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Lake Austin Fishing Report: Largemouth, Panfish, and More on a Glassy Early Fall Day
Published 7 months ago
Description
This is Artificial Lure, checking in lakeside on a golden early-fall Saturday here at Lake Austin. It’s September 27, 2025, first light just creeping over the 360 Bridge—sunrise hit at 7:21 a.m. and sunset’ll set the skyline glowing tonight at 7:21 p.m. The air is cool, just shy of 67 degrees at dawn, feeling like fall’s got its hooks in us, but by midday expect highs to push into the low 90s. There’s barely a whisper of wind, water glassy through the coves, only broken by the slap of a tail or a jump—central Texas at its best, as reported by the Lake Austin Daily Fishing Report.
The dam’s not moving much water, and we don’t get real tidal swings, but watch for subtle current picking up near the marina inlets and creek mouths as boat traffic increases mid-morning—great ambush points for both baitfish and their pursuers.
Now, the bite: locals and guides have seen steady action this week on largemouth bass—most anglers working soft plastics off the ledges and drop-offs just downslope from City Park and under the Pennybacker Bridge. According to Texas Parks & Wildlife records, largemouths topping 5 pounds are being found early using watermelon-red Senkos, chatterbaits, and black-blue jigs bounced around submerged timber and dock pilings. A couple brutes pushing 7 pounds were recently landed near the Quinlan Park area—one on a chartreuse spinnerbait slow-rolled at dawn, another hit a live shad freelined in deeper pockets below the lower dam.
For panfish, the bluegill and sunfish bite is still hot in the shallows and around boat docks—most taken with mealworms, small chunks of nightcrawler, or white-and-yellow beetle spins. Don’t overlook the deeper holes upriver, where black and hybrid bluegills over 9 inches have been pulled this week on microjigs and even small flies like prince nymphs and stoneflies, as noted in TPWD’s angler reports.
Catfish are waking up too, especially channel cats that’ve been biting best at night and in low light—chicken liver, punch bait, and cut shad are getting the job done off deeper bends by Emma Long Park and under the east end of Tom Miller Dam.
If you’re chasing white or hybrid striped bass, focus your efforts where you see schools of baitfish on sonar—midlake humps, the mouth of Bee Creek, and around “the City Park Drop”—best bets are chrome lipless crankbaits and quarter-ounce white Rooster Tails.
Now, if you want a true shot at a Lake Austin legend, try a live bluegill or large crawfish beneath a slip float just off the rock jetties at Mary Quinlan Park—some anglers have stuck into double-digit bass by being patient and quiet.
Best lures right now: soft-plastic stickbaits in watermelon, craw-pattern jigs, white spinners, and small crankbaits that mimic threadfin shad. If the bite gets finicky, switch to live worms, fresh-cut shad, or lively minnows—sometimes that’s what’ll trigger those pressured fish.
Hot spots today:
- **Under the Pennybacker (360) Bridge**, targeting structure and shade lines early
- **The downstream end of Emma Long Park**—docks, laydowns, and creek channel drops
- **Quinlan Park boat ramp and adjacent reeds**—bass at first light, bluegill all day
A quick reminder: Lake Austin operates entirely catch and release for largemouth bass, and all city parks are enforcing trash regulations—pack out what you pack in so these banks stay fishable for the next generation.
Thanks for tuning in to your Lake Austin report with me, Artificial Lure. Don’t forget to subscribe for daily updates, fresh tips, and more local angler 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-genera
The dam’s not moving much water, and we don’t get real tidal swings, but watch for subtle current picking up near the marina inlets and creek mouths as boat traffic increases mid-morning—great ambush points for both baitfish and their pursuers.
Now, the bite: locals and guides have seen steady action this week on largemouth bass—most anglers working soft plastics off the ledges and drop-offs just downslope from City Park and under the Pennybacker Bridge. According to Texas Parks & Wildlife records, largemouths topping 5 pounds are being found early using watermelon-red Senkos, chatterbaits, and black-blue jigs bounced around submerged timber and dock pilings. A couple brutes pushing 7 pounds were recently landed near the Quinlan Park area—one on a chartreuse spinnerbait slow-rolled at dawn, another hit a live shad freelined in deeper pockets below the lower dam.
For panfish, the bluegill and sunfish bite is still hot in the shallows and around boat docks—most taken with mealworms, small chunks of nightcrawler, or white-and-yellow beetle spins. Don’t overlook the deeper holes upriver, where black and hybrid bluegills over 9 inches have been pulled this week on microjigs and even small flies like prince nymphs and stoneflies, as noted in TPWD’s angler reports.
Catfish are waking up too, especially channel cats that’ve been biting best at night and in low light—chicken liver, punch bait, and cut shad are getting the job done off deeper bends by Emma Long Park and under the east end of Tom Miller Dam.
If you’re chasing white or hybrid striped bass, focus your efforts where you see schools of baitfish on sonar—midlake humps, the mouth of Bee Creek, and around “the City Park Drop”—best bets are chrome lipless crankbaits and quarter-ounce white Rooster Tails.
Now, if you want a true shot at a Lake Austin legend, try a live bluegill or large crawfish beneath a slip float just off the rock jetties at Mary Quinlan Park—some anglers have stuck into double-digit bass by being patient and quiet.
Best lures right now: soft-plastic stickbaits in watermelon, craw-pattern jigs, white spinners, and small crankbaits that mimic threadfin shad. If the bite gets finicky, switch to live worms, fresh-cut shad, or lively minnows—sometimes that’s what’ll trigger those pressured fish.
Hot spots today:
- **Under the Pennybacker (360) Bridge**, targeting structure and shade lines early
- **The downstream end of Emma Long Park**—docks, laydowns, and creek channel drops
- **Quinlan Park boat ramp and adjacent reeds**—bass at first light, bluegill all day
A quick reminder: Lake Austin operates entirely catch and release for largemouth bass, and all city parks are enforcing trash regulations—pack out what you pack in so these banks stay fishable for the next generation.
Thanks for tuning in to your Lake Austin report with me, Artificial Lure. Don’t forget to subscribe for daily updates, fresh tips, and more local angler 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-genera