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Lake Tenkiller Oklahoma Fishing Report Today
by Inception Point AI
Stay updated with the latest fishing conditions at Lake Tenkiller, Oklahoma! Tune into the "Lake Tenkiller Oklahoma Fishing Report Today" for daily insights on fish activity, best bait, prime fishing spots, and expert tips. Perfect for anglers looking to make the most of their fishing trips. Subscribe now for your daily dose of fishing news and advice straight from Lake Tenkiller!For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXkThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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Lake Tenkiller Early Summer: Bass on Points, Crappie Going Deep, Long Light Window
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake Tenkiller fishing report straight from the Cookson Hills. Lake Tenkiller’s a reservoir, so no real tide swing to worry about, but water level’s near normal and clarity is typical Tenkiller: clearer on the south end, a little stain up the river arms. The Corps of Engineers has been running some power-generation pulls, so expect a light fluctuation in level and a little current in the main lake channels. Weather around Tenkiller Ferry today is classic Oklahoma early summer: morning lows in the upper 60s, warming into the mid to upper 80s by afternoon with a light south wind 5–10 mph. Humidity’s up, so it’ll feel a touch stickier by mid‑day. Clouds will be mixed sun and clouds, with a better bite likely on those overcast stretches. Sunrise is right around 6:00 a.m., sunset just before 9:00 p.m., giving you a long window to work those low‑light periods. Fish activity’s been solid in the mornings and again the last two hours of light. Bass have been setting up on that 8–18 foot range around main‑lake points, brush, and rock ledges. Recent local reports from Tenkiller guides and tackle shops have largemouth and spots coming on shaky heads with green pumpkin worms, drop‑shots with small finesse plastics, and mid‑depth crankbaits in shad patterns. Smallmouth have been more consistent on rocky main‑lake points and bluff transitions; think 10–20 feet with a football jig or Carolina‑rigged creature. Crappie action has shifted deeper, with folks sticking good numbers on brush piles in 15–25 feet, especially around mid‑lake. Minnows are still putting fish in the boat, but a lot of locals are switching to small hand‑tied jigs in white, chartreuse, or monkey milk on 1/16‑ounce heads. Channel cats and blues are biting on cut shad and prepared stink baits on flats and creek mouths in 10–20 feet, especially toward evening. For bait and lure choices, if you’re chasing bass, bring: - Topwater walking baits and poppers for first light over points and shallow rock. - 3/8‑ to 1/2‑ounce football jigs in green pumpkin or brown for dragging rock. - Drop‑shot rigs with small straight‑tail worms in natural shad or watermelon. - Medium‑running crankbaits in sexy shad or citrus shad when the wind picks up. For crappie, small tube jigs or marabou jigs under a slip float worked just above brush tops are producing, with minnows as backup. For cats, punch bait or cut shad on a simple Carolina rig, tossed on the upwind side of a point and let it drift into deeper water. A couple of local hot spots to key on: First, Chicken Creek and the nearby coves have been giving up a mixed bag of bass and crappie, especially around submerged brush and secondary points. Work the outside edges first thing with topwater or a crankbait, then slide out and pick apart brush with a jig or drop‑shot once the sun gets up. Second, the area around Cato Creek and the main‑lake points down toward Tenkiller State Park has been steady for smallmouth and spotted bass. Focus on the rocky points and bluff ends in 12–20 feet, dragging a football jig or slowly hopping a Ned rig along the bottom. If the wind kicks up, slow‑roll a swimbait along the break. Mid‑day bite will be tougher with the clear water, so slow down, fish deeper, and think finesse. Early and late, don’t be afraid to move shallow and cover water; those feeding windows have been short but strong. 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. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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Lake Tenkiller Summer Bite: First Light Topwater and Deep Finesse When Sun Climbs
