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Tenkiller Topwater Titans: Fall Bite Heats Up with Bass, Crappie & Cats
Published 7 months ago
Description
Lake Tenkiller anglers, this is Artificial Lure bringing you your local report for Saturday, September 27th, 2025. If you’re heading out today, expect classic fall conditions—lake level running just above normal, with pool elevation at 634.11 feet and outflow steady at 4,236 cubic feet per second, according to the Tulsa District Water Control. Water’s moving but not flooding, so fish are on the move and biting predictably.
Sunrise nudged in at 7:14 AM and sunset will slip out around 7:14 PM, giving you nearly perfect bookends for a full day on the water. Weather’s mild—morning temps in the upper 60s, warming into the low 80s by midday. Winds light from the southeast, just enough ripple for topwater action, and no sign of rain till late evening.
Topwater’s the hero this week—big bass smashing poppers and walk-the-dog style plugs during those golden morning hours. The “Lake Tenkiller Oklahoma Daily Fishing Report” confirms the bite is hot on topwater and plastics, especially right at first light. Floating frogs, Zara Spooks, and buzzbaits have all brought in largemouths pushing 5 pounds near Snake Creek and Burnt Cabin flats.
Crappie are stacking up on brush piles at mid-depth—8 to 15 feet. Local stick Dave’s Bait & Tackle in Gore says big slabs are coming on pink or chartreuse tube jigs tipped with minnows. Catfish, meanwhile, are cruising flats and channels looking for cut shad and chicken liver, particularly in the lower end near Carter’s Landing. Fish running 2-8 pounds, with some bigger blues hanging deeper closer to the dam.
Recent catches include:
- Largemouth and spotted bass, regular numbers 2-4 lbs, some nearing 6.
- Crappie, plenty of 10-12 inchers, occasional slabs over 14.
- Channel and blue cats, solid eaters with a few trophy-class movers.
Best bait today: Topwater lures for bass just past dawn, switching to soft plastics like watermelon red worms and craws as the sun climbs. For crappie, it’s hard to beat live minnows or bright hair jigs on brush. Cats want cut bait or punch baits set right on the bottom.
If you’re new or want a fast start, the brush piles off Strayhorn Landing and the breaks at Chicken Creek are proven hot spots. Bass and crappie concentrate here as the water cools, with the channel cuts up north kicking out nice catfish.
Don’t forget, Oklahoma wildlife rules updated for 2025—everyone, especially non-residents, needs to check in and out at public access points now. This helps the Wildlife Department manage traffic and keep our lake fishing strong.
Gear up before leaving the dock—the bite’s active and September’s rhythm feels just about perfect.
Thanks for tuning in and don’t forget to hit subscribe for daily fishing intel. 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.
Sunrise nudged in at 7:14 AM and sunset will slip out around 7:14 PM, giving you nearly perfect bookends for a full day on the water. Weather’s mild—morning temps in the upper 60s, warming into the low 80s by midday. Winds light from the southeast, just enough ripple for topwater action, and no sign of rain till late evening.
Topwater’s the hero this week—big bass smashing poppers and walk-the-dog style plugs during those golden morning hours. The “Lake Tenkiller Oklahoma Daily Fishing Report” confirms the bite is hot on topwater and plastics, especially right at first light. Floating frogs, Zara Spooks, and buzzbaits have all brought in largemouths pushing 5 pounds near Snake Creek and Burnt Cabin flats.
Crappie are stacking up on brush piles at mid-depth—8 to 15 feet. Local stick Dave’s Bait & Tackle in Gore says big slabs are coming on pink or chartreuse tube jigs tipped with minnows. Catfish, meanwhile, are cruising flats and channels looking for cut shad and chicken liver, particularly in the lower end near Carter’s Landing. Fish running 2-8 pounds, with some bigger blues hanging deeper closer to the dam.
Recent catches include:
- Largemouth and spotted bass, regular numbers 2-4 lbs, some nearing 6.
- Crappie, plenty of 10-12 inchers, occasional slabs over 14.
- Channel and blue cats, solid eaters with a few trophy-class movers.
Best bait today: Topwater lures for bass just past dawn, switching to soft plastics like watermelon red worms and craws as the sun climbs. For crappie, it’s hard to beat live minnows or bright hair jigs on brush. Cats want cut bait or punch baits set right on the bottom.
If you’re new or want a fast start, the brush piles off Strayhorn Landing and the breaks at Chicken Creek are proven hot spots. Bass and crappie concentrate here as the water cools, with the channel cuts up north kicking out nice catfish.
Don’t forget, Oklahoma wildlife rules updated for 2025—everyone, especially non-residents, needs to check in and out at public access points now. This helps the Wildlife Department manage traffic and keep our lake fishing strong.
Gear up before leaving the dock—the bite’s active and September’s rhythm feels just about perfect.
Thanks for tuning in and don’t forget to hit subscribe for daily fishing intel. 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.