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Tenkiller's Clear Winter Patterns: Bass, Crappie, and Catfish Hotspots for the Weekend Angler

Tenkiller's Clear Winter Patterns: Bass, Crappie, and Catfish Hotspots for the Weekend Angler

Published 4 months, 1 week ago
Description
This is Artificial Lure with your Lake Tenkiller fishing report.

We’re in a clear‑water winter pattern on Tenkiller. According to the Oklahoma Mesonet and Weather Underground, we’re looking at a chilly start in the upper 30s climbing into the low 50s this afternoon, light north to northwest breeze around 5–10 mph, and high pressure sitting over the region. Skies mostly clear, so expect bright sun on that gin‑clear water. Sunrise was right around 7:30 a.m., sunset will be close to 5:10 p.m., giving you a short but stable window.

There’s no meaningful tide here, just a slight daily fluctuation from power generation and inflow. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Tenkiller project reports the lake just a touch above normal, with slow, steady releases and good clarity throughout the main lake.

According to recent local reports from Tenkiller Property.com and regional tackle shops, bass, crappie, and blue cats have all been cooperating the last several days, with anglers boating mixed bags of 10–20 fish on half‑day trips when they stay on the winter pattern. Spotted and smallmouth bass have been the main players, with a few quality largemouth mixed in. Crappie limits are coming from brush piles and docks for folks using electronics and staying patient.

For **bass**, think deep and slow. Focus on 18–35 feet off main‑lake points, bluff ends, and channel swings. Best producers have been:
- Small 3–4 inch swimbaits on 1/4–3/8 oz heads
- Green pumpkin or brown football jigs with a compact trailer
- Silver or white jigging spoons worked vertically on bait schools

Spots and smallies are stacking on rock and gravel; if you see shad on the graph, drop straight down and yo‑yo that spoon.

**Crappie** are holding 12–20 feet over brush and standing timber on the lower half of the lake. Best baits:
- 1/16 oz marabou or tube jigs in white, monkey milk, or chartreuse
- Small minnows on light wire hooks, just above the brush

According to local marina talk, most folks are keeping 15–25 solid slabs per boat when they stay mobile and hit multiple piles.

**Catfish** action has been steady on the river channel edges and around creek mouths in 20–40 feet. Cut shad, chicken liver, and punch bait on Carolina rigs are all putting blues and channels in the box, with a few flatheads still showing up on live bait.

If you’re looking for **hot spots**, two to circle on your map:
- The **dam to Cookson Bend stretch**: classic Tenkiller clear water, deep rock, and wintering bait. Work main‑lake points and bluff pockets with spoons and football jigs.
- The **Goose Neck to Snake Creek area**: plenty of channel swings, chunk rock, and brush. Great for both bass and crappie, especially along deeper docks and marked brush piles.

Best all‑around winter confidence lures right now: a 3.3–3.8 keitech‑style swimbait, a 1/2 oz peanut‑butter‑and‑jelly football jig, a silver slab spoon, and a white or chartreuse crappie jig. For bait, you can’t beat live minnows for crappie and fresh cut shad for cats.

Bundle up, fish slow, and trust your electronics—most of the action is happening right under you in that 20–35 foot band.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next 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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