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake Tenkiller fishing report for the day. We’ll start with the conditions. Lake Tenkiller is a hydroelectric reservoir, so no real tide swings like the coast, but you do get slight level and current changes with power generation releases at Tenkiller Ferry Dam. Those releases can flip the bite on quick, especially around channels, bluff ends, and below the dam. Weather around Tenkiller today is classic Oklahoma summer: morning temps starting in the upper 60s to low 70s, climbing into the upper 80s to low 90s by afternoon, with mostly clear to partly cloudy skies and a light south wind around 5–10 mph. Humidity runs sticky, and any pop‑up storms this afternoon will just be the typical isolated summer boomers. Sunrise is around 6:00 a.m., sunset close to 8:45 p.m., giving you a long low‑light window early and late. Fish activity has been best at first light and the last hour of sun. Midday has been tougher with the clear water and bright sky, so think deep or shaded. Recent local talk around the marinas and bait shops has largemouth and smallmouth both cooperating early on main‑lake points and secondary points halfway back in the creeks. Folks are reporting mixed bags of 1–3 pound largemouth with a few better smallies in the 2–4 pound class, plus plenty of fun‑sized spotted bass. Best lures for bass right now: - In low light and a light chop, a **topwater walking bait** or **popper** over points and around rocky banks. - As the sun gets up, **green pumpkin or watermelon red finesse worms** on a shaky head or drop shot in 15–25 feet. - Around steeper rock and bluffs, a **natural‑shad crankbait** or **swimbait** ticking 10–15 feet has been producing. The striper and white bass bite below the dam and in the lower lake has been on and off but worth a look. When you see surface schooling, **small spoons, rooster tails, and 3‑inch soft jerkbaits** in shad colors have been the ticket. Some anglers have been boating good numbers of white bass with the occasional hybrid mixed in. Crappie reports are decent around brush piles and timber in 12–20 feet. Minnows and **small chartreuse or pearl tube jigs** under a slip float, set just above the brush, will put fish in the cooler. Expect a mix of 9–12 inch keepers with some nicer slabs if you hop around until you land on an active pile. Catfishermen are doing well on channel and blue cats on main‑lake flats and creek mouths, especially at night. **Cut shad, chicken liver, and prepared stink baits** on slip rigs are producing steady action, with eater‑size channels being the norm and the occasional bigger blue showing up deeper along the channel edges. A couple of local hot spots to keep in mind: - **Cookson Bend area**: good mix of rocky points, coves, and nearby channel swings. Solid for bass early on topwater, then finesse plastics as the sun climbs. - **Lower end near the dam and Carter’s Landing**: clear water, steeper structure, and better shot at smallmouth, plus schooling whites and stripers when they push baitfish up. If the sun gets high and the bite slows, back off to 20–30 feet, drag a Carolina‑rigged creature bait or a football jig along the breaks, and watch your electronics for bait and fish hugging the bottom. That’s the Lake Tenkiller rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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Lake Tenkiller Early Summer: Topwater at Dawn, Soft Plastics by Mid-Morning
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake Tenkiller fishing report, coming to you like a local leaning on the bait shop counter. We don’t worry about tides here in the hills – Tenkiller’s a reservoir, not a coastal bay – so instead we watch wind, light, and generation. Expect a warm, muggy early summer pattern: light south wind at dawn, building into a breezy afternoon, with scattered clouds and a chance of a pop-up shower later in the day. Sunrise is right around six in the morning, sunset close to eight forty-five in the evening, so you’ve got long low‑light windows to work with. Water’s running clear on the main lake, with a light stain in the backs of creeks and where runoff sneaks in. Surface temps are sitting in the upper seventies to low eighties, classic post‑spawn sliding into summer. That’s pushed fish to a mix of shallow shade and first breaks off the bank. Largemouth and spots have been chewing best early and late. Folks around the lake have been catching decent numbers of 1–3 pounders with an occasional four‑plus mixed in. Best bite has been on topwater and moving baits at first light, then soft plastics once the sun gets up. Smallmouth are showing on the steeper, rockier banks and points, especially where you’ve got some breeze rolling in. Crappie are still giving up nice messes on brush piles and deeper docks, mostly 10–14 inch fish. Catfish are steady on cut shad and punch bait on flats near the river channel bends, with some good eater‑sized blues and channels coming in, plus a few bigger blues for folks setting up overnight. For lures, think “shad and crawdad.” At dawn, tie on a walking topwater or a small popping bait around main‑lake points, bluff ends, and the mouths of creeks. Once the sun’s