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Red River Fishing Report - Messy Water but Bites are Better+++

Red River Fishing Report - Messy Water but Bites are Better+++



Red River locals woke up to thick fog and a mild 61 degrees this morning, with humidity sitting at 100%. Expect mostly cloudy skies to stick around all day, high near 70, and a gentle east wind at 3-5 mph. There’s a Flood Watch in effect, so the river’s running high and muddy. Some banks are soft—watch your step out there. Early showers passed through overnight and might linger, but by noon it should dry up, making for easier casting according to the National Weather Service.

Sunrise came at 6:46 AM, and sunset will be at 5:13 PM. Your best fishing times today, based on solunar tables from SolunarForecast.com, are the major period from 12:51 to 2:51 PM, with minor spikes in activity between 9:31 and 10:31 AM and 7:16 to 8:16 PM. Day’s rated “Better++++”—top marks for late fall, so the fish should be moving even with the messy water.

Recent reports around Shreveport say the Red River is producing healthy stringers of largemouth bass, especially near rock jetties and the deeper edges of sandbars. Anglers brought in several bass over 4 pounds this week, with some impressive catches near Stoner Boat Launch and the southern end of Charles H. Seabaugh. White bass and crappie are also biting well in slower-moving backwater sloughs and oxbows just off the main channel. Downriver towards Coushatta, channel catfish are taking over—folks pulling quarter to three-pound cats up on cut shad and chicken liver after the rain.

Spinnerbaits and chartreuse crankbaits have been the stars for bass, fished slow and tight to structure. The muddy water and current have made black/blue jigs with pork trailers especially effective in the pockets behind wing dams. For crappie, locals swear by small shiners under slip floats, presented at three to eight feet in those brush piles the river leaves behind after high water. Catfish are ignoring most artificial lures but will pile onto punch bait or fresh-cut gizzard shad fished on bottom rigs.

The bites are strongest where fresh water mingles with older pools—try the mouth of Twelve Mile Bayou and those big bends below the I-220 bridge. Another reliable hotspot is the pocketed water just downstream of Stoner Avenue, especially for evening topwater strikes as the sun gets low.

Tides aren’t a factor this far upriver, but rain-driven current is making the river move hard—fish are hunkered down near cover. With water levels up, don’t overlook flooded laydowns or submerged brush. Mind your footing on slick ramps and keep an eye on the rising river; safety first, y’all.

Thanks for tuning in to today’s on-the-water rundown. Y’all stay safe, keep lines tight, and be sure to subscribe for the next local update. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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Published on 1 month, 1 week ago






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