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Red River Fishing Report: Bass, Crappie, and Cats Bite Amid Fall Conditions

Red River Fishing Report: Bass, Crappie, and Cats Bite Amid Fall Conditions

Published 2 months, 1 week ago
Description
Artificial Lure here with your Thursday, October 30th fishing report for the Red River in and around Shreveport. We’re kicking off the day with some classic northern Louisiana fall conditions, so let’s get into what you need to know before you wet a line.

First things first: water and weather. According to the National Weather Service, we’re waking up to patchy fog and temps in the low 60s, but that sun’ll poke through by mid-morning. Look for a high near 70 and light winds from the east. No major rain in the forecast, so expect stable river levels, but keep an eye on runoff from earlier storms if you’re targeting oxbows or backwaters. Sunrise hit at 7:25 AM and sunset rolls through at 6:27 PM, so you’ve got a good day’s light, with the best bite often right around those changes.

On the fish front, the talk around the bait shop is that the recent cool snap’s got those Red River bass shaking off the late-summer funk. The largemouth are feeding up, especially in the main river’s current breaks—think behind the wing dams, along flooded cypress, and in those near-bank eddies. Local tourney chatter says 3- to 4-pounders are showing up, and mixed bags are common if you chase the sandbars for white bass and hybrids.

Crappie are starting to pile up under deeper laydowns, especially near the launch at Stoner Avenue and along Cross Bayou. Most limits are coming early on jigs tipped with minnows or electric chicken plastics. Catfish are steady too—channel cats biting cut shad and punch bait on deeper holes below the locks.

If you’re a lure-person, October means you can’t beat classic fall tactics. Topwater walkers and buzzbaits are good in low light, especially anywhere you see shad popping. Once that sun’s up, switch to a white or chartreuse spinnerbait slow-rolled around timber, or rip a squarebill crank through any submerged brush. Locals are still catching tight to cover, so don’t shy away from pitching a black/blue jig with a big trailer—especially if you find those infamous Red River roots.

Live bait fans should grab a bucket of shiners or fresh caught shad; both are killer right now, especially if the bite gets tough around midday. For catfish, nightcrawlers and chicken livers will keep you busy even if the bass are stubborn.

Best spots today? Shreveport’s downtown boat launches get crowded but produce, especially near the Texas Street Bridge pilings and through the river bends south toward Bishop Point. Up river, the bluffs around Hamel’s Memorial Park are a go-to for both bass and crappie. If you’ve got a kayak or small rig, hit Twelve Mile Bayou early before boat traffic picks up—that’s where a few folks have reported stringers of slab crappie and some early fall sauger.

A quick word for the bank fishermen: plenty of cats and the odd drum are being caught right off the rocks at the Red River South Marina—bring extra hooks and be ready for a surprise or two.

Fish activity should really pick up again late afternoon as the water cools into sunset—combine that with a new moon phase and we’ve got prime conditions for a big bite window right before dark.

Thanks for tuning in to your local Red River fishing fix. Be sure to subscribe for more daily updates, tips, and reports from the muddy banks of northwest Louisiana. 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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