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Fall Transition Heats Up Lake of the Ozarks Fishing
Published 7 months, 1 week ago
Description
Artificial Lure here with your Saturday morning fishing report for Lake of the Ozarks, Missouri, September 20, 2025.
We’re enjoying the start of true fall transition this morning—sunrise hit around 6:52 AM, with sunset slated for about 7:10 PM. A refreshing cool snap moved in last night, leaving temps in the upper 50s at dawn, with highs forecast to touch the mid-70s by late afternoon. Winds are moderate out of the northwest at 10–12 mph, skies swing from cloudy to partly sunny, and you can expect stable pressure—a great combo for active fish. No tides here, but the cooling overnight temps and shorter daylight hours mean fish patterns are shifting fast.
Recent activity reports around Lake of the Ozarks show crappie action heating up in the shallows. Rem-Dawg’s local fishing video posted yesterday shows folks catching good numbers of slab crappie on brush piles and docks, mostly in 8–15 feet of water. Small jigs tipped with Bobby Garland or Mo’Glo plastics are working well; bright colors like chartreuse and electric chicken are the ticket. Minnows also get bit, especially on suspended fish near deeper docks.
Bass anglers—both largemouth and spotted bass—are getting bites early and late along main lake points and secondary coves. Topwater baits such as walking-type plugs, buzzbaits, and hollow body frogs are pulling strikes at first light and dusk, particularly around emergent grass and seawalls. Wired2Fish puts emphasis on the jighead minnow presentation, with swimbaits in shad or silver hues fished slow and steady above submerged brush or rock ledges. Don’t forget spinnerbaits with white blades during overcast periods, and when the sun’s high, Texas-rigged worms fished deep are producing larger fish.
Lake of the Ozarks always has solid catfish action; channels and blues are on the feed below main lake docks and near channel swings. Fresh cut shad, chicken liver, or dip bait dropped on bottom rigs get the job done. Check the deeper holes near the Grand Glaize and Gravois arms for best results.
Reports from tackle shops say white bass are schooling heavy; watch for surface feeding frenzies mid-morning and again before sunset. Throw small silver spoons or inline spinners into busting bait balls for quick limits.
Recent catches:
- Crappie: many anglers reporting 20+ fish per trip, with keepers in the 10”–13” range.
- Bass: Multiple 3–5 lb largemouth caught this week (weighted at Hazel’s Dock Challenge); top baits were white/green spinnerbaits, and Zoom Trick Worms.
- Catfish: 5–10 lb blues and channels common, with some anglers hitting double digits at night with fresh cut bait.
- White bass: 15–30 per outing on the lower lake arms, mainly on silver spoons and rooster tails.
For those seeking hot spots today:
- The Niangua arm—specifically around the 6-mile marker—has been lights out for crappie and bass.
- Gravois arm docks and brush piles are holding numbers of keeper crappie and hungry spotted bass.
- The main channel drop-offs near Linn Creek are loaded with white bass chasing shad.
Best lures and baits for this weekend:
- Crappie: 1/16 oz jigheads with chartreuse or monkey milk plastics, or live minnows.
- Bass: topwater plugs, spinnerbaits, small swimbaits, and green pumpkin soft plastics.
- Catfish: cut shad, liver, stink bait.
- White bass: silver spoons, chrome inline spinners.
As always, changing conditions mean adaptability is key—keep an eye on the water clarity and bring extra color options for your plastics. Fall patterns are firing up and fish are feeding hard.
Thanks for tuning in to the Lake of the Ozarks fishing report! Be sure to subscribe so you never miss a bite—this has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt
We’re enjoying the start of true fall transition this morning—sunrise hit around 6:52 AM, with sunset slated for about 7:10 PM. A refreshing cool snap moved in last night, leaving temps in the upper 50s at dawn, with highs forecast to touch the mid-70s by late afternoon. Winds are moderate out of the northwest at 10–12 mph, skies swing from cloudy to partly sunny, and you can expect stable pressure—a great combo for active fish. No tides here, but the cooling overnight temps and shorter daylight hours mean fish patterns are shifting fast.
Recent activity reports around Lake of the Ozarks show crappie action heating up in the shallows. Rem-Dawg’s local fishing video posted yesterday shows folks catching good numbers of slab crappie on brush piles and docks, mostly in 8–15 feet of water. Small jigs tipped with Bobby Garland or Mo’Glo plastics are working well; bright colors like chartreuse and electric chicken are the ticket. Minnows also get bit, especially on suspended fish near deeper docks.
Bass anglers—both largemouth and spotted bass—are getting bites early and late along main lake points and secondary coves. Topwater baits such as walking-type plugs, buzzbaits, and hollow body frogs are pulling strikes at first light and dusk, particularly around emergent grass and seawalls. Wired2Fish puts emphasis on the jighead minnow presentation, with swimbaits in shad or silver hues fished slow and steady above submerged brush or rock ledges. Don’t forget spinnerbaits with white blades during overcast periods, and when the sun’s high, Texas-rigged worms fished deep are producing larger fish.
Lake of the Ozarks always has solid catfish action; channels and blues are on the feed below main lake docks and near channel swings. Fresh cut shad, chicken liver, or dip bait dropped on bottom rigs get the job done. Check the deeper holes near the Grand Glaize and Gravois arms for best results.
Reports from tackle shops say white bass are schooling heavy; watch for surface feeding frenzies mid-morning and again before sunset. Throw small silver spoons or inline spinners into busting bait balls for quick limits.
Recent catches:
- Crappie: many anglers reporting 20+ fish per trip, with keepers in the 10”–13” range.
- Bass: Multiple 3–5 lb largemouth caught this week (weighted at Hazel’s Dock Challenge); top baits were white/green spinnerbaits, and Zoom Trick Worms.
- Catfish: 5–10 lb blues and channels common, with some anglers hitting double digits at night with fresh cut bait.
- White bass: 15–30 per outing on the lower lake arms, mainly on silver spoons and rooster tails.
For those seeking hot spots today:
- The Niangua arm—specifically around the 6-mile marker—has been lights out for crappie and bass.
- Gravois arm docks and brush piles are holding numbers of keeper crappie and hungry spotted bass.
- The main channel drop-offs near Linn Creek are loaded with white bass chasing shad.
Best lures and baits for this weekend:
- Crappie: 1/16 oz jigheads with chartreuse or monkey milk plastics, or live minnows.
- Bass: topwater plugs, spinnerbaits, small swimbaits, and green pumpkin soft plastics.
- Catfish: cut shad, liver, stink bait.
- White bass: silver spoons, chrome inline spinners.
As always, changing conditions mean adaptability is key—keep an eye on the water clarity and bring extra color options for your plastics. Fall patterns are firing up and fish are feeding hard.
Thanks for tuning in to the Lake of the Ozarks fishing report! Be sure to subscribe so you never miss a bite—this has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt