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Lake of the Ozarks Morning Fishing Report: Seasonal Shifts, Prime Spots, and Lure Recommendations
Published 7 months, 1 week ago
Description
Artificial Lure here, checking in lakeside for your morning September 19, 2025 fishing report from the heart of Lake of the Ozarks, Missouri. After a sticky-hot week across the state, today’s forecast calls for a cooler stretch — early fall is starting to flirt with the water. The sunrise is coming in at about 6:55 AM, and sunset’s drifting close to 7:12 PM; plenty of daylight for working prime spots before the weekend crowd wakes up.
Lake levels are holding steady, water temps ranging from upper 70s to low 80s right now, with clarity just a little stained after Wednesday’s pop-up showers. There’s no tidal swing since we’re inland, but you’ll want to watch for wind pushing bait into the backs of coves and creek mouths late in the day.
Fish activity is starting to shift with the season — the shad migration is picking up, which means both bass and stripers are on the hunt, and the topwater bite is coming alive especially at dawn and dusk. Recent catches reported by locals and the last few tournaments have included good numbers of **largemouth bass** running 2–4 pounds. Soft plastics have been the ticket: Texas-rigged worms (watermelon and green pumpkin), Carolina rigs, and drop shots have worked best on main lake points and long gravel flats. Topwater action with Whopper Ploppers, Zara Spooks, and buzzbaits has produced some solid strikes near docks and seawalls in the shade before the sun gets high.
Anglers have seen regular catches of **crappie** around brush piles and deep docks, holding about 12–18 feet down. Minnows and Bobby Garland jigs in white/chartreuse have drawn steady bites, especially in the Gravois and Niangua arms.
Don’t overlook the **white bass** and hybrid stripers schooling up; road runners and small spoons tossed into busting bait schools around the main channel are catching aggressive fish. Catfish remain active; folks fishing with cut shad and chicken livers on flats and near channel swings have landed blues and channels up to 10 pounds over the past few evenings. Bream still biting well on crickets, especially around shallow timber.
Now, about hot spots — if you’re launching out today, be sure to check:
- **The Bagnell Dam tailwaters at sunrise:** Always a classic for early topwater, deep diving crankbaits, and live shad for larger predators.
- **The back of the Gravois Arm:** Shad are stacking here, and so are the bass and crappie. Dock pattern bite is solid, especially midway in the creek.
- For late-evening action, hit **Niangua Bridge** and work the gravel points with a Carolina rig or jig, targeting suspended bass and schooling whites.
Best lures right now: topwater walkers and buzzbaits* early, soft plastics rigged Texas or Carolina style in green pumpkin/watermelon midday, and jigs around structure. For crappie, stick with chartreuse–white tubes or minnows. Catfishermen, keep using cut bait and try nightcrawlers after sunset. Bream are nailing anything wormy or buggy.
Thanks for tuning in to today’s lakeside report. Don’t forget to subscribe for your next dose of Lake Ozark action and tips. 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 content.
Lake levels are holding steady, water temps ranging from upper 70s to low 80s right now, with clarity just a little stained after Wednesday’s pop-up showers. There’s no tidal swing since we’re inland, but you’ll want to watch for wind pushing bait into the backs of coves and creek mouths late in the day.
Fish activity is starting to shift with the season — the shad migration is picking up, which means both bass and stripers are on the hunt, and the topwater bite is coming alive especially at dawn and dusk. Recent catches reported by locals and the last few tournaments have included good numbers of **largemouth bass** running 2–4 pounds. Soft plastics have been the ticket: Texas-rigged worms (watermelon and green pumpkin), Carolina rigs, and drop shots have worked best on main lake points and long gravel flats. Topwater action with Whopper Ploppers, Zara Spooks, and buzzbaits has produced some solid strikes near docks and seawalls in the shade before the sun gets high.
Anglers have seen regular catches of **crappie** around brush piles and deep docks, holding about 12–18 feet down. Minnows and Bobby Garland jigs in white/chartreuse have drawn steady bites, especially in the Gravois and Niangua arms.
Don’t overlook the **white bass** and hybrid stripers schooling up; road runners and small spoons tossed into busting bait schools around the main channel are catching aggressive fish. Catfish remain active; folks fishing with cut shad and chicken livers on flats and near channel swings have landed blues and channels up to 10 pounds over the past few evenings. Bream still biting well on crickets, especially around shallow timber.
Now, about hot spots — if you’re launching out today, be sure to check:
- **The Bagnell Dam tailwaters at sunrise:** Always a classic for early topwater, deep diving crankbaits, and live shad for larger predators.
- **The back of the Gravois Arm:** Shad are stacking here, and so are the bass and crappie. Dock pattern bite is solid, especially midway in the creek.
- For late-evening action, hit **Niangua Bridge** and work the gravel points with a Carolina rig or jig, targeting suspended bass and schooling whites.
Best lures right now: topwater walkers and buzzbaits* early, soft plastics rigged Texas or Carolina style in green pumpkin/watermelon midday, and jigs around structure. For crappie, stick with chartreuse–white tubes or minnows. Catfishermen, keep using cut bait and try nightcrawlers after sunset. Bream are nailing anything wormy or buggy.
Thanks for tuning in to today’s lakeside report. Don’t forget to subscribe for your next dose of Lake Ozark action and tips. 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 content.