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Bite's Up at Lake of the Ozarks - Hammering Bass, Crappie, and Catfish in Classic Early Fall Action

Bite's Up at Lake of the Ozarks - Hammering Bass, Crappie, and Catfish in Classic Early Fall Action

Published 7 months ago
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Lake of the Ozarks is waking up to a classic early fall morning on Saturday, September 27, 2025. Air temps hovered near 59 at dawn, reaching into the low 70s as light winds persisted from the northeast. There’s patchy fog along the coves early, burning off by midday. Sunrise today hit at 6:57 AM, and sunset will settle in around 7:03 PM. Water temps are cooling, holding steady in the upper 70s which is firing up fish activity across the lake. No tides to report here in Missouri, but lunar activity’s shifting toward a waning moon phase, with most anglers agreeing it’s a fine window for feeding fish.

Bass are on the move, according to Mid Missouri Angling—late September always wakes up shallow bite. Largemouth and spotted bass are pushing into backs of creeks and shallow points chasing shad, with plenty of action early and late in the day. Most reported catches fall in the 2–4 lb range, with the occasional kicker over five showing up, especially from deeper brush piles and rocky ledges. The Tin Horse Monty Fishing crew mentioned strong bites on spinnerbaits, squarebill crankbaits, and old-school black/blue jigs around docks and laydowns. Buzzbaits and chatterbaits have lit up before 10 AM, mainly where shad schools are pushing toward shore.

Crappie are cooperating just as well, with good numbers coming in off brush piles set in 15–22 ft of water, particularly around the Niangua arm and Gravois. Experienced locals report limits before noon using minnows and 2" chartreuse tubes. Most slabs are running 10–12 inches, perfect for the fryer. Catfish hunters have had a solid showing this week—blues are biting night crawlers and cut shad on main channel flats and drop-offs after dark, with fish reported between 5–15 lbs.

The Spreaker Daily Report’s highlighting that fall patterns are setting up: “Biting Bass, Cooperative Crappie, and Hungry Catfish” make for solid mixed bags right now. The Missouri Department of Conservation notes regulations remain steady, so remember those slot limits and keep only legal fish.

Best lures this week:
- **Bass:** white buzzbaits, black/blue flipping jigs, chrome/blue lipless crankbaits, shad-pattern squarebills.
- **Crappie:** live minnows, chartreuse/white tubes, Bobby Garland's blue ice baby shads.
- **Catfish:** fresh cut shad, Sonny's dip bait, big night crawlers.

Top hot spots:
- **Gravois Arm:** Shallow docks and brush for crappie, rocky secondary points for bass.
- **Niangua Arm:** Hit bluff ends for bass and brush in 15–20 feet for slabs.
- **Grand Glaize Creek:** Early morning spinnerbait and buzzbait action for bass; main channel ledges for late-night cats.

Over the past several days, local tournament anglers have noted a marked increase in fish numbers—one report indicated over 15 keepers boated per boat on practice days, with plenty of short strikes signaling uptick in feeding. Wired2Fish reminds us that Lake of the Ozarks hosts both largemouth and spotted bass; look for the bigger largemouths holding closer to deeper cover, especially during midday lulls.

After a cooler week and lots of stable weather, the fish are prepping for the turnover, so now’s prime time before things shift. Bring extra spinnerbaits—dock bass have been bending hooks left and right. If you’ve got access to LiveScope or side imaging, you’ll spot crappie stacked on deeper cover, and chasing bait balls—keep your presentation moving and downsize when the bite slows.

Thanks for tuning in, folks. For the latest boots-on-the-dock updates and to swap stories with fellow anglers, make sure to subscribe. 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

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