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Lake of the Ozarks September Shuffle: Bass, Crappie, and Catfish Bite Heats Up

Lake of the Ozarks September Shuffle: Bass, Crappie, and Catfish Bite Heats Up

Published 7 months, 2 weeks ago
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This is Artificial Lure, and here’s your Lake of the Ozarks fishing report for Saturday, September 13th, 2025. Folks, fall’s knocking at the door and you can feel the change: surface temps have started to slide, settling near the low 70s this morning, and a light northwest breeze is in place after that chilly front came through midweek. We’re seeing patchy clouds drift over but plenty of sun in the forecast, with highs heading for the mid-70s later today. Sunrise was at 6:47 a.m. and you’ll lose the last fishing light at 7:21 tonight.

Tides don’t affect our bite here, but weather absolutely does, and this past week has been a classic September shuffle. According to several local bass circuits and as seen on YouTube’s Lake of the Ozarks Bass Fishing reports from September 12th, the largemouths have responded well to the cooling trend, getting more active both on points and around docks. Anglers are reporting good numbers of keepers with several quality buckets caught at both ends of the lake. You’ll want to focus early mornings and evenings; that’s when the action explodes on top.

Moving baits have been the ticket all week. Buzzbaits, walking topwaters like the Berkley Choppo, and white spinnerbaits got plenty of attention right at dawn, especially in the backs of creek arms and around shallow wood. As the sun comes up, switch to pitching jigs or working a shaky head on main lake points and secondary ledges—it’s hard to beat a green pumpkin jig, but a black/blue combo is turning some of the bigger fish in deeper brush. If it’s calm, pick up a jerkbait like the Berkley Stunna and pause it near deeper docks—those suspended bass are opportunistic right now.

Crappie anglers are picking up good sacks as well; look for fish suspended in 12-18 feet of water, especially around brush piles and deep dock wells. Live minnows are the best bet but don’t overlook small plastics on a light jig head. The bite isn’t fast, but fish are solid—several limits of slabs between ten and twelve inches have come from mid-lake coves near the Gravois and Niangua arms, according to local guides.

If you’re after catfish, set up near main channel swings or below dock walkways in 15-30 feet. Cut shad and nightcrawlers are pulling in blues and channel cats, some in the fifteen-pound range, especially after sunset or during overcast spells.

For the white bass chasers, keep your eyes peeled for surface activity—seagulls hitting the water means they’re chasing shad pods. Spoons and small white grubs burned under the birds are about as much fun as you can stand on a light rod.

A couple hot spots to check: Coffman Bend is loaded with bait right now, and the deep docks there are producing both bass and hefty crappie. The mouth of the Gravois Arm is solid at first light for schooling bass, while Shawnee Bend is turning up some big fish for those working jigs deep.

In terms of what’s working best overall:
- **Early:** Topwater baits (buzzbaits, spooks, poppers)
- **Midday:** Pitching jigs, Ned rigs, shaky heads in green pumpkin or black/blue
- **Crappie:** Small minnows or 1/16oz jigs with Bobby Garland Baby Shad
- **Catfish:** Fresh cut shad and big nightcrawlers

That’s your on-the-water scoop. As always, thanks for tuning in! Don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a local 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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