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Lake of the Ozarks September 14th Fishing Report: Bass, Crappie, and Catfish Heating Up

Lake of the Ozarks September 14th Fishing Report: Bass, Crappie, and Catfish Heating Up

Published 7 months, 2 weeks ago
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Artificial Lure here, bringing you the Lake of the Ozarks fishing report for September 14th, 2025.

First light hit the water at 6:49 AM, and sunset will be at 7:15 PM tonight—so there’s plenty of daylight to get lines wet. With no tides in Missouri’s freshwater, focus instead on barometric swings and those classic Ozark fall transitions. Today, we're seeing temps in the mid-60s at dawn, warming to the high 70s by afternoon under partly cloudy skies, a light southern breeze keeping things comfortable and fish on the move. A mild cold front has the water temps sitting right around 75 degrees, cooling quick after last week’s heat. According to the Lake of the Ozarks Missouri Daily Fishing Report, the fall transition bite started mid-week and really fired up following Friday’s rain, which means fish are shallow at daybreak and cruising mid-depth by midday.

Bass fishing continues to headline the action. The September 12th tournament scene saw a pile of quality largemouth, with tournament bags tipping 17 to 20 pounds and several 5-pounders reported on main-lake points and boat docks. Mid Missouri Angling and Intuitive Angling with Randy Blaukat both highlight classic fall patterns: topwater lures at dawn—Whopper Ploppers, buzzbaits, and walking baits—held over steep banks in the lower Glaize and Gravois arms. Once the sun’s up, anglers are rotating to soft plastics. Ned rigs and wacky-rigged Senkos are producing well around docks and brush, especially near shaded catwalks and isolated laydowns.

Crappie are starting to regroup after their summer spread, stacking up on brushpiles in 10 to 18 feet of water, especially in mid-lake coves and the Niangua arm. Small jigs tipped with crappie minnows or gulp sabikis will put a mess of slabs in the livewell. Reports from locals on Spreaker say many are limiting out near the 31 and 55 mile markers using Bobby Garland Baby Shads and pink jigs, with best bites coming from 8:00 to 10:00 AM.

Catfishing has been steady, with several good blues and channels brought in overnight. Stinkbaits, cut shad, and nightcrawlers fished along drop-offs and behind docks are the ticket, especially from dusk to just after midnight. According to Kyle Kosovich’s recent Ozarks float trip, the channel cats are fattening up and eager to eat right before a weather front.

If you’re thinking of which baits to grab, locals and YouTube regulars recommend:
- Topwaters like Whopper Plopper or Berkley Choppo at dawn
- Jerkbaits such as the Berkley Stunna for suspended bass mid-morning
- Ned rigs and wacky worms (try Berkley PowerBait General)
- 3/8 oz jigs for pitching under docks
- For crappie: 1/16 oz marabou jigs or live minnows
- For cats: fresh cut shad, stinkbait, or nightcrawlers

As for hotspots, check out the following:
- **Lower Osage Arm**, especially main-lake points with ledge transitions for both bass and crappie.
- **Grand Glaize Arm**, working docks near PB2, which has been a September staple for big bass.
- Early morning, hit the bluff ends around the Niangua 50-mile marker.
- For catfish, anchor off channel swings near the 19 to 25 mile markers after sundown.

Remember, as Randy Blaukat says, “take a moment to enjoy the fish and the experience.” Watch the fog lift off the water, breathe in that cool Ozark air, and maybe take a kid fishing—it’s more than the catching that keeps us coming back.

Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure’s Lake of the Ozarks fishing report. Subscribe so you don’t miss tomorrow’s update, and tight lines until then.

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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI

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