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Okeechobee Bass and Crappie Bite Heating Up as Winter Approaches

Okeechobee Bass and Crappie Bite Heating Up as Winter Approaches

Published 4 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
This is Artificial Lure with your Lake Okeechobee fishing report.

Big O is in an early winter groove: cool mornings, mild afternoons, and the bass and specks are chewing. Air temps are starting in the upper 50s and heading into the mid to upper 70s with light northeast breeze, mostly clear skies, and just a slight chance of a passing shower. According to the National Weather Service for the lake region, barometer is steady and that’s helping keep the bite consistent most of the day.

Sunrise is right around 7:00 a.m. with sunset close to 5:30 p.m., and that low-light window has been the magic. First hour of daylight and the last 90 minutes before dark have both been strong, with a softer but steady bite mid‑morning once the grass edges warm up a bit.

Tides don’t move much on Okeechobee itself, but wind still pushes water around. With this light northeast flow, water’s stacking just a bit on the south and southwest rim. That’s keeping a faint trickle of current along outside reed lines and shell bars, and the fish are setting up right on those seams.

On the bass side, local tournament videos from yesterday, including a Toys for Kids event clip on Lake Okeechobee, showed multiple bags in the mid‑20s with several fish over 6 pounds coming out of hydrilla and mixed reed lines. Most of those better fish were caught on moving baits early, then slowed down presentations once the sun got up.

Best producers:
- **Lures:**
• White or shad‑pattern **spinnerbaits** slow‑rolled along outside grass.
• Gold or chrome/black **lipless crankbaits** ripped through submerged hydrilla.
• Green pumpkin or Okeechobee craw **creature baits** and craws like a Rage‑style bait pitched into pencil reeds and dollar pads.
• Black/blue or junebug **flipping jigs** with a compact trailer for the thicker mats.

- **Live bait:**
• Wild shiners are still king. Free‑line them along outside reed heads and eelgrass lanes, or float them just off the edge of thicker mats. Most boats running shiners have been putting 15–30 bass in the boat on a half‑day, with a legit shot at an 8‑plus.

Crappie (specks) are turning on strong. Recent trip videos from local guides on the north end showed limits coming on red‑and‑white tube jigs slow‑trolled in 6–10 feet, plus minnows over brush and subtle drops. Look for those tight groups on your electronics just off the main grass edge; once you find one school, stay with it—short passes, tight turns.

A few bluegill and shellcracker are still being picked off around reed clumps with worms and crickets, but they’re more of a bonus fish now than a primary bite.

Couple of hot spots to key on:
- **Kissimmee River mouth and the North Shore grass line:** Work the eelgrass and hydrilla edges with spinnerbaits at first light, then switch to flipping jigs and creature baits once the sun’s up. Good mix of numbers and a real shot at a trophy.
- **Tin House Cove and Buckhead Ridge area:** Excellent for both bass and specks right now. Slow‑troll jigs for crappie just outside the grass, then slide in and pitch reeds for bass when the sun gets higher.

Water’s fairly clean in these zones; if you get into stained or muddy water, keep moving until you find that clearer green‑brown mix. Downsizing line to 12–15 lb fluoro on your moving baits and 50–65 lb braid on your flipping sticks is working well around the heavier cover.

That’s your Lake Okeechobee report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a morning 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
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