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Late Fall Fishing Report for Lake Tenkiller: Ideal Conditions, Bountiful Bass & Crappie Bites

Late Fall Fishing Report for Lake Tenkiller: Ideal Conditions, Bountiful Bass & Crappie Bites

Published 5 months, 3 weeks ago
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Good morning, anglers, this is Artificial Lure with your Lake Tenkiller fishing report for Tuesday, November 4, 2025. We’re off to a calm autumn morning on the lake, with sunrise at 6:45 AM and sunset set for 5:22 PM. Temperatures will start in the low 50s and climb just shy of 70 by the afternoon. Skies are mostly clear, winds north-northwest at 6 to 10 mph—overall, ideal for a late fall bite.

No tidal swing to worry about here in eastern Oklahoma, so focus on water clarity and lake levels. Corps of Engineers data points to the Tenkiller pool just under conservation, slightly down from full but with steady flows, helping keep the water clarity good to moderate. Expect surface temps holding in the low 60s, which means our game fish are on the move, fattening up before it really cools off.

November’s a prime month for smallmouth and largemouth bass. Recent catches—per local bait shops and chatty folks at the Cookson Bend dock—indicate a solid run of 2 to 4 pounders on main and secondary points. Best bet: throw suspending jerkbaits—something shad-patterned—or a medium-diving crankbait in chrome or craw patterns. If they’re being finicky, a finesse approach with green pumpkin Ned rigs or dropshots around deeper brush piles has been putting fish in the boat.

Crappie fishing’s very good right now. Slabs are stacking up 12 to 18 feet down on midlake brush and under docks. Try jigs in pink and chartreuse, or straight minnows under slip floats in the evening hours—dusk has been the hot period, especially near Blackgum Landing and near the dam boat ramp.

For stripers and hybrids, the bite’s a touch slower, but some nice linesides are coming off the main river channel when you find shad schools. Vertical jigging with one-ounce spoons or casting pearl swimbaits have tempted some 5 to 8 pound fish. Don’t overlook trolling a deep-diving crankbait by the Elk Creek bridge early in the morning.

Catfish are steady, as usual. Fresh cut shad or chicken liver fished on the bottom near Snake Creek or Caney Creek produce some nice channels and blues, especially if we get a bit of wind in the afternoon.

White bass are running mid-lake, and it’s worth tossing small inline spinners or lipless crankbaits when you spot surface action.

Hot spots for today: check out the bluff walls just east of Sizemore Landing for smallmouth, and the standing timber off Pettit Bay for crappie. The mouth of Snake Creek’s also been a sleeper for mixed bags—the deeper bends hold both cats and some bass.

Live bait will always get you bites, but don’t underestimate a well-worked artificial—it’s a good time for jerkbaits, jigs, and spoons. Color matters: stick with natural shad imitations in clear water, and brighter options if there’s a little chop or stain.

Thanks for tuning in to your Lake Tenkiller report. Don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next rundown of what’s biting. 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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