on the water, switch to a green pumpkin or watermelon red finesse worm or creature bait on a shaky head or Texas rig, and drag it down the first drop in 8–15 feet. A 3.3–3.8 swimbait on a ball head is money along bluff walls and over rocks for spots and smallmouth. For crappie, go with 1/16–1/8 ounce jigs in chartreuse/white or monkey milk; tip with a small minnow if they get finicky. Catfish fans, stick with fresh cut shad, chicken liver, or a good stink bait on slip rigs. Live baits: large minnows and small sunfish around timber and docks will tempt bigger bass. Nightcrawlers will catch you a little bit of everything on gravel points and small coves. Couple of local hot spots for you: First, the Snake Creek area – work the main‑lake points at the mouth at daybreak with topwater, then slide out and fish the first breaks with soft plastics as the traffic picks up. Second, the dam and that clear lower‑end water – target the rocky points and bluff transitions for smallmouth and spots with swimbaits and finesse worms, especially when there’s a little wind pushing in. If you want crappie, hunt brush piles off those same points in 15–25 feet. Midday is going to be tough with the heat and boat traffic, so either hit it early, slip out for a long lunch and a nap, or come back for the evening topwater flurry as the sun drops behind the ridge. Thanks for tuning in to this Lake Tenkiller report with Artificial Lure. Be sure to subscribe so you don’t miss the next rundown. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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Lake Tenkiller: Summer Bite Heating Up - Bass, Crappie & Schooling Stripers This Week
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake Tenkiller fishing report. We’ll start with conditions. Skies are running mostly clear to partly cloudy with light south to southwest wind, and temps building from the upper 60s at first light into the upper 80s by afternoon. Humidity is up, so expect that classic muggy Oklahoma feel with a slight chop on the main lake. Sunrise comes a little after 6 a.m., sunset a little after 8:30 p.m., giving you a long, bright day but the best bite is stacked around dawn and the last hour of light. No real tidal swing here, but water is seasonally low to near normal and clear to that classic Tenkiller green, with a little stain up the river arms after recent pop-up storms. The Corps of Engineers has been reporting steady generation at the dam, so there’s a bit of current on the lower end that’s helping the bite along the channel edges. Bass first. Local reports this week have been solid on numbers of spotted and largemouth bass, with some smallmouth mixed in down by the dam. Most fish are coming in the 1–3 pound range, with an occasional kicker in the 4–5 range off deeper structure. Early, work the chunk rock and bluff transitions with topwaters and walking baits in shad patterns. Once the sun gets up, the better fish slide off to 12–20 feet, holding on main-lake points, brush piles, and drops. Carolina rigs with green pumpkin creature baits, drop shots with small finesse worms, and football jigs in brown or green pumpkin have been producing steady action. Crappie have been decent, not on fire, but enough for a good mess if you’re patient. Folks are catching them off brush in 12–18 feet, especially on mid-lake docks and main-lake timber. Small hair jigs and 1/16-ounce plastics in white, chartreuse, and blue/white are getting bit, and minnows are still the go-to if you just want to fill a cooler. Stripers and white bass are active early and late when the shad push up. Keep a rod ready with a small chrome spoon or a swimbait; watch for schooling activity on the lower end. Most fish are schoolie size, but they’ll keep you busy when they come up busting. Catfish are a solid backup plan with this warm weather. Channels and blues are biting on cut shad, nightcrawlers, and stink bait, especially in 10–20 feet on ledges and around river-channel bends. Set up on the edge of the current and give them some time; once they find the scent, the action can be steady. Best lures today: Topwater walkers and poppers in bone or shad early; medium-diving crankbaits in sexy shad or natural craw on rock; green pumpkin and watermelon soft plastics on Texas or Carolina rigs; small crappie jigs in bright colors; chrome or white spoons and swimbaits for schooling fish. Live bait standouts are minnows for crappie, cut shad and nightcrawlers for catfish. A couple of local hot spots to keep in mind: - Downlake near Tenkiller Dam: clear water, smallmouth and spots on rock points and bluff ends, plus schooling action when the shad come up. - Carter’s Landing and the nearby main-lake points: good mixed bag of largemouth, spots, and crappie on brush and structure in that 10–18 foot range. That’s your Lake Tenkiller rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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Lake Tenkiller Early Summer Bass: Topwater at Dawn, Finesse by Noon
