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Tenkiller Tuned Up: Wintertime Tactics for Bass, Crappie, and Cats

Tenkiller Tuned Up: Wintertime Tactics for Bass, Crappie, and Cats

Published 3 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake Tenkiller fishing report.

We’re in a classic mid‑winter pattern on Tenkiller right now: cold, mostly stable water, and fish pushed tight to structure. According to the Tenkiller Ferry Lake water level page from Lakes Online, the lake is sitting just under 629 feet, very close to normal pool, so you won’t see any wild swings in shoreline or boat ramp access. Light north to northwest breeze, chilly mornings near freezing, afternoons creeping into the 40s and low 50s with high pressure overhead – that’s bluebird sky, tough‑bite weather. Sunrise is right around 7:30 a.m., sunset close to 5:30 p.m., so your best window is that late‑morning warmup into mid‑afternoon.

No true tides here, but we do get “lake tides” from generation and wind. With releases low and the lake steady, current is limited, so subtle structure changes matter more than moving water. Fish are a bit sluggish; think slow and small.

Recent local chatter and reports from area bait shops around Vian and Keys put **smallmouth and spotted bass** as the top biters, with a few largemouth mixed in. Folks have been scratching out 5–10 bass on a decent half‑day when they commit to the winter program. Most bass are running 1–3 pounds, with the occasional 4‑plus smallie off the deeper rock. Crappie action has been fair to good for those who find brush in 20–30 feet, with catches of 10–20 keepers per boat on the better days. Catfish are mostly a drift‑or‑soak deal, scattered but catchable on cut shad in the channels.

For **bass**, focus on:
- Main‑lake and secondary points in 15–35 feet
- Bluff walls and chunk rock banks
- Channel swings just inside the creeks

Best offerings right now:
- **Alabama rigs** with 3–4 inch swimbaits in shad colors
- Finesse **football jigs** (3/8 to 1/2 oz) in green pumpkin or brown with a small trailer
- **Damiki/hover rigs** or vertical fluke‑style plastics over suspended bait in 25–40 feet
- Silver or white blade baits yo‑yoed off the bottom on steep structure

For **crappie**, go with:
- 1/16 to 1/8 oz **marabou or plastic crappie jigs** in monkey milk, shad, or chartreuse/white
- Small minnows on light line over brush piles and timber tops in 20–30 feet
Electronics are key – drop straight on their heads and hold it still.

For **catfish**, use:
- Cut shad or chicken soaked on the bottom along main‑lake channel edges in 25–40 feet
- Slow drifts if the wind cooperates, or anchor on bends and ledges

A few local hot spots to key on:

- **Cooksson Bend area**: The main‑lake points and nearby channel swings here have been giving up quality smallmouth on A‑rigs and football jigs when the sun gets up and warms that rock just a bit.
- **Big Hollow and standing timber near Chicken Creek**: Solid crappie zone right now. Scan for brush and vertical timber, then work jigs or minnows just above the fish.

If you’re in a kayak or fishing from the bank, target the steeper, rocky banks near public access and work a small jig or shaky head painfully slow. Let that bait soak; in this cold water, fast is dead.

That’s your Lake Tenkiller rundown from Artificial Lure. 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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