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Fall Fishing Frenzy at Lake of the Ozarks
Published 7 months ago
Description
Artificial Lure here with your Sunday, September 28th Lake of the Ozarks fishing report. Fall’s officially underway and it’s a fine, cool morning lakeside—currently in the mid-50s at sunrise with a crisp breeze out of the north. Expect mostly sunny skies through the day, highs brushing 74, and a light wind right around 5 to 10 knots. Sunrise was at 7:02 a.m. and sunset will wrap things up tonight at 6:56 p.m., just enough daylight for a full day of casting lines and chasing those bites.
Lake of the Ozarks isn’t tidal, so no tide tables today—what matters now is water temps dipping toward the high 60s in the shallows, perfect for ramping up fish activity. According to the Lake of the Ozarks Daily Fishing Report, the fall bite is heating up across the lake, especially for largemouth bass, crappie, and walleye.
Bass have turned on big time lately, with tournament anglers bringing in bags over 16 pounds as seen in this weekend’s Toyota Series. Folks are reporting their best luck flipping jigs on shallow cover early, and when the sun climbs, switching over to deeper docks and main channel points with jerkbaits and topwater walkers. Randy Blaukat, fresh from the tournament, said Mega Bass jerkbaits and throwback jigs along brush and rocky transitions drew out some quality largemouth, but it was a matter of patience and covering lots of water.
Crappie fishing is holding strong on mid-lake brush piles and under docks, piling up in 10–15 feet early in the morning then slipping a bit deeper as the sun rises. Anglers are filling limits with small hair jigs in white and chartreuse, or going old school with a live minnow on a slip bobber.
Walleye have shown up around the lower Gravois and Glaize arms and are taking a liking to deep-diving crankbaits along rocky points at first and last light. Some early morning trollers have picked up bonus fish running crawler harnesses in 15–25 feet.
Catfish, both blues and channels, are active on river bends and flat edges, with cut shad still king. Early mornings have seen a good flurry right as the fog burns off, especially below the 60 MM and down around the Niangua.
If you’re after sheer numbers and family fun, bluegill are stacked along riprap and marina walls—try a bit of worm or a tiny crappie jig under a float.
Best lures this past week: black/blue flipping jigs, green pumpkin finesse worms, chrome jerkbaits, topwater spooks, and classic crankbaits in shad patterns. For bait, you can’t beat fresh-cut shad for cats, minnows for crappie, and nightcrawlers if you want to keep youngsters busy all morning.
Couple hot spots today:
- **Gravois Arm:** main lake points for bass before the sun gets high, and rocky transition banks for walleye at dusk.
- **Niangua Arm:** brush piles and docks for crappie and those schooling white bass chasing shad in open water.
- **Bagnell Dam Area:** deep docks for big bass and some solid morning crappie.
That’s what’s happening on the water this weekend. Remember, the calendar’s packed with fishing events and clinics from the Missouri Department of Conservation, so if you’re new or bringing the family, check out their fall lineup and get everyone hooked up right.
Thanks for tuning in—be sure to subscribe, catch us tomorrow for a fresh report, and tight lines to you all! 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.
Lake of the Ozarks isn’t tidal, so no tide tables today—what matters now is water temps dipping toward the high 60s in the shallows, perfect for ramping up fish activity. According to the Lake of the Ozarks Daily Fishing Report, the fall bite is heating up across the lake, especially for largemouth bass, crappie, and walleye.
Bass have turned on big time lately, with tournament anglers bringing in bags over 16 pounds as seen in this weekend’s Toyota Series. Folks are reporting their best luck flipping jigs on shallow cover early, and when the sun climbs, switching over to deeper docks and main channel points with jerkbaits and topwater walkers. Randy Blaukat, fresh from the tournament, said Mega Bass jerkbaits and throwback jigs along brush and rocky transitions drew out some quality largemouth, but it was a matter of patience and covering lots of water.
Crappie fishing is holding strong on mid-lake brush piles and under docks, piling up in 10–15 feet early in the morning then slipping a bit deeper as the sun rises. Anglers are filling limits with small hair jigs in white and chartreuse, or going old school with a live minnow on a slip bobber.
Walleye have shown up around the lower Gravois and Glaize arms and are taking a liking to deep-diving crankbaits along rocky points at first and last light. Some early morning trollers have picked up bonus fish running crawler harnesses in 15–25 feet.
Catfish, both blues and channels, are active on river bends and flat edges, with cut shad still king. Early mornings have seen a good flurry right as the fog burns off, especially below the 60 MM and down around the Niangua.
If you’re after sheer numbers and family fun, bluegill are stacked along riprap and marina walls—try a bit of worm or a tiny crappie jig under a float.
Best lures this past week: black/blue flipping jigs, green pumpkin finesse worms, chrome jerkbaits, topwater spooks, and classic crankbaits in shad patterns. For bait, you can’t beat fresh-cut shad for cats, minnows for crappie, and nightcrawlers if you want to keep youngsters busy all morning.
Couple hot spots today:
- **Gravois Arm:** main lake points for bass before the sun gets high, and rocky transition banks for walleye at dusk.
- **Niangua Arm:** brush piles and docks for crappie and those schooling white bass chasing shad in open water.
- **Bagnell Dam Area:** deep docks for big bass and some solid morning crappie.
That’s what’s happening on the water this weekend. Remember, the calendar’s packed with fishing events and clinics from the Missouri Department of Conservation, so if you’re new or bringing the family, check out their fall lineup and get everyone hooked up right.
Thanks for tuning in—be sure to subscribe, catch us tomorrow for a fresh report, and tight lines to you all! 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.