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Red River Fishing Report: Winter Patterns and Midday Majors on the Shreveport Stretch

Red River Fishing Report: Winter Patterns and Midday Majors on the Shreveport Stretch

Published 2 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Red River Shreveport fishing report.

We’re sitting in classic North Louisiana winter pattern right now: cool mornings, mild afternoons, mostly light north to northeast breeze and stable barometer, with just enough cloud cover to keep the bite comfortable. Local weather outlets out of Shreveport are calling for highs in the low 50s to near 60 with light winds and no big fronts crashing through today, which usually makes for a steady, if not explosive, bite.

According to SolunarForecast’s Shreveport tables, sunrise is right around 7:34 a.m. and sunset about 6:22 p.m., giving us roughly ten and three‑quarter hours of daylight. They’ve got today rated “Better++,” with a **minor feed** around 8–9 a.m. and an **afternoon major** from about 12:50–2:50 p.m. That lines up perfect for a late‑morning to early‑afternoon push on the river ledges and current breaks.

Red River doesn’t have true tides this far inland, but the “tide” for us is river level and flow. With no big rain makers right over Shreveport overnight, expect near‑normal winter flow: a little stain to the water, gentle current pushing off the wing dikes and around the islands. That’s ideal for stacking catfish, white bass, and the occasional striper run in those seams.

Recent talk at the ramps and bait shops around Shreveport–Bossier has been pretty consistent:
- **Blue cats** in the 5–15 lb class with a few twenties mixed in, mostly off the deeper outside bends and below the locks.
- **Channel cats** eating good on the flats just off the river drops.
- **White bass** and **hybrids/stripers** schooling randomly when the sun gets up, chasing shad along the riprap and eddies.
- A few **largemouth bass** coming from backwater cuts and barge pockets when the sun warms those pockets up.

Best baits and lures right now:

- For catfish: cut shad, skipjack if you can find it, or fresh chicken liver on 3/0–5/0 circles. Drift or bump them along the ledge edges.
- For white bass/stripers: 1/4–3/8 oz silver or pearl jigging spoons, small swimbaits on a jig head, and chrome Rat‑L‑Traps burned through schooling fish.
- For largemouth: black/blue or green pumpkin jigs, compact creature baits, and a slow‑rolled chartreuse/white spinnerbait around wood and current breaks.

FishingReminder’s Red River notes talk about pools, wing dikes, and current seams holding blues, flatheads, and the bass runs, and that lines up with what folks are catching right now in town.

Couple of local hot spots to check:

- **Downstream of the Clyde Fant Parkway boat ramps**, work the outside bends and the first couple of wing dikes you hit. That stretch has been good for blues on cut bait and white bass on spoons when they push shad to the surface.
- **Around the pocket areas like Cottons Pocket and Clark Pocket** listed on FishingReminder’s Shreveport map. Those slack‑water cuts off the main river give you a warmer, calmer spot where bass and catfish slide in to feed, especially on that afternoon major window.
- If you’re bank fishing, the riprap and eddies near the bridges through Shreveport–Bossier are always worth a few casts with a spoon or small shad‑style crankbait.

Given the stable weather, that midday major is where I’d hang my hat: start on cats along the deeper bends mid‑morning, then slide shallower and closer to current breaks and pockets as the sun warms the water and pushes bait up.

This is Artificial Lure, reminding you to keep an eye on the river levels, respect that current, and release a few good ones so we can all keep telling these Red River stories.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more local fishing reports and tips.

This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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