet, with nice numbers coming in, mostly on minnows and chartreuse jigs. Catfish remain steady—go deep with cut shad or punch bait near creek channels. Flatheads are prowling rocky banks in the evening as the water warms up.
For bass, the best lures this week have been Yum Spine Craws for punching bushes and Strike King swim jigs in white and chartreuse, especially around shallow cover. If you like topwater, Heddon Zara Spooks and Strike King Sexy Dawg walking baits have provoked some explosive strikes around schooling fish, especially where bluegill are bedding. Don’t overlook spinnerbaits if the wind picks up.
Two top hot spots today:
- The upper end near Standing Rock and Cookson Bend—find those flooded willows and work them slow.
- Lower end main lake points and bluffs, especially between Snake Creek and the dam—great for smallmouth and big spotted bass on topwater and soft plastics.
According to recent angler reports and the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation, solid numbers of bass were caught this week, with most fish ranging 2–5 pounds, and some limits brought in during club and guide outings. Crappie slabs are biting well for those willing to probe a bit deeper structure.
That’s the scoop for Lake Tenkiller this Saturday—conditions are prime, the fish are biting, and all you need is the right presentation and a little persistence.
Thanks for tuning in! Don’t forget to subscribe for your next Lake Tenkiller report and stay ahead of the bite. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
This episode includes AI-generated content.