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Lake of the Ozarks Fishing Report: Fall Bite Heating Up with Walleye, Bass, and Crappie Action
Published 7 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
Artificial Lure here with your Friday morning fishing report for Lake of the Ozarks, Missouri, on September 12, 2025. If you’re itching for some fall action, let’s get right to the meat and potatoes: the bite’s officially heating up with cooler nights and stable weather rolling in, right on schedule for the annual fall transition.
Today’s forecast is classic late-summer-to-fall Missouri—mostly cloudy, mild wind around 5-10mph, and highs pushing near 75°F. You can expect water temps hovering around 65 to 67 degrees; perfect for triggering predatory fish to move shallow and start feeding up for the colder months. Sunrise hit at 6:54AM, so folks out for first light got a solid jump. Sunset’s coming at 7:25PM, so the evening bite is primed for action—especially that last golden hour when walleye and bass turn hungry.
Now, for those wondering about tides, Lake of the Ozarks is a reservoir, not a natural or tidal lake, so no moon-pull or saltwater tides to speak of here. Instead, it’s all about water level fluctuations from the dam, which have been steady this week, keeping fish in predictable patterns.
The past two days, reports from local guides say the walleye bite’s picked up strong, especially along the shallower shoreline edges and the submerged humps. Limits of eater-size walleye are common, with most fish caught in 18-30 feet, transitioning up when the sun’s tucked behind the clouds. Most anglers are drifting spinner rigs with nightcrawlers or trolling crankbaits, with gold, orange, and firetiger patterns being the ticket. Don’t be afraid to bump up to heavier bottom bouncers, up to 3 ounces, to keep your bait hugging the lakebed.
Crappie are biting well near brush piles and docks in the coves, with consistency on jigs tipped with minnows and small crankbaits. trolling small crankbaits is producing decent slab action—size running mostly 10-12 inches, but a few pushing 14. Channel catfish reports are up this week as well, with best results coming on fresh cut shad or chicken livers fished near channel swings in 15-20 feet of water.
Bass anglers had luck in the local 148 tournament just a few days ago, using a mixed bag of tactics. Early morning and late evening, shallow docks and overhanging trees are producing largemouth action. Flat-sided crankbaits are big performers right now. Cody Meyer’s box of flat-sides is all about deflection—these work magic around wood, rocks, or feathered above submerged grass. Texas-rigged plastics and buzzbaits are also getting bites, particularly in moving water near the Gravois Arm and the mouth of the Glaize, two hot spots you shouldn’t overlook.
Top lures for the next week:
- Gold or firetiger spinner rigs with nightcrawler trailers for walleye.
- Flat-sided crankbaits around shallow cover for bass.
- Chartreuse, pink, or blue jigs with live minnows for crappie.
- Fresh cut shad for channel cats.
For live bait, big walleye and jumbo perch almost always fall for a lively minnow on a jig head. Bass are still going for plastics in black/blue or pumpkin, while heavy spinnerbaits are drawing strikes from shallow pike and bass in cloudy conditions.
Finally, if you’re after numbers and variety, hit Brush Creek Cove or the mouth of the Niangua for a mixed bag. For trophy-size options and tournament strategies, the Gravois Arm and waters near Horseshoe Bend have turned up some real quality fish in the last four days.
That’s your up-to-the-minute Lake of the Ozarks report. Thanks for tuning in and don’t forget to subscribe for more fishing 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
Today’s forecast is classic late-summer-to-fall Missouri—mostly cloudy, mild wind around 5-10mph, and highs pushing near 75°F. You can expect water temps hovering around 65 to 67 degrees; perfect for triggering predatory fish to move shallow and start feeding up for the colder months. Sunrise hit at 6:54AM, so folks out for first light got a solid jump. Sunset’s coming at 7:25PM, so the evening bite is primed for action—especially that last golden hour when walleye and bass turn hungry.
Now, for those wondering about tides, Lake of the Ozarks is a reservoir, not a natural or tidal lake, so no moon-pull or saltwater tides to speak of here. Instead, it’s all about water level fluctuations from the dam, which have been steady this week, keeping fish in predictable patterns.
The past two days, reports from local guides say the walleye bite’s picked up strong, especially along the shallower shoreline edges and the submerged humps. Limits of eater-size walleye are common, with most fish caught in 18-30 feet, transitioning up when the sun’s tucked behind the clouds. Most anglers are drifting spinner rigs with nightcrawlers or trolling crankbaits, with gold, orange, and firetiger patterns being the ticket. Don’t be afraid to bump up to heavier bottom bouncers, up to 3 ounces, to keep your bait hugging the lakebed.
Crappie are biting well near brush piles and docks in the coves, with consistency on jigs tipped with minnows and small crankbaits. trolling small crankbaits is producing decent slab action—size running mostly 10-12 inches, but a few pushing 14. Channel catfish reports are up this week as well, with best results coming on fresh cut shad or chicken livers fished near channel swings in 15-20 feet of water.
Bass anglers had luck in the local 148 tournament just a few days ago, using a mixed bag of tactics. Early morning and late evening, shallow docks and overhanging trees are producing largemouth action. Flat-sided crankbaits are big performers right now. Cody Meyer’s box of flat-sides is all about deflection—these work magic around wood, rocks, or feathered above submerged grass. Texas-rigged plastics and buzzbaits are also getting bites, particularly in moving water near the Gravois Arm and the mouth of the Glaize, two hot spots you shouldn’t overlook.
Top lures for the next week:
- Gold or firetiger spinner rigs with nightcrawler trailers for walleye.
- Flat-sided crankbaits around shallow cover for bass.
- Chartreuse, pink, or blue jigs with live minnows for crappie.
- Fresh cut shad for channel cats.
For live bait, big walleye and jumbo perch almost always fall for a lively minnow on a jig head. Bass are still going for plastics in black/blue or pumpkin, while heavy spinnerbaits are drawing strikes from shallow pike and bass in cloudy conditions.
Finally, if you’re after numbers and variety, hit Brush Creek Cove or the mouth of the Niangua for a mixed bag. For trophy-size options and tournament strategies, the Gravois Arm and waters near Horseshoe Bend have turned up some real quality fish in the last four days.
That’s your up-to-the-minute Lake of the Ozarks report. Thanks for tuning in and don’t forget to subscribe for more fishing 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