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Late Fall Tenkiller Fishing Report: Bass, Crappie, Walleye Bites to Target

Late Fall Tenkiller Fishing Report: Bass, Crappie, Walleye Bites to Target

Published 4 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake Tenkiller fishing report.

We’re sitting in a mild late‑fall pattern: chilly mornings in the 30s and low 40s, afternoons climbing into the 50s with light north to northwest breeze, high pressure and clear skies dominating. According to Weather.gov for the Cookson/Park Hill area, expect mostly sunny, dry conditions, stable barometer, and a light wind that’ll lay the lake down nicely by afternoon. Sunrise is right around 7:20 a.m. with sunset near 5:10 p.m., so your best light window is that first hour after sunup and the last hour before dark.

No true “tide” on Tenkiller, but the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers reports the lake running close to normal winter pool with only small daily fluctuations, which keeps fish pinned to structure and breaks instead of roaming flooded shoreline.

Recent local chatter from area marinas and tackle shops around Cookson Bend and Tenkiller State Park has most of the catching centered on three species: **smallmouth and spotted bass, crappie, and walleye**.

Bass first. Folks dragging Alabama rigs and 3.5–4 inch swimbaits on 1/4–3/8 oz heads over main‑lake points in 15–30 feet are reporting decent numbers of spots and some solid smallmouth, with a few largemouth mixed in. Jigs in green pumpkin and brown with a small craw trailer, and shaky heads with finesse worms, are putting fish in the boat off bluff ends and rock transitions. Best bite is midday once the sun warms that rock.

Crappie are stacking on brush piles and standing timber in 18–25 feet, especially along channel swings near Cookson and along the bluffs toward Snake Creek. Minnows are still king, but 1/16 oz tube jigs and small paddle‑tail plastics in pearl, chartreuse, and monkey milk are getting bit when you stay right on top of them with Livescope or good electronics. Reports from local docks say 8–11 inch keepers are common with a few 12–13 inch slabs mixed in; a limit is very doable if you stay mobile and hop piles.

Walleye have been more of a bonus fish, but a few are coming on live nightcrawlers or minnows dragged slowly on bottom bouncers along deeper gravel points in 25–35 feet, mostly in the mid‑lake section. A couple local guys dragging small shad‑colored crankbaits at night along bluff walls have picked up some eaters as well.

As for **best lures and bait** right now:
- For bass: A‑rigs with small shad‑colored swimmers, 3/8 oz football jigs, finesse worms on shaky heads, and silver buddy‑style blade baits or spoons when they’re pinned deep.
- For crappie: live minnows, 1/16 oz tubes, hair jigs, and tiny paddle‑tails in natural shad and chartreuse.
- For walleye: live minnows, nightcrawlers on bottom bouncers, and small shad‑style crankbaits worked slow.

Two **hot spots** to circle:
- **Cookson Bend to mid‑lake bluff line**: work main‑lake points and bluff ends for smallmouth and spots with A‑rigs, jigs, and blade baits.
- **Snake Creek and nearby channel swings**: target brush and timber for crappie with minnows and small jigs; drag live bait a bit deeper off the breaks for a bonus walleye.

Fish activity will be sluggish at first light on those cold mornings, then pick up mid‑morning as the sun hits the rocks and again in that classic evening window. Slow your presentation down, keep contact with the bottom or the brush, and don’t be afraid to fish vertical once you find them on the graph.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a Tenkiller update.

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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