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Tenkiller Lake's Fall Bite: Bass, Crappie, and More in Oklahoma's Heartland
Published 5 months, 4 weeks ago
Description
Artificial Lure coming to you just after sunrise on November 2nd, giving the low-down for all those fishing Tenkiller Lake and the surrounding waters here in the heart of Oklahoma.
Weather’s setting up perfect for a fall bite—sunny skies, an expected high near 85 degrees, and just a light east breeze keeping things comfortable, according to the Illinois River near Gore flow report. It’s been dry last couple days, and water clarity is holding fair to slightly stained in the main lake, which is typical this time of year as turnover settles down. Sunrise hit at 6:45 AM, with sunset expected at 5:22 PM, giving us a good, long day on the water.
Lake Tenkiller’s pool is sitting just about normal, and the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation shows water temps hanging near 70°F, and a touch murky. That’s prime territory for chasing both bass and crappie as fish move up shallow to feed during these cooler fall nights and warm afternoons.
Largemouth bass have been hit or miss but starting to stack up near brush, laydowns, and the edges of deeper channels. Folks are catching them fair on medium-diving crankbaits in shad patterns, and plastic baits—especially creature baits and shaky head worms—worked slow around submerged wood and transitions. Early morning topwater action is worth a shot near the rocky banks, especially with buzzbaits or a walking bait if you see any surface activity.
Crappie have been a steady bet for dinner, mostly in 12 to 18 feet over brush piles. Jigs in chartreuse/black or white/blue are doing real work, and minnows—always reliable—are producing some better fish in the clearer pockets near Snake Creek and Chicken Creek coves. Several reports of good stringers over the weekend, with most slabs in the 10 to 12-inch range, though a couple pushing the 14-inch mark were cleaned at the state docks.
Catfish are active with the recent mild temperatures, being caught on cut shad and prepared baits set along channel edges and flats near the upper end of the lake. Blue cats in particular are moving along deeper humps. Nighttime lines in Blackgum and Cookson areas have brought in fish up to 15 pounds.
White bass and the occasional walleye are showing up around the mouth of the Illinois River, especially midday when the sun warms things up. Spoons jigged over main-lake points and small swim baits are your best presentation for these bonus catches.
Hot spots to check today:
- Chicken Creek area—crappie and bass are biting well here, especially early and late.
- Snake Creek Cove—good mixed bag potential with reliable brush piles and creek channels.
- Lower Illinois River mouth—best for white bass, with a side chance at walleye or striper, especially as the water picks up some flow.
No tidal report for Tenkiller, as it’s all reservoir, but river flow into the lake is steady and clear enough for good fishing. Remember, keep it slow and methodical as water cools, and don’t overlook vertical presentations off deeper docks and ledges by midday.
Thanks for tuning in to this report. If you found it useful, make sure to subscribe for your weekly updates and fishing tips straight from the lake. 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.
Weather’s setting up perfect for a fall bite—sunny skies, an expected high near 85 degrees, and just a light east breeze keeping things comfortable, according to the Illinois River near Gore flow report. It’s been dry last couple days, and water clarity is holding fair to slightly stained in the main lake, which is typical this time of year as turnover settles down. Sunrise hit at 6:45 AM, with sunset expected at 5:22 PM, giving us a good, long day on the water.
Lake Tenkiller’s pool is sitting just about normal, and the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation shows water temps hanging near 70°F, and a touch murky. That’s prime territory for chasing both bass and crappie as fish move up shallow to feed during these cooler fall nights and warm afternoons.
Largemouth bass have been hit or miss but starting to stack up near brush, laydowns, and the edges of deeper channels. Folks are catching them fair on medium-diving crankbaits in shad patterns, and plastic baits—especially creature baits and shaky head worms—worked slow around submerged wood and transitions. Early morning topwater action is worth a shot near the rocky banks, especially with buzzbaits or a walking bait if you see any surface activity.
Crappie have been a steady bet for dinner, mostly in 12 to 18 feet over brush piles. Jigs in chartreuse/black or white/blue are doing real work, and minnows—always reliable—are producing some better fish in the clearer pockets near Snake Creek and Chicken Creek coves. Several reports of good stringers over the weekend, with most slabs in the 10 to 12-inch range, though a couple pushing the 14-inch mark were cleaned at the state docks.
Catfish are active with the recent mild temperatures, being caught on cut shad and prepared baits set along channel edges and flats near the upper end of the lake. Blue cats in particular are moving along deeper humps. Nighttime lines in Blackgum and Cookson areas have brought in fish up to 15 pounds.
White bass and the occasional walleye are showing up around the mouth of the Illinois River, especially midday when the sun warms things up. Spoons jigged over main-lake points and small swim baits are your best presentation for these bonus catches.
Hot spots to check today:
- Chicken Creek area—crappie and bass are biting well here, especially early and late.
- Snake Creek Cove—good mixed bag potential with reliable brush piles and creek channels.
- Lower Illinois River mouth—best for white bass, with a side chance at walleye or striper, especially as the water picks up some flow.
No tidal report for Tenkiller, as it’s all reservoir, but river flow into the lake is steady and clear enough for good fishing. Remember, keep it slow and methodical as water cools, and don’t overlook vertical presentations off deeper docks and ledges by midday.
Thanks for tuning in to this report. If you found it useful, make sure to subscribe for your weekly updates and fishing tips straight from the lake. 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.