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"Fall Fishing Report for Lake of the Ozarks: Biting Bass, Cooperative Crappie, and Hungry Catfish"

"Fall Fishing Report for Lake of the Ozarks: Biting Bass, Cooperative Crappie, and Hungry Catfish"

Published 7 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
It’s Artificial Lure here, bringing you the Lake of the Ozarks fishing report for September 10, 2025, and folks, fall is whispering through the trees even if the afternoons are still holding that stubborn summer warmth. This morning kicked off with sunrise at 6:46 AM, and you’ve got daylight to work with until sunset at 7:29 PM, so there’s plenty of time to wet a line and chase those legendary Lake O bass.

We don’t get true tides here in the Ozarks—just that classic Missouri lake level, steady today with a few minor fluctuations depending on rain runoff and dock activity. The real shift right now is in the water temps: expect mid-morning surface temperatures in the low 70s, and the water is still clear to slightly stained. According to the Lake Sun, when the Ozarks cool off at night and then heat up by day, baitfish start schooling tighter and the bass move into transition mode.

The weather’s cooperating: it’s a mild September morning, high cirrus clouds and a cool breeze from the north-northeast. The Missouri Department of Conservation is urging folks to get outside and take advantage of the crisp, early fall bite. According to KLPW News, there's a light north breeze in the forecast and a high today near 81—perfect for comfort and fish activity alike.

Bass are the main story. Largemouths are coming out of deep water haunts into shallower, chunk-rock banks and main lake points. Local anglers are reporting solid numbers caught early using topwater pencil baits and buzzbaits around lingering brush piles, especially during the low-light hours right after sunrise. Once the sun climbs, it’s prime time for medium-diving crankbaits and Carolina-rigged plastics. According to Dion Hibdon via Lake News Online, shad-colored crankbaits and white spinnerbaits are go-tos this month. Soft plastics in green pumpkin and watermelon are still hot, rigged Texas or shaky head style for dock fishing.

Crappie are picking up too. If you’re after slabs, target brush in 10–15 feet of water near creek mouths or main channel bends. Recent reports from the Missouri Department of Conservation suggest small jigs tipped with a minnow or plain Bobby Garland Baby Shads in monkey milk and blue ice are drawing steady action, especially as water cools.

Don’t overlook those whiskerfish. September is a fantastic month for blue and channel catfish, especially on cut bait or dip baits along muddy flats at dusk. Anglers are stringing up some nice eaters off the mouths of the Gravois Arm and down by the Niangua.

For quantity and quality, bass are topping the leaderboards, with several locals posting limits in the 2–4 pound range over the weekend. The bite is hit-or-miss midday but explodes again with the evening shade: stick it out and you’ll reap the rewards.

Hotspots today? Try the point just outside PB2—state park area that always holds fish this time of year thanks to abundant bait and changing structure. Another sure bet is the back of the Gravois Arm, especially around submerged wood and secondary points.

Quick lure recap:
- Topwater walkers and buzzbaits at dawn.
- Shad-pattern cranks, spinnerbaits, and soft plastics mid-morning.
- Small jigs for crappie over brush.
- Cut shad or Sonny’s for cats in the evening.

Remember, fishing pressure is picking up as more folks get the fall fever—so rotate spots, keep quiet, and match your retrieve to the activity you see on your electronics.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for your next Lake of the Ozarks fishing update. 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

This episode includes AI-generated content.
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