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Lake of the Ozarks Fishing Report: Jerkbaits, A-Rigs, and Deep Brush Crappie
Published 4 months ago
Description
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake of the Ozarks fishing report.
No tides to worry about here in mid‑Missouri, just lake level and weather. National Weather Service data shows a classic Ozarks winter pattern: cold morning in the upper 20s to low 30s, creeping into the 40s this afternoon with a light north breeze and high thin clouds. Sunrise was right around 7:25 a.m., sunset will be about 5:00 p.m., so you’ve got a short window and that late‑afternoon warming will matter.
Water temps on the main lake are riding the upper 40s to low 50s, a touch cooler on the Niangua and Gravois arms according to recent Missouri Department of Conservation and local marina reports. That’s pushed most gamefish into their true winter haunts: channel swings, bluffy banks, deep docks, and mid‑lake structure.
Bass first. Local reports from guides and dock talk at Osage Beach say the best action lately has been on suspended spots and largemouth staging 15–25 feet down over 30–40 feet. A jerkbait bite is building: think natural shad colors early, then something with a little chartreuse when the sun gets up. Alabama rigs are quietly putting quality fish in the boat, especially around big dock corners and over brush. Finesse swimbaits on 3/8‑ounce heads, crawled painfully slow, are a solid backup.
If you’re after numbers, drop‑shot or Ned rigs around deeper dock stalls are still producing keeper‑size fish. Green pumpkin and brown still rule this lake; add a little purple flake if the water’s clearer down by the dam.
Crappie fishing has been steady. According to Missouri Department of Conservation winter sampling and local tackle shop chatter, plenty of black and white crappie are stacked 18–25 feet deep on brush piles and condo sets, especially in the Niangua arm and around the Grand Glaize. Jig‑and‑minnow combos are hard to beat: 1/16‑ to 1/8‑ounce tube jigs in blue/white, monkey milk, or plain chartreuse tipped with a small minnow. On calm days, straight minnows on a double‑rig above brush are putting limits in coolers. Expect mostly 9–11‑inch fish with a few bigger slabs mixed in.
White bass and hybrids have been hit‑or‑miss but worth checking when birds start working over main‑lake flats and points. Small spoons and 2‑inch swimbaits burned through the marks will get you bit; every now and then someone stumbles into a quick dozen‑fish flurry.
Catfish action has slowed but hasn’t died. A few blues and channels are coming from the river channel bends on cut shad and shad guts, 30–50 feet deep. Don’t expect big numbers, but the fish that do bite tend to be solid.
On lures and bait, think winter confidence baits:
– For bass: **suspending jerkbaits**, **A‑rigs**, 3–4‑inch swimbaits, finesse jigs, and Ned rigs.
– For crappie: small **marabou or tube jigs** with or without minnows, or plain minnows over brush.
– For catfish: fresh **cut shad** is still king.
Couple of hot spots to circle today:
– The **Grand Glaize arm**, from PB2 up past the bridge, has been giving up both good jerkbait bass and deep‑brush crappie.
– The **Niangua arm** around the 3–8‑mile markers, working brush off secondary points and creek mouths, has been a crappie‑limit factory when the wind lays down.
Work slow, watch your electronics, and don’t leave fish just because they’re not biting right away—winter fish here can take some convincing.
Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a Lake of the Ozarks 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
This episode includes AI-generated content.
No tides to worry about here in mid‑Missouri, just lake level and weather. National Weather Service data shows a classic Ozarks winter pattern: cold morning in the upper 20s to low 30s, creeping into the 40s this afternoon with a light north breeze and high thin clouds. Sunrise was right around 7:25 a.m., sunset will be about 5:00 p.m., so you’ve got a short window and that late‑afternoon warming will matter.
Water temps on the main lake are riding the upper 40s to low 50s, a touch cooler on the Niangua and Gravois arms according to recent Missouri Department of Conservation and local marina reports. That’s pushed most gamefish into their true winter haunts: channel swings, bluffy banks, deep docks, and mid‑lake structure.
Bass first. Local reports from guides and dock talk at Osage Beach say the best action lately has been on suspended spots and largemouth staging 15–25 feet down over 30–40 feet. A jerkbait bite is building: think natural shad colors early, then something with a little chartreuse when the sun gets up. Alabama rigs are quietly putting quality fish in the boat, especially around big dock corners and over brush. Finesse swimbaits on 3/8‑ounce heads, crawled painfully slow, are a solid backup.
If you’re after numbers, drop‑shot or Ned rigs around deeper dock stalls are still producing keeper‑size fish. Green pumpkin and brown still rule this lake; add a little purple flake if the water’s clearer down by the dam.
Crappie fishing has been steady. According to Missouri Department of Conservation winter sampling and local tackle shop chatter, plenty of black and white crappie are stacked 18–25 feet deep on brush piles and condo sets, especially in the Niangua arm and around the Grand Glaize. Jig‑and‑minnow combos are hard to beat: 1/16‑ to 1/8‑ounce tube jigs in blue/white, monkey milk, or plain chartreuse tipped with a small minnow. On calm days, straight minnows on a double‑rig above brush are putting limits in coolers. Expect mostly 9–11‑inch fish with a few bigger slabs mixed in.
White bass and hybrids have been hit‑or‑miss but worth checking when birds start working over main‑lake flats and points. Small spoons and 2‑inch swimbaits burned through the marks will get you bit; every now and then someone stumbles into a quick dozen‑fish flurry.
Catfish action has slowed but hasn’t died. A few blues and channels are coming from the river channel bends on cut shad and shad guts, 30–50 feet deep. Don’t expect big numbers, but the fish that do bite tend to be solid.
On lures and bait, think winter confidence baits:
– For bass: **suspending jerkbaits**, **A‑rigs**, 3–4‑inch swimbaits, finesse jigs, and Ned rigs.
– For crappie: small **marabou or tube jigs** with or without minnows, or plain minnows over brush.
– For catfish: fresh **cut shad** is still king.
Couple of hot spots to circle today:
– The **Grand Glaize arm**, from PB2 up past the bridge, has been giving up both good jerkbait bass and deep‑brush crappie.
– The **Niangua arm** around the 3–8‑mile markers, working brush off secondary points and creek mouths, has been a crappie‑limit factory when the wind lays down.
Work slow, watch your electronics, and don’t leave fish just because they’re not biting right away—winter fish here can take some convincing.
Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a Lake of the Ozarks 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
This episode includes AI-generated content.