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Fall Bite Activates on Lake of the Ozarks - Walleye, Bass, and Crappie Chasing Baitfish

Fall Bite Activates on Lake of the Ozarks - Walleye, Bass, and Crappie Chasing Baitfish

Published 7 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
Morning folks, this is Artificial Lure with your September 17th fishing report for Lake of the Ozarks and the surrounding Missouri waters.

A cool hint of fall is in the air this morning. As of sunrise at 6:52 AM, air temps are starting in the mid-60s and we’re expecting a pleasant high in the upper 70s under mostly clear skies. Winds are light out of the northwest at around 5 to 8 mph—absolutely prime conditions for a day on the lake. No tidal report is needed here since Lake of the Ozarks isn’t influenced by tides—just steady reservoir water, ideal for anglers looking for predictable patterns. Sunset tonight will be at 7:17 PM, giving us a solid window to chase fish through dusk.

Recent weather has finally dropped surface water temperatures into the upper 60s, which is activating both the bass and walleye bites. According to the local guides, the cooler water has triggered fall patterns—fish are moving out of their deep summer haunts and feeding more aggressively along channel swings, points, and brush piles. The Bass Cast reports a nice run of largemouth over the weekend, with winning weights at tournaments topping 18 pounds—most of those fish came on shad-imitating crankbaits and spinnerbaits, especially at first light or in overcast spells.

Walleye action has picked up as well. Drifting or slow-trolling bottom bouncers tipped with nightcrawlers or minnows in 18 to 28 feet of water is getting steady results, especially near the mid-lake humps and the mouths of major creeks. When the clouds roll in, switch to a jig and minnow combo. Keep your trolling speeds around 1.3 to 1.7 mph just off the main bottom structure, as folks on YouTube like the Walleye Fishing - Trolling Speed Is Key channel have shown—hang close to the bottom, especially when marking fish on your graph.

Largemouth are being taken across shallow points and back in the coves. Early and late, work a topwater frog or buzzbait around shallow docks and weed lines. Once the sun’s high, a Texas-rigged senko in green pumpkin or a compact jig pitched into laydowns or boat slips is the ticket. Wired2Fish recommends a Keitech Model 1 Casting Jig paired with a Paca Chunk for pressured largemouth—keep it subtle and work it slow, especially with the clear fall water.

Crappie are starting to stack up on deeper brush, typically 12 to 18 feet down. A Bobby Garland Baby Shad in blue ice or monkey milk, fished on a light jighead, has been the local favorite. Don’t overlook the bluff ends or channels just out from the main river.

Catfish chasers, you’re in luck too. The bigger blues are prowling during low light—they’re being caught on fresh cut bait near channel edges and below the big docks. Flatheads are moving up river as shad schools thicken up, so set a tight line and be patient.

For hotspots, hit the Gravois Arm for a mixed bag of walleye and crappie—focus around Indian Creek and deep brush piles. Bass anglers are piling up at the mouths of the Niangua and Grand Glaize Arms, working secondary points and brush. If you’re after numbers, the area near the Dam offers great vertical jigging, especially for schooling whites and hybrids on windy days.

To sum up: the bite’s heating up, patterns are shifting, and the fish are finally responding after a long, hot summer. Don’t forget your gold and chartreuse blades for walleye, and keep those frogs and jigs handy for bass along the docks.

Thanks for tuning in—remember to subscribe so you don’t miss a report or tip. 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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