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Tenkiller's Autumn Angling: Bass, Crappie, and Cats on the Bite

Tenkiller's Autumn Angling: Bass, Crappie, and Cats on the Bite

Published 7 months, 1 week ago
Description
Artificial Lure back with your September 19, 2025 fishing report for Lake Tenkiller, Oklahoma. Kick off the morning with a sunrise at 7:08 a.m., and if you’re planning to stay late, expect sunset at 7:26 p.m. The weather’s setting up a perfect day—overnight lows sticking to the high 60s, highs pushing 82°, skies partly cloudy, and a gentle south breeze around 9 mph. Lake conditions? Total pool elevation is holding steady at 632.72 feet, just about 0.72 feet above normal with a slow release of 590 cubic feet per second from the dam as of yesterday evening, keeping water levels stable and visibility good. Tenkiller flood pool is barely filled, so expect current to be mellow except near the dam, and water clarity typical for September.

There’s no real tide here, but anglers always keep an eye on flow from dam releases. Today, with minimum release, fish will settle into deeper structure early and roam up shallows as the sun warms the banks. Top targets right now: largemouth bass, smallmouth bass, spotted bass, crappie, and catfish.

Local talk this week is all about the bass bite. Reports confirm consistent catches, with limits in the 3–5 lb range and a few pushing 7 lbs near the main lake points and mid-lake humps. A couple area bass clubs saw Saturday weigh-ins featuring strong bags—most anglers catching their best on green pumpkin soft plastics, chartreuse crankbaits, and bluegill-colored swimbaits. Surface temps are hovering in the low to mid-70s, ideal for fall patterns to ramp up.

Crappie action's reliable, especially around the Standing Rock area and Snake Creek. Most slabs are coming off small minnows and 1/16 oz jigs in chartreuse or purple, fished near submerged brush at 15–20 feet. The bite heat up as the morning rises, so get those lines down early. Some anglers are still filling limits within two hours on the right piles. Catfish have been active close to Cookson Bend—cut shad and stink bait are working well after sunset, with most blues and channels averaging 3–6 lbs.

Best baits today:
- **Bass:** Green pumpkin finesse worms, chrome or shad pattern crankbaits, and white spinnerbaits.
- **Crappie:** Live minnows, chartreuse or electric chicken jigs.
- **Catfish:** Fresh cut bait or classic stink bait.

If you’re looking for hot spots: try the main lake points off Pine Cove for smallmouth in the morning, Standing Rock for crappie midday, and Driftwood Hollow for largemouth as shadows get longer. Night owls, head for the flats near Cookson Bend for a mix of cats on cut bait.

With steady water, mild weather, and early fall forage starting to move, Lake Tenkiller’s delivering classic action. Whether casting or jigging, aim to work both vertical and horizontal presentations—fish are on the move but tight to cover early.

Thanks for tuning in to today’s Lake Tenkiller fishing report. Don't forget to subscribe so you never miss the local bite or tackle 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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