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Tenkiller Fishing Report: Lush Foliage, Excellent Bass & Crappie Bite in Northeast Oklahoma

Tenkiller Fishing Report: Lush Foliage, Excellent Bass & Crappie Bite in Northeast Oklahoma

Published 6 months ago
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Artificial Lure reporting in from Lake Tenkiller, serving up the latest from the blue-green heart of northeast Oklahoma. Sun rose this morning at 7:38 a.m., and she’ll set at 6:37 p.m.—plenty of daylight to work every weed edge and bluff this lake has tucked away. The skies greeted us clear and crisp, with temps climbing into the mid-60s by midday and a gentle southwest breeze just enough to riffle the water and stir up the predators.

NOAA says we’ve got high pressure dominating today, and local forecast models call for calm, stable weather—perfect for fall fishing. With water clarity pushing 20 feet in some spots, courtesy of our limestone beds, experienced locals know your finesse presentations and natural colors are going to shine.

Lake level’s just above normal, sitting at 633.07 feet according to the Tulsa District Water Control as of yesterday morning. Outflow’s steady at 578 cubic feet per second—so current’s moving, but not blowing out bait balls. No tidal effect here (we’re far from the coast), so your bite windows will be driven by weather, lunar cycles, and light penetration. Fish tend to feed best at dawn and dusk, especially in these clear waters.

Bass action is picking up. Reports from the past week say largemouth, smallmouth, and Kentucky spotted bass are stacking up around deeper rock piles and main lake points—look for them suspending off ledges or cruising shadows in the afternoons. Top catches for locals: several limits of keeper-sized largemouth, with a few smallmouth pushing the 4-pound mark. One boat weighed a five-fish stringer for a club meet last weekend at just over 16 pounds—solid for fall.

Crappie are still holding tight, especially under brush piles in 18 to 24 feet of water. Folks working vertical jigs and live minnows report good numbers, mostly 10 to 12-inch slabs. The bite slows midday, but picks back up around sunset. Catfish are consistent along the channel drops west of Carter’s Landing, with blues and channels coming on cut shad and stinkbait.

Walleye have been scarce, but a few have shown up for anglers working crawler harnesses along gravel bars, mostly in low-light windows.

Best baits right now:
- **Bass:** Green pumpkin finesse worms, craw-style soft plastics, and natural-colored jerkbaits. When it’s windy, switch to ½-ounce white spinnerbaits or shallow-running crankbaits.
- **Crappie:** 1/16-ounce jigs in chartreuse/black or plain old minnows. Slip bobber rigs over submerged timber.
- **Catfish:** Fresh cut shad, chicken liver, and punch bait. Try to keep baits near bottom structure.
If you want to dabble with live bait, big shiners for bass and shad for cats will always produce.

A couple of hot spots worth your time: first, the rocky points southeast of Cookson Bend Marina are stacked with schooling bass and the occasional bonus crappie. Second, Snake Creek’s coves—especially where the old creek channel swings close to shore—are loaded up this week with baitfish and chasing game fish. Early risers are seeing surface activity right off the boat ramp.

Boat traffic’s light now that summer crowds have thinned, and the wooded banks are lit up gold and red as the sycamores and oaks peak for fall. It’s a peaceful time to fish, and you can usually hear a whip-poor-will as dusk settles, just before the crappie bite really takes off.

Thanks for tuning in to today’s Lake Tenkiller fishing report from Artificial Lure. Don’t forget to subscribe for local tips and timely conditions. 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

This episode includes AI-generated content.
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