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Lake Austin Fishing: Chasing Summer's Bounty
Published 8 months ago
Description
Artificial Lure here with your Sunday morning fishing report for Lake Austin and the surrounding waters. It’s August 31st, 2025, and the dog days of summer are still draping that classic Central Texas haze over the lake.
Sunrise hit just before 7:07 a.m., painting the calm water with the first brushstrokes of light, while sunset will be about 7:55 p.m.—plenty of daylight to wet a line before the week rolls over. The weather at dawn is starting out humid and sultry, with temps in the upper 70s, climbing fast toward the low 90s by midday. Winds are out of the south at a gentle 4–7 mph, and skies are mostly clear—perfect conditions for sight fishing or prowling the deeper holes. Water clarity remains decent near the dam and the main river channel, though you might see a little extra stain upstream due to increased recreation and wakes over the weekend.
As for the bite, you can expect a mixed bag of action today. Largemouth bass remain the star attraction on Lake Austin—recent outings have produced solid numbers of 2- to 5-pounders, and there have even been a couple reports of seven and eight pound fish turning up from deep brush piles and shaded docks, according to Texas fishing forums and local guide chatter. Early risers have had success with topwater walking baits like Spooks and Whopper Ploppers along grass edges and around cypress knee clumps. As the sun climbs, a slow-rolled spinnerbait or a Texas-rigged Senko in watermelon, green pumpkin, or junebug has been getting bites around boat docks and overhanging limbs.
Target drop-offs and submerged timber with medium-diving crankbaits if you’re casting during midday heat—shad patterns, firetiger, and chartreuse/blue back colors have drawn the most hits lately. There have also been some quality bites on football jigs and Carolina rigs trailing small creature baits when worked along ledges and humps in 8 to 15 feet.
Don’t sleep on the panfish, either—bluegill and redear action is still lively near bulkheads and riprap, especially for those using crickets or small pieces of nightcrawler under a float. Catfishers are picking up channel and blue cats during the low-light hours near the Pennybacker Bridge and below the dam; best results on cut shad or chicken liver.
If you’re looking for a couple of today’s hot spots, check out the stretch around Emma Long Metropolitan Park—the dock lines there have been holding bass, and deeper drop-offs nearby attract sizable cats and the occasional big gar. Also, the basin above Tom Miller Dam has been consistent this week, especially just off the main current where schools of shad are bunching up and predator fish are lurking just beneath.
Tidal influence on Lake Austin is minimal, since it’s a controlled river environment and not coastal, so target your outings for early morning or the hour before sunset when fish are most active with cooler temps and lower light. Light line, natural presentations, and stealthy approaches near pressured areas have been key to fooling the bigger fish.
That wraps up your Lake Austin fishing report for today. Thanks for tuning in to hear from Artificial Lure—be sure to subscribe for more fishing updates and local tips. 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.
Sunrise hit just before 7:07 a.m., painting the calm water with the first brushstrokes of light, while sunset will be about 7:55 p.m.—plenty of daylight to wet a line before the week rolls over. The weather at dawn is starting out humid and sultry, with temps in the upper 70s, climbing fast toward the low 90s by midday. Winds are out of the south at a gentle 4–7 mph, and skies are mostly clear—perfect conditions for sight fishing or prowling the deeper holes. Water clarity remains decent near the dam and the main river channel, though you might see a little extra stain upstream due to increased recreation and wakes over the weekend.
As for the bite, you can expect a mixed bag of action today. Largemouth bass remain the star attraction on Lake Austin—recent outings have produced solid numbers of 2- to 5-pounders, and there have even been a couple reports of seven and eight pound fish turning up from deep brush piles and shaded docks, according to Texas fishing forums and local guide chatter. Early risers have had success with topwater walking baits like Spooks and Whopper Ploppers along grass edges and around cypress knee clumps. As the sun climbs, a slow-rolled spinnerbait or a Texas-rigged Senko in watermelon, green pumpkin, or junebug has been getting bites around boat docks and overhanging limbs.
Target drop-offs and submerged timber with medium-diving crankbaits if you’re casting during midday heat—shad patterns, firetiger, and chartreuse/blue back colors have drawn the most hits lately. There have also been some quality bites on football jigs and Carolina rigs trailing small creature baits when worked along ledges and humps in 8 to 15 feet.
Don’t sleep on the panfish, either—bluegill and redear action is still lively near bulkheads and riprap, especially for those using crickets or small pieces of nightcrawler under a float. Catfishers are picking up channel and blue cats during the low-light hours near the Pennybacker Bridge and below the dam; best results on cut shad or chicken liver.
If you’re looking for a couple of today’s hot spots, check out the stretch around Emma Long Metropolitan Park—the dock lines there have been holding bass, and deeper drop-offs nearby attract sizable cats and the occasional big gar. Also, the basin above Tom Miller Dam has been consistent this week, especially just off the main current where schools of shad are bunching up and predator fish are lurking just beneath.
Tidal influence on Lake Austin is minimal, since it’s a controlled river environment and not coastal, so target your outings for early morning or the hour before sunset when fish are most active with cooler temps and lower light. Light line, natural presentations, and stealthy approaches near pressured areas have been key to fooling the bigger fish.
That wraps up your Lake Austin fishing report for today. Thanks for tuning in to hear from Artificial Lure—be sure to subscribe for more fishing updates and local tips. 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.