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Ozarks Fishing Report: Cool Temps, Steady Mixed Bag on Lake of the Ozarks

Ozarks Fishing Report: Cool Temps, Steady Mixed Bag on Lake of the Ozarks

Published 4 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
This is Artificial Lure with your Lake of the Ozarks fishing report.

We don’t worry about tides here in the Ozarks, but water level and weather are driving the bite. According to the National Weather Service, we’re sitting under a cool, high‑pressure pattern: chilly mornings in the upper 20s to low 30s, highs topping out in the low 40s, light north to northeast breeze, and mostly clear skies. Sunrise is right around 7:10 a.m., with sunset close to 4:50 p.m., so your prime windows are that first hour of light and the last 90 minutes before dark.

Water temps are in the low to mid‑40s on the main lake, a touch warmer in the backs of creeks. That’s pushed most of the gamefish into classic early‑winter patterns. Local guides around Osage Beach are reporting a steady mixed bag this past week: decent numbers of keeper largemouth and spots, plus good crappie and a few bonus white bass and walleye.

Bass first. According to recent tournament coverage from Major League Fishing out of Lake of the Ozarks, jerkbaits, umbrella rigs, and football jigs have been key as the lake cools and even gets semi‑frozen in the very backs. Anglers have been boating solid limits dragging a 3/4‑ounce football jig with a chunk trailer on chunk rock and pea‑gravel points, and working an Alabama rig or suspending jerkbait over 15–30 feet of water where shad are stacked. Don’t overlook a Crock‑O‑Gator football jig or a green pumpkin/brown combo crawled painfully slow.

Crappie guys are doing well dipping brush in 15–25 feet on the main lake and secondary points. Bright tube jigs and small plastics on 1/16‑ounce heads are putting fish in the boat when held just above the tops of brush piles. Minnows on light line are still tough to beat if they get finicky. Most fish are suspended 8–12 feet down, so use your electronics and stay off ’em.

As for what’s been caught: local reports from the Lake of the Ozarks fishing community and recent podcasts out of the area mention regular 12–16‑pound five‑bass bags on tough days, with better anglers boating 20‑plus fish to weed through shorts. Crappie limits have been common when the wind lays down, with many anglers icing 15–30 keepers in a morning, mostly 10–12 inches.

Best lures and baits right now:
- For bass: suspending jerkbaits in shad patterns, Alabama rigs with 3.3–3.8 paddletails, 1/2–3/4‑ounce football jigs, and finesse shaky heads on bluff ends.
- For crappie: small marabou or tube jigs in white, chartreuse, or monkey milk, and live minnows.
- For bonus walleye or white bass: spoons and blade baits hopped on channel swings just off main‑lake points.

Couple of hot spots to hit:
- The Glaize Arm, especially around the Grand Glaize Bridge and secondary points leading into coves, has been consistent for both bass and crappie.
- The Niangua Arm, targeting bluff ends and nearby channel swings, is giving up some quality bass on jigs and jerkbaits and good crappie on deeper brush.

Work slow, watch your graph for shad balls, and let that winter sun warm the backs of creeks before you slide in shallow.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss tomorrow’s report. 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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