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Tenkiller Fishing Report: Topwater Bass, Slab Crappie, and Hefty Cats - A Late Summer Tenkiller Angling Forecast
Published 8 months ago
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This is Artificial Lure with your Lake Tenkiller fishing report for Saturday, August 30, 2025. Let's get you set for a day on the water, Tenkiller style.
Right now, the lake is sitting just a half foot above normal—water levels are steady and clarity is good, with the latest reading showing the lake at 84 degrees and clear, perfect for late-summer angling. The Corps of Engineers reports a steady outflow of about 578 cubic feet per second, so currents are mild, and you won't find much in the way of debris. No worries about the flood pool either, which sits just a tad over 3% full—ideal for working those shallows and deeper ledges without worrying about dramatic changes in conditions.
There’s no tide to factor in here in Oklahoma, but your best bet for hitting peak activity is around sunrise, which is rolling in at 6:47 AM today, and sunset tonight will be at 8:02 PM. Early morning and last light are always money on Tenkiller, especially with this week’s high pressure and a nice stretch of sunny weather holding steady, keeping the bite predictable.
According to the most recent Oklahoma Department of Wildlife fishing report, largemouth bass are rated “good,” with steady action coming on main lake points, secondary points, and deeper brush—especially near the channel swings. Anglers have done well working topwater walkers and poppers right at sun-up, switching to Texas-rigged soft plastics and crankbaits as the sun climbs. The bite is most aggressive on green pumpkin and watermelon-red lures, with shad-pattern squarebills playing well during midday.
Smallmouth folks, don’t sleep on those rocky bluffs and mid-lake points around Cookson Bend and Standing Rock—some solid brown fish have come up on suspending jerkbaits and finesse jigs fished along drop-offs just as that sun starts warming the rocks.
Catfish action is also strong. Blue and channel cats are both rated “good,” with most of the numbers coming on cut shad and live bait set on drift rigs around the main lake flats and river channels. If you’re looking for a mess of eaters, W Cookson and the Snake Creek area have been reliable spots. You may also bump into a hefty flathead; a live sunfish under a slip float by structure will up your odds.
Crappie are a bit scattered but very much catchable, especially if you can locate brush piles in 12-18 feet of water. Black crappie have been hitting small jigs—chartreuse and monkey milk colors are working the best—along brush and submerged timber.
For other species, don't forget about the chance for a drum or the odd striped bass—locals have landed a few drum pushing double digits, particularly below the dam on large jigs.
As for hot spots, I’d start the day at Chicken Creek early, targeting bass hitting bait on the flats. By mid-morning, make a move to the bluff points near Standing Rock or Eagle Bluff for a mix of bass and the shot at some big smallmouth. Snake Creek is a safe bet for a mess of catfish and the occasional slab crappie, with heavy timber and deeper holes that always seem to hold fish.
So, to recap: early topwater for largemouth, then soft plastics and squarebills as the day warms. Fish deeper bluffs and rocky points for smallmouth. For catfish, drift cut bait around main channel edges. Crappie are best found on brush piles with bright jigs.
That’s your Lake Tenkiller report—thanks for tuning in, folks! Don’t forget to subscribe for more tips and updates. 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.
Right now, the lake is sitting just a half foot above normal—water levels are steady and clarity is good, with the latest reading showing the lake at 84 degrees and clear, perfect for late-summer angling. The Corps of Engineers reports a steady outflow of about 578 cubic feet per second, so currents are mild, and you won't find much in the way of debris. No worries about the flood pool either, which sits just a tad over 3% full—ideal for working those shallows and deeper ledges without worrying about dramatic changes in conditions.
There’s no tide to factor in here in Oklahoma, but your best bet for hitting peak activity is around sunrise, which is rolling in at 6:47 AM today, and sunset tonight will be at 8:02 PM. Early morning and last light are always money on Tenkiller, especially with this week’s high pressure and a nice stretch of sunny weather holding steady, keeping the bite predictable.
According to the most recent Oklahoma Department of Wildlife fishing report, largemouth bass are rated “good,” with steady action coming on main lake points, secondary points, and deeper brush—especially near the channel swings. Anglers have done well working topwater walkers and poppers right at sun-up, switching to Texas-rigged soft plastics and crankbaits as the sun climbs. The bite is most aggressive on green pumpkin and watermelon-red lures, with shad-pattern squarebills playing well during midday.
Smallmouth folks, don’t sleep on those rocky bluffs and mid-lake points around Cookson Bend and Standing Rock—some solid brown fish have come up on suspending jerkbaits and finesse jigs fished along drop-offs just as that sun starts warming the rocks.
Catfish action is also strong. Blue and channel cats are both rated “good,” with most of the numbers coming on cut shad and live bait set on drift rigs around the main lake flats and river channels. If you’re looking for a mess of eaters, W Cookson and the Snake Creek area have been reliable spots. You may also bump into a hefty flathead; a live sunfish under a slip float by structure will up your odds.
Crappie are a bit scattered but very much catchable, especially if you can locate brush piles in 12-18 feet of water. Black crappie have been hitting small jigs—chartreuse and monkey milk colors are working the best—along brush and submerged timber.
For other species, don't forget about the chance for a drum or the odd striped bass—locals have landed a few drum pushing double digits, particularly below the dam on large jigs.
As for hot spots, I’d start the day at Chicken Creek early, targeting bass hitting bait on the flats. By mid-morning, make a move to the bluff points near Standing Rock or Eagle Bluff for a mix of bass and the shot at some big smallmouth. Snake Creek is a safe bet for a mess of catfish and the occasional slab crappie, with heavy timber and deeper holes that always seem to hold fish.
So, to recap: early topwater for largemouth, then soft plastics and squarebills as the day warms. Fish deeper bluffs and rocky points for smallmouth. For catfish, drift cut bait around main channel edges. Crappie are best found on brush piles with bright jigs.
That’s your Lake Tenkiller report—thanks for tuning in, folks! Don’t forget to subscribe for more tips and updates. 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.