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Late Fall Fishing on Lake Tenkiller - Bass, Crappie, and Stripers Biting Strong

Late Fall Fishing on Lake Tenkiller - Bass, Crappie, and Stripers Biting Strong

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

We don’t worry about tides here in the hills, but we do watch the sky and the river. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Tenkiller Ferry pool has been running a little above normal lately, with steady releases keeping the Illinois River pushing good current below the dam. According to USGS data summarized by Snoflo, the Illinois near Gore’s been rolling in the 4,000 cfs range with over 11 feet on the gauge recently, so there’s plenty of moving water downriver.

Weather-wise, local forecasts are calling for a mild late‑fall pattern: cool mornings in the upper 30s to low 40s, afternoons climbing into the 50s, light north to northeast breeze, and high thin clouds with some sun breaks. Sunrise is right around 7:20 a.m. and sunset near 5:10 p.m., giving you a short but productive window. The stable barometer and light wind should have fish steady, not scattered.

Water temps on Tenkiller are in the low to mid‑50s on the main lake, a touch cooler up the river arms and a hair warmer in the deeper clear water near the dam. That’s classic winter transition: fish sliding off the banks and stacking on structure.

Recent chatter from local marinas and tackle shops around Cookson and Keys is that **smallmouth and spotted bass** are carrying the show, with a few **largemouth** mixed in. Folks are reporting 10–20 fish half‑day trips when they stay on points and bluff ends. Average bass are 1–2 pounds with some 3‑pound smallies showing up. Crappie have been fair to good in brush, with buckets of 10–12‑inch fish coming from 18–25 feet. Striper and hybrid action is better down on the lower Illinois River below the dam, where anglers have been picking up a handful of 3–8‑pound fish on each outing when the generation kicks up.

Best baits on the lake right now:

- For bass:
• **Alabama rigs** with 3–4 inch swimbaits over 15–25 feet on main‑lake points and channel swings.
• **Jigging spoons** and 3/4‑oz blade baits vertically on bait schools in 25–35 feet.
• **Finesse jig** or shaky head with green pumpkin plastics for when they get stubborn on the rocks.

- For crappie:
• Small **marabou or tube jigs** in natural shad or pearl, 1/16 to 1/8 oz, dropped into brush piles.
• Minnows are still putting more fish in the boat for folks spider‑rigging slow.

- For stripers below the dam:
• **1–2 oz bucktail jigs** with a fluke trailer in white or chartreuse.
• Live shad or big minnows drifted in the current seams.

Couple of local hot spots to circle on your map:

- **Chicken Creek / Cookson Bluff area**: classic winter bass water. Work the long points and bluff transitions in 20–35 feet with an A‑rig or spoon.
- **Upper Tenkiller / Horseshoe Bend up into the river channel**: when they pull water, bass and spots load up on the first few channel swings; crappie piles along that stretch can be excellent.
- **Tailrace below Tenkiller Dam down toward Gore Landing**: on generation, fish the eddies and current breaks for stripers and nice bonus sauger.

Keep your eye on the birds – if the gulls start diving over open water, ease in with the trolling motor and drop a spoon under them. That’s been putting bonus spotted bass and the occasional white bass in the livewell.

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