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Lake Tenkiller Fishing Report - Steady Bite for Bass, Crappie, and Catfish
Published 8 months, 2 weeks ago
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Good morning anglers, Artificial Lure here with your Lake Tenkiller, Oklahoma fishing report for Sunday, August 17, 2025. Sunrise hit at 6:37 this morning, and sunset will be about 8:18 tonight—plenty of daylight to chase your limit. Tides aren’t a factor here, but water levels matter and Tenkiller is hovering just under a foot above normal, with steady releases keeping the lake clear and stable, per the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
A muggy August morning gave way to calm conditions, with barely a breeze and temps set to climb into the low 90s by late afternoon—classic summer pattern, so think early and late for best results.
The bite’s been steady, especially in the cool dawn and that golden hour before dark. The Lake Tenkiller Daily Fishing Report notes that bass are working the flooded shoreline grass and shallow brush in the mornings and evenings. Spinnerbaits and buzzbaits have been the key for active largemouth and spotted bass, while plastic worms and creature baits on Texas rigs are cleaning up when the sun’s high and fish slide deeper. If you're a power fisherman, cover water with reaction baits early, then slow down with soft plastics as the day heats up.
Crappie are fair, but still scattered out deep. Anglers are picking up a few tight to standing timber and deeper brush piles, mostly over 18–25 feet. Small jigs in natural colors or live minnows are your best bet for these shy biters, especially in the mid-lake area. Reports from yesterday mentioned the occasional slab crappie, but you’ve got to move around to stay on them.
Catfishing's another solid bet—blues and channels have been showing up around river channels and above the dam. Cut shad or punch bait are getting the most attention. Nighttime brings out the big boys; anchor up on the edge of a flat near deep water to intercept those roaming cats.
If you’re after a mixed bag, white bass are busting shad on main lake points in the evenings. A small chrome spoon or inline spinner can fool them when you see the surface action heat up.
As usual, plastics, spinnerbaits, and jigs dominate for bass, with colors like watermelon, green pumpkin, and black-and-blue hard to beat in Tenkiller’s clear water. Early bites go to brighter buzzbaits, white or chartreuse, while natural finesse baits will get bit as the sun climbs. For crappie, stick with Bobby Garland or similar style jigs in blue ice or monkey milk, and don’t be shy about switching to live bait if the bite's soft.
Hot spot picks for today: Snake Creek Cove is turning out reliable bass action, particularly near grassy banks. The area around Chicken Creek is also worth your time, especially for crappie and bonus catfish. The Dam and Burnt Cabin flats are late-evening white bass magnets.
Recent catches have included solid three- to four-pound largemouth, good numbers of eater-size catfish, and some fair bags of crappie—most everybody’s getting at least a few fish for the fryer. While paddlefish action is slow this time of year, there are always a few trophies out deep for patient snaggers, according to the latest state record updates at LandBigFish.
Whether you’re in a boat or working the bank, get out early for a topwater bite, shift to soft plastics as the sun rises, and don’t overlook live bait for those picky crappie or hungry channel cats.
Thanks for tuning in! Be sure to subscribe for daily reports and updates—this has been Artificial Lure. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
This episode includes AI-generated content.
A muggy August morning gave way to calm conditions, with barely a breeze and temps set to climb into the low 90s by late afternoon—classic summer pattern, so think early and late for best results.
The bite’s been steady, especially in the cool dawn and that golden hour before dark. The Lake Tenkiller Daily Fishing Report notes that bass are working the flooded shoreline grass and shallow brush in the mornings and evenings. Spinnerbaits and buzzbaits have been the key for active largemouth and spotted bass, while plastic worms and creature baits on Texas rigs are cleaning up when the sun’s high and fish slide deeper. If you're a power fisherman, cover water with reaction baits early, then slow down with soft plastics as the day heats up.
Crappie are fair, but still scattered out deep. Anglers are picking up a few tight to standing timber and deeper brush piles, mostly over 18–25 feet. Small jigs in natural colors or live minnows are your best bet for these shy biters, especially in the mid-lake area. Reports from yesterday mentioned the occasional slab crappie, but you’ve got to move around to stay on them.
Catfishing's another solid bet—blues and channels have been showing up around river channels and above the dam. Cut shad or punch bait are getting the most attention. Nighttime brings out the big boys; anchor up on the edge of a flat near deep water to intercept those roaming cats.
If you’re after a mixed bag, white bass are busting shad on main lake points in the evenings. A small chrome spoon or inline spinner can fool them when you see the surface action heat up.
As usual, plastics, spinnerbaits, and jigs dominate for bass, with colors like watermelon, green pumpkin, and black-and-blue hard to beat in Tenkiller’s clear water. Early bites go to brighter buzzbaits, white or chartreuse, while natural finesse baits will get bit as the sun climbs. For crappie, stick with Bobby Garland or similar style jigs in blue ice or monkey milk, and don’t be shy about switching to live bait if the bite's soft.
Hot spot picks for today: Snake Creek Cove is turning out reliable bass action, particularly near grassy banks. The area around Chicken Creek is also worth your time, especially for crappie and bonus catfish. The Dam and Burnt Cabin flats are late-evening white bass magnets.
Recent catches have included solid three- to four-pound largemouth, good numbers of eater-size catfish, and some fair bags of crappie—most everybody’s getting at least a few fish for the fryer. While paddlefish action is slow this time of year, there are always a few trophies out deep for patient snaggers, according to the latest state record updates at LandBigFish.
Whether you’re in a boat or working the bank, get out early for a topwater bite, shift to soft plastics as the sun rises, and don’t overlook live bait for those picky crappie or hungry channel cats.
Thanks for tuning in! Be sure to subscribe for daily reports and updates—this has been Artificial Lure. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
This episode includes AI-generated content.