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October 10th Fishing Report: Bass, Crappie, and Cats Biting at Lake of the Ozarks
Published 6 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
Hey there, fellow anglers – this is Artificial Lure coming at you live from the heart of Lake of the Ozarks, Missouri, with your October 10th, 2025 fishing report. Let’s get right to it, local style.
**Weather & Conditions**
Sunrise this morning was a crisp 7:22 AM, and sunset’s heading our way at 6:42 PM – good daylight hours to stretch those lines. No tidal action to worry about here on the lake, it’s all about the current and water levels, and right now things are settling after some recent rains. Water’s clear in most spots, surface temps hanging in the mid-70s, and we’re looking at a mix of sun and passing clouds most of the day, light winds out of the southwest. Perfect fall conditions for chasing those big boys.
**Fish Activity & What’s Biting**
The lake’s definitely waking up to fall patterns. Largemouth and spotted bass are busting shad on the surface early and late, especially around creek mouths and channel swings. Topwater action has been red-hot at dawn and dusk – think Zara Spooks, buzzbaits, and Pop-Rs. As the sun climbs, switch to a Carolina rig, jig, or a drop-shot fished around brush and rock in 10-18 feet. There’s a healthy mix of keeper bass, with some husky 3- and 4-pounders in the mix, lots of 2-pounders, and plenty of schoolers working baitfish balls.
According to local chatter and recent tournaments, square-bill crankbaits in natural shad colors, 5–10 feet diving, have been firing off the rocky points and secondary drop-offs. White flukes and Senkos are also fooling some quality largemouths—these finesse baits work especially well after a cold night, which we’re starting to see more of.
If you’re after crappie, the bite’s picking up as water temps drop. Try small minnows or small jigs tipped with a minnow around dock brushpiles and submerged timber in 8–15 feet. The crappie are a bit scattered but stacking up on cover, and the keeper ratio is improving every day. Catfish are hitting cut shad and nightcrawlers along the channel edges and deep flats – not on fire, but steady.
**Hotspots for Today**
For bass, target the backs of major creeks, especially Little Niangua and Big Niangua, where baitfish are holding tight and bass are schooling up. The flats around the 13MM area are also producing, especially near stumps and submerged brush. If you want to get away from the crowd, try the deeper rocky points around the Gravois Arm—the chunk rock and brush piles there are holding quality fish chasing shad. For crappie, the long docks and marina slips in Osage Beach and the Gravois Arm consistently hold fish in transition—focus on the shady sides and deeper pilings.
**Best Lures & Baits**
- **Topwater**: Zara Spook, buzzbait, Pop-R
- **Crankbaits**: Bill Lewis Square Bill in Tennessee Shad, Fat Free Guppy in Ghost Minnow, Rapala Shad Rap
- **Jigs**: Black/blue with craw trailer, football jig on rock
- **Soft plastics**: Senko in green pumpkin, Zoom Fluke in white, trick worms
- **Crappie**: Bobby Garland Baby Shad on a 1/16 oz jighead, minnows under a slip float
- **Catfish**: Cut shad, nightcrawlers, chicken liver
- **All-purpose**: Don’t leave home without a shad-colored crankbait and a green pumpkin worm—they’ll always find fish here.
**Sunrise/Sunset**
Again, sun’s up at 7:22 AM, down at 6:42 PM – get out early or stay late for that prime bite.
**Final Thoughts**
October on Lake of the Ozarks is as good as it gets—big bass, busting shad, and plenty of action on multiple species. Conditions are stable, the water’s cooling, and the fish know winter’s coming. Whether you’re chasing topwater explosions, cranking rock, or dunking minnows for slabs, there’s something for every angler right now.
Thanks for tuning in, Lake of the Ozarks crew! Keep those lines tight and the cooler full. Don’t forget to subscribe for more honest, local f
**Weather & Conditions**
Sunrise this morning was a crisp 7:22 AM, and sunset’s heading our way at 6:42 PM – good daylight hours to stretch those lines. No tidal action to worry about here on the lake, it’s all about the current and water levels, and right now things are settling after some recent rains. Water’s clear in most spots, surface temps hanging in the mid-70s, and we’re looking at a mix of sun and passing clouds most of the day, light winds out of the southwest. Perfect fall conditions for chasing those big boys.
**Fish Activity & What’s Biting**
The lake’s definitely waking up to fall patterns. Largemouth and spotted bass are busting shad on the surface early and late, especially around creek mouths and channel swings. Topwater action has been red-hot at dawn and dusk – think Zara Spooks, buzzbaits, and Pop-Rs. As the sun climbs, switch to a Carolina rig, jig, or a drop-shot fished around brush and rock in 10-18 feet. There’s a healthy mix of keeper bass, with some husky 3- and 4-pounders in the mix, lots of 2-pounders, and plenty of schoolers working baitfish balls.
According to local chatter and recent tournaments, square-bill crankbaits in natural shad colors, 5–10 feet diving, have been firing off the rocky points and secondary drop-offs. White flukes and Senkos are also fooling some quality largemouths—these finesse baits work especially well after a cold night, which we’re starting to see more of.
If you’re after crappie, the bite’s picking up as water temps drop. Try small minnows or small jigs tipped with a minnow around dock brushpiles and submerged timber in 8–15 feet. The crappie are a bit scattered but stacking up on cover, and the keeper ratio is improving every day. Catfish are hitting cut shad and nightcrawlers along the channel edges and deep flats – not on fire, but steady.
**Hotspots for Today**
For bass, target the backs of major creeks, especially Little Niangua and Big Niangua, where baitfish are holding tight and bass are schooling up. The flats around the 13MM area are also producing, especially near stumps and submerged brush. If you want to get away from the crowd, try the deeper rocky points around the Gravois Arm—the chunk rock and brush piles there are holding quality fish chasing shad. For crappie, the long docks and marina slips in Osage Beach and the Gravois Arm consistently hold fish in transition—focus on the shady sides and deeper pilings.
**Best Lures & Baits**
- **Topwater**: Zara Spook, buzzbait, Pop-R
- **Crankbaits**: Bill Lewis Square Bill in Tennessee Shad, Fat Free Guppy in Ghost Minnow, Rapala Shad Rap
- **Jigs**: Black/blue with craw trailer, football jig on rock
- **Soft plastics**: Senko in green pumpkin, Zoom Fluke in white, trick worms
- **Crappie**: Bobby Garland Baby Shad on a 1/16 oz jighead, minnows under a slip float
- **Catfish**: Cut shad, nightcrawlers, chicken liver
- **All-purpose**: Don’t leave home without a shad-colored crankbait and a green pumpkin worm—they’ll always find fish here.
**Sunrise/Sunset**
Again, sun’s up at 7:22 AM, down at 6:42 PM – get out early or stay late for that prime bite.
**Final Thoughts**
October on Lake of the Ozarks is as good as it gets—big bass, busting shad, and plenty of action on multiple species. Conditions are stable, the water’s cooling, and the fish know winter’s coming. Whether you’re chasing topwater explosions, cranking rock, or dunking minnows for slabs, there’s something for every angler right now.
Thanks for tuning in, Lake of the Ozarks crew! Keep those lines tight and the cooler full. Don’t forget to subscribe for more honest, local f