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Lake Tenkiller Fishing Report: Summer Patterns and Hot Spots for Late August

Lake Tenkiller Fishing Report: Summer Patterns and Hot Spots for Late August

Published 8 months, 1 week ago
Description
Artificial Lure here, coming to you with your fresh Lake Tenkiller fishing report for Wednesday, August 20th, 2025.

We're kicking off the morning with lake levels a hair above normal—pool elevation is sitting at 632.97 feet, and the reservoir has a steady release of 585 cubic feet per second. The flood pool remains low with only 1.54% full. Water clarity is good and plenty typical for late summer. It’s been muggy around the region with highs inching toward the low 90s and dew points sticking near 70°F, so plan on a humid fishing trip. No tidal activity to report, as is usual for Tenkiller.

Sunrise brightened the water at 6:33 AM this morning, with sunset to come around 8:06 PM. The extended daylight means plenty of fishing time, and with surface temps rising, expect feeding windows early and late in the day.

The bite has been classic August: largemouth bass are holding tight to shallow structure during the low-light hours. According to recent regional tournament updates, crankbaits bounced off rocks and a big Texas rigged worm have brought in solid limits. Anglers also report the buzz bait and walking baits like the Sexy Dawg are working when fished over submerged cover in early morning. The water’s a little off-color, so noise and vibration are your friend—switching to chatterbaits and jigs with rattles can provoke those ambush strikes. Topwater action slows by midday, so dig deeper with jigs or shaky-head rigs as the sun climbs.

White bass are schooled up near the river channel bends; vertical slab spoons and small swimbaits have been effective when the schools bust shad on the surface. Catfish—mostly channel and some blue—are hitting cut shad and stink baits off deep ledges near Snake Creek and Petit Bay, with nighttime anglers reporting steady action.

Crappie catches remain decent, though they’ve moved out to brush piles in 15-20 feet of water. Best approach has been using a live minnow under a slip bobber or slowly trolling small curly tail grubs. Panfish, especially sunfish, are still active around docks and shaded shallows; worms and mealworms get quick bites.

Recent outings have seen stringers with several keeper largemouths (2 to 5 pounds), regular limits of white bass, and a handful of chunky catfish in the 8-12 pound range. No record-breakers this week, but the action has been consistent, especially at first and last light.

For hot spots, you can’t go wrong with the coves near Cookson Bend—in particular, the channel edge and boat slips have held good numbers all week. Another local favorite is the mouth of Caney Creek, where submerged timber and creek inflows are drawing feeding bass and panfish.

When gearing up, select crankbaits that dig the rocks and make a racket, black and blue or green pumpkin jigs, and if bait fishing, nothing beats fresh cut shad or nightcrawlers. In muddy stretches after a rain, switch to chartreuse or white for extra pop.

That’s your Lake Tenkiller report—stay hydrated out there today, work the early and late bite, and don’t be afraid to mix it up if conditions shift on you. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for the latest fishing news and updates.

This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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

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