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Tenkiller Winter Fishing: Bass, Crappie, Stripers, and Cats - Fishing Report from Artificial Lure

Tenkiller Winter Fishing: Bass, Crappie, Stripers, and Cats - Fishing Report from Artificial Lure

Published 4 months ago
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This is Artificial Lure with your Lake Tenkiller fishing report.

We’re in a classic clear‑water winter pattern on Tenkiller. Overnight temps are cold, daytime highs climbing into the upper 40s to low 50s with light north to northeast breeze and high thin clouds. According to the National Weather Service for eastern Oklahoma, barometric pressure is steady to slightly rising and no major fronts are pushing through, so conditions are stable and fish are predictable rather than wild and roaming.

Sunrise is right around 7:30 a.m. with sunset about 5:15 p.m., giving you a tight feeding window. The best activity has been the late‑morning warmup from about 9:30 to noon, and then a shorter dusk bite right before dark when that surface chill eases off.

No tide to worry about here, but water level is near normal pool and winter‑clear. With cooler inflow from the Illinois River and phosphorous issues still being worked on legally and environmentally, recent local talk is that visibility is good on the main lake with a light stain up the river arms. NonDoc recently noted Lake Tenkiller’s algae and phosphorus problems, but anglers this week are reporting decent clarity and no major impact on the bite.

According to the latest Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation report for Tenkiller, **black bass** are fair to good on soft plastics and Alabama rigs off bluff ends and main‑lake points. Folks have been boating solid numbers of spotted bass with a few largemouth mixed in, most in the 1½–3 pound range. Slow‑rolling a 3.3–3.8 swimbait on a ball head or an A‑rig over 20–30 feet has been the deal.

**Crappie** are good on jigs and small minnows around brush piles and docks in 18–25 feet. Hair jigs and small tube jigs in natural shad or pearl have been outfishing bright colors on the sunny days. Several locals this weekend reported easy limits when they stayed off the piles and used forward‑facing sonar to pluck the bigger fish off the top of the schools.

**Stripers and white bass** have been spotty but showing near the river channel swings and at the lower‑lake humps. Small spoons and 2‑inch paddle‑tails dropped straight down on them are getting bit when they’re pushed up by shad. Keep an eye out for bird activity mid‑lake.

**Catfish** are fair on cut shad and chicken liver on the channel edges and below the dam, especially in the afternoon when a bit of current moves. Most fish are eaters, not giants, but consistent.

Best lures right now:
- For bass: finesse jigs in green pumpkin, shaky heads with straight‑tail worms, underspins with small swimbaits, and compact Alabama rigs.
- For crappie: 1/16–1/8 oz marabou or hair jigs, small plastics tipped with a crappie nibble, or live minnows under a slip float.
- For catfish: fresh cut shad, chicken liver, and prepared stink baits on slip‑sink rigs.

Best natural baits:
- Minnows for crappie around docks and brush.
- Nightcrawlers or cut bait for channel cats on ledges and points.

Couple of hot spots if you’re heading out:
- The **Goose Neck / Cookson Bend area**: work main‑lake and secondary points for spots and smallmouth with jigs and swimbaits, then slide out to brush in 20 feet for crappie.
- The **dam and lower‑lake bluff walls**: vertical fish spoons and A‑rigs along the channel break for bass and roaming white bass; drift cut bait for catfish below the dam if they’re running any water.

Fish slow, watch your electronics, and don’t be afraid to back off into that 25–35 foot zone. Most of the better fish this week have come from deeper than you think.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a Tenkiller report.

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