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Red River Fishing Report: Clear Skies, Cooling Temps, and Feisty Fall Bite

Red River Fishing Report: Clear Skies, Cooling Temps, and Feisty Fall Bite

Published 2 months, 3 weeks ago
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Artificial Lure here, bringing you the morning fishing report for October 15th, 2025, straight from the banks of the Red River around Shreveport. Pull up a chair, pour yourself some coffee, and let’s get right to it.

We’re starting out with crisp, clear conditions—temps in the upper 50s at sunrise and warming up into the upper 80s as the day rolls on. Winds are out of the northeast around 5 to 10 miles an hour. That nice high pressure means bluebird skies and steady water temps, just the thing to get that early fall bite going. According to the National Weather Service, you can expect fair skies all day, and it’s shaping up to be a textbook October day for chasing anything with fins. Sunrise came in right at 7:17 AM, and sunset is looking to hit around 6:39 PM.

The tidal influence in this stretch of the Red isn’t significant, but those small daily variations can still nudge fish to bite best at dawn and dusk. With water clarity holding steady, look for slightly stained moderate flow. That means we’re in classic transition water as fish move shallow for the fall feed.

Talking to the folks at local tackle shops and a few guides, the report is hot for largemouth bass, with good numbers coming out of the backwater cuts and channels. Folks are landing plenty in the 1-3 pound range, and every now and then someone’s weighing in a solid five-plus. A few white bass have shown up schooling in the deeper runs just as the sun pops over the horizon. Catfish action has been picking up on those outside bends, with blues and channels both getting frisky as the weather cools.

Your best baits today: for bass, you can’t beat a shad-colored crankbait or a chartreuse spinnerbait fished through the current seams and shallow laydowns. Early morning, a bone or silver topwater walking bait should get you explosions on the rocks and riprap. Plastic creature baits in watermelon red flake, Texas-rigged, are cleaning up once that sun gets up.

Catfish anglers are scoring best with fresh cut shad or nightcrawlers tight to the bottom just off the deeper holes. Folks after white bass are doing well tossing small white curly tail grubs and silver spoons near the mouths of feeder creeks.

For hotspots, don’t skip out on Stoner Avenue Boat Launch—work both sides of the channel and hit that old rock pilings for bass cruising around baitfish. And over near the I-220 bridge, those eddies below the pylons are producing some heavy action for everything from stripers to panfish. If you want to get off the beaten path, hit the oxbow lakes just north of downtown—cooler temps have the bream and crappie poking back up into the shallows as well.

Fish activity charts and local word-of-mouth both say the best bite is coming right around sunrise and tapering off early afternoon, so set your alarms.

Thanks for tuning in to the Red River fishing report. Be sure to subscribe for daily updates, tips, and hot spot secrets. 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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