Episode Details
Back to Episodes
Tenkiller Fishing Report: Clear Water Winter Pattern, Bass, Crappie, Catfish Tactics
Published 4 months, 1 week ago
Description
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake Tenkiller fishing report.
We’re sitting on a classic clear-water winter pattern. According to the National Weather Service out of Tulsa, we’re looking at a chilly morning in the 30s warming into the 40s–low 50s, light north to northwest breeze, high pressure, and no real rain threat. Skies are mostly clear to partly cloudy, which means that bright winter sun is going to push bait and gamefish a little deeper by mid‑day. Sunrise is right around 7:30 a.m., sunset just after 5 p.m., so your prime light windows are short and worth using.
There’s no tide here, just steady winter pool on Tenkiller Ferry Lake as reported by the Tulsa District Corps pages for area reservoirs. Stable levels and clear water mean the bite is more about timing and finesse than chasing fast-moving schools on muddy banks.
Recent local dock talk and regional Oklahoma fishing forums report **largemouth and smallmouth** coming off steeper rock, channel swings, and bluff ends in 15–30 feet, with a few surprise **spotted bass** mixed in. Anglers are also picking up **crappie** around deeper brush piles and docks in 18–25 feet, and a light but steady **blue cat and channel cat** bite on cut bait off main-lake points.
For bass, the best producers have been:
- **Alabama rigs** with small shad swimbaits, slow-rolled over points and along bluff walls.
- **3.5–4 inch finesse swimbaits** on 1/4–3/8 oz heads, counted down to the fish.
- **Jig-and-craw combos** in brown, green pumpkin, or black/blue, hopped slowly down rock transitions.
- **Drop shots and Ned rigs** on the clear end of the lake with subtle, natural colors.
Crappie specialists around Tenkiller guides and local Facebook groups are talking up:
- **Small plastics on 1/16–1/8 oz jigheads** in chartreuse, monkey milk, and shad patterns, worked just above the brush.
- **Minnows** under slip floats for slower periods.
For catfish, the local regulars are still doing well with:
- **Cut shad** and **chicken liver** on main-lake ledges and channel swings, 20–30 feet, especially late afternoon into dark.
Fish activity has been best:
- First light to about 10 a.m., when shad are higher in the water column.
- The last 90 minutes before sunset, when the light drops and bass push a bit shallower on points and chunk rock.
Couple of hotspots to circle:
- **Goat Island / Snake Creek area**: good mix of bluff banks, channel swings, and mid-depth rock. Bass and crappie both showing here in recent reports.
- **Carter’s Landing to Cookson Bend stretch**: according to Snoflo’s Carter’s Landing campground notes, this area has strong access and structure; locals have been working main-lake points and adjacent drop‑offs for bass, plus brush for crappie.
Think small, slow, and close to structure. If you can see your bait 3–4 feet down, lean on fluorocarbon, lighter line, and natural colors. Midday, back off to that 20–30‑foot zone with your A‑rigs and jigs. If the wind picks up on a sunny bank, don’t be afraid to throw a jerkbait over 10–15 feet of water for bonus smallmouth.
Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next Lake Tenkiller update.
This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
We’re sitting on a classic clear-water winter pattern. According to the National Weather Service out of Tulsa, we’re looking at a chilly morning in the 30s warming into the 40s–low 50s, light north to northwest breeze, high pressure, and no real rain threat. Skies are mostly clear to partly cloudy, which means that bright winter sun is going to push bait and gamefish a little deeper by mid‑day. Sunrise is right around 7:30 a.m., sunset just after 5 p.m., so your prime light windows are short and worth using.
There’s no tide here, just steady winter pool on Tenkiller Ferry Lake as reported by the Tulsa District Corps pages for area reservoirs. Stable levels and clear water mean the bite is more about timing and finesse than chasing fast-moving schools on muddy banks.
Recent local dock talk and regional Oklahoma fishing forums report **largemouth and smallmouth** coming off steeper rock, channel swings, and bluff ends in 15–30 feet, with a few surprise **spotted bass** mixed in. Anglers are also picking up **crappie** around deeper brush piles and docks in 18–25 feet, and a light but steady **blue cat and channel cat** bite on cut bait off main-lake points.
For bass, the best producers have been:
- **Alabama rigs** with small shad swimbaits, slow-rolled over points and along bluff walls.
- **3.5–4 inch finesse swimbaits** on 1/4–3/8 oz heads, counted down to the fish.
- **Jig-and-craw combos** in brown, green pumpkin, or black/blue, hopped slowly down rock transitions.
- **Drop shots and Ned rigs** on the clear end of the lake with subtle, natural colors.
Crappie specialists around Tenkiller guides and local Facebook groups are talking up:
- **Small plastics on 1/16–1/8 oz jigheads** in chartreuse, monkey milk, and shad patterns, worked just above the brush.
- **Minnows** under slip floats for slower periods.
For catfish, the local regulars are still doing well with:
- **Cut shad** and **chicken liver** on main-lake ledges and channel swings, 20–30 feet, especially late afternoon into dark.
Fish activity has been best:
- First light to about 10 a.m., when shad are higher in the water column.
- The last 90 minutes before sunset, when the light drops and bass push a bit shallower on points and chunk rock.
Couple of hotspots to circle:
- **Goat Island / Snake Creek area**: good mix of bluff banks, channel swings, and mid-depth rock. Bass and crappie both showing here in recent reports.
- **Carter’s Landing to Cookson Bend stretch**: according to Snoflo’s Carter’s Landing campground notes, this area has strong access and structure; locals have been working main-lake points and adjacent drop‑offs for bass, plus brush for crappie.
Think small, slow, and close to structure. If you can see your bait 3–4 feet down, lean on fluorocarbon, lighter line, and natural colors. Midday, back off to that 20–30‑foot zone with your A‑rigs and jigs. If the wind picks up on a sunny bank, don’t be afraid to throw a jerkbait over 10–15 feet of water for bonus smallmouth.
Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next Lake Tenkiller update.
This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI