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Late Summer Bites at Tenkiller: September 6th Fishing Report
Published 7 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
Artificial Lure here with your September 6th Lake Tenkiller fishing report, coming to you from right here in the heart of eastern Oklahoma.
We're seeing fair late-summer weather today—expect it to warm up quickly after a cool, comfortable morning. Sunrise was at 6:58 AM, with sunset coming up at 7:42 PM, giving you plenty of daylight for those early and late bites. It's mostly clear, with just a gentle southern breeze and lake levels a bit above normal for this time of year, according to the Tulsa District Water Control. Water clarity is typical summer Tenkiller—clear to a gentle green in the main basin.
Tidal swing doesn’t play a factor here, but lake level's up about 1.8 feet above normal, and the Corps reports a healthy flow out of the dam, which means some subtle current in the lower end and below the dam itself.
Bass bite is hot right at first light, especially up in the coves and off main lake points. Local anglers and the Lake Tenkiller Oklahoma Daily Fishing Report say there’s a strong topwater bite—think poppers and walking baits if you’re working the early shallows. As soon as the sun gets up, switch over to soft plastics worked around submerged brush and deeper ledges, or slow-roll a spinnerbait along the rock piles. Bassmaster notes Tenkiller is well-known for its solid populations of largemouth, spotted bass, and smallmouth alike, so don’t be afraid to fan-cast those deeper gravel points.
Crappie have shifted this week—they’re stacking up in 15-20 feet on brush and structure, especially mid-lake. Folks are catching slabs with both minnows and jigging small tubes—chartreuse and white or monkey milk are producing best right now.
Catfish are still roaming the flats and creek channels, especially at night and just after dawn. Cut shad and chicken liver are the go-to baits, and some blue cats over twenty pounds have been caught near Snake Creek and Chicken Creek arms. Drift fishing in deeper water has been steady.
Other regulars out here have been finding sand bass schooled up early, busting shad on windblown points—small slabs or spoons are a ticket for quick action when you see the birds working.
If you’re looking for some hot spots today, steer toward the mouth of Sizemore Cove for that early topwater bass, or try the old highway bridge area near Cookson Bend for crappie—both areas are putting up good numbers this week. For catfish, try drifting along the edges of Blackgum Landing.
As always, the best bait changes hour by hour—today’s pattern calls for versatility. Topwater lures at first light, soft plastics and jigs mid-morning, and live bait or cut bait as the sun gets high for cats and crappie.
That wraps up your Tenkiller fishing report for September 6th—thanks for tuning in! Don’t forget to subscribe to keep these reports coming right to you. 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.
We're seeing fair late-summer weather today—expect it to warm up quickly after a cool, comfortable morning. Sunrise was at 6:58 AM, with sunset coming up at 7:42 PM, giving you plenty of daylight for those early and late bites. It's mostly clear, with just a gentle southern breeze and lake levels a bit above normal for this time of year, according to the Tulsa District Water Control. Water clarity is typical summer Tenkiller—clear to a gentle green in the main basin.
Tidal swing doesn’t play a factor here, but lake level's up about 1.8 feet above normal, and the Corps reports a healthy flow out of the dam, which means some subtle current in the lower end and below the dam itself.
Bass bite is hot right at first light, especially up in the coves and off main lake points. Local anglers and the Lake Tenkiller Oklahoma Daily Fishing Report say there’s a strong topwater bite—think poppers and walking baits if you’re working the early shallows. As soon as the sun gets up, switch over to soft plastics worked around submerged brush and deeper ledges, or slow-roll a spinnerbait along the rock piles. Bassmaster notes Tenkiller is well-known for its solid populations of largemouth, spotted bass, and smallmouth alike, so don’t be afraid to fan-cast those deeper gravel points.
Crappie have shifted this week—they’re stacking up in 15-20 feet on brush and structure, especially mid-lake. Folks are catching slabs with both minnows and jigging small tubes—chartreuse and white or monkey milk are producing best right now.
Catfish are still roaming the flats and creek channels, especially at night and just after dawn. Cut shad and chicken liver are the go-to baits, and some blue cats over twenty pounds have been caught near Snake Creek and Chicken Creek arms. Drift fishing in deeper water has been steady.
Other regulars out here have been finding sand bass schooled up early, busting shad on windblown points—small slabs or spoons are a ticket for quick action when you see the birds working.
If you’re looking for some hot spots today, steer toward the mouth of Sizemore Cove for that early topwater bass, or try the old highway bridge area near Cookson Bend for crappie—both areas are putting up good numbers this week. For catfish, try drifting along the edges of Blackgum Landing.
As always, the best bait changes hour by hour—today’s pattern calls for versatility. Topwater lures at first light, soft plastics and jigs mid-morning, and live bait or cut bait as the sun gets high for cats and crappie.
That wraps up your Tenkiller fishing report for September 6th—thanks for tuning in! Don’t forget to subscribe to keep these reports coming right to you. 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.