This is Artificial Lure with your Lake Tenkiller fishing report. We’re sitting on a classic early‑summer pattern right now. Skies are running mostly clear to partly cloudy with light south winds and warm, muggy air. Daytime highs are pushing into the upper 80s and low 90s, nights backing off into the upper 60s. The barometer’s fairly steady, so nothing too wild front‑wise, just a solid Oklahoma summer setup. Sunrise is right around 6 a.m., with sunset close to 8:40 p.m., giving you a nice long low‑light window on both ends of the day. Those first two hours after sunup and the last hour before dark are your money times, especially with this heat building. No real tide to speak of here, but the “freshwater tide” of generation and boat traffic is in play. Expect the mid‑day bite to slow as pleasure boaters get rolling. The best feeding windows are early, late, and again right before dark when the lake settles down. Recent chatter from local marinas and bait shops around Cookson and Keys is that the **black bass** bite has been decent. Folks are reporting good numbers of spots with a few solid largemouths mixed in. Most fish are coming off main‑lake and secondary points, and along bluff ends where you’ve got quick access to deeper water. For bass: - Early and late, work **topwater**: walking baits, poppers, and small buzzbaits in shad colors over points and shallow pockets. - As the sun climbs, switch to **finesse plastics**: green pumpkin or watermelon red Ned rigs, drop‑shots, and shaky heads on the first and second breaks in 12–20 feet. - A **3/8–1/2 oz football jig** in green pumpkin with a craw trailer dragged on chunk rock points is picking off better‑quality fish. The **crappie** bite has slid a little deeper. Locals are finding them around brush piles, docks, and standing timber in 12–20 feet. Small jigs in natural shad or pearl, or live minnows, are still producing steady limits if you hop brush to brush until you find a stacked pile. Electronics are your friend here. **Catfish** action is solid on the upper end and in the river arms. Cut shad, stink bait, and chicken liver on slip rigs on channel bends and flats near the river channel are putting blues and channels in the box. Nighttime on shallow flats is very good right now if you can handle the bugs and the humidity. On **stripers and white bass**, watch for surface activity early and late, especially around the lower lake and near the dam. When you see them schooling, throw small chrome spoons, inline spinners, or 2–3 inch swimbaits into the busting fish and burn them back. A couple of local hot spots to focus on: - **Cookson Bend area**: main‑lake points and adjacent coves for bass early on topwater, then finesse plastics as the sun gets high. Also a good area to scan for suspended bait and schooling activity. - **Upper Illinois River arm**: great for cats and mixed bag action. Work the channel edges and flats with cut bait, and pitch jigs to any laydowns you see for bonus bass and crappie. Live bait picks: minnows for crappie, nightcrawlers and cut shad for cats. Artificial standouts: shad‑pattern topwaters, green pumpkin finesse worms, and small swimbaits or spoons for schooling fish. That’s your Lake Tenkiller rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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Tenkiller Early Summer: Topwater at Dawn, Deep Structure at Noon
This is Artificial Lure with your Lake Tenkiller fishing report. We don’t worry about tides on Tenkiller, but the **lake level and generation** matter. Public lake data this week show Tenkiller sitting close to normal pool, with steady releases on the Lower Illinois keeping a light draw on the main lake. That’s got a gentle but noticeable current on the lower end and around the river channel swings. Weather around the lake is classic early summer: morning temps starting in the upper 60s, climbing to the upper 80s to near 90 by midafternoon. Light south to southwest breeze, 5–12 mph, with a chance of a pop‑up storm late in the day. Skies are mostly clear early with building clouds in the afternoon. Sunrise is right around 6 a.m., sunset near 8:40 p.m., giving you a long low‑light window at both ends of the day. Surface temps are running in the mid to upper 70s on the main lake, touching 80 in the backs of coves. That’s pushed a lot of fish into early summer patterns. Morning and late evening have the best activity; mid‑day slows unless you commit to deeper structure. **Black bass** (largemouth and spots) have been pretty steady. Local reports from marinas and tackle shops say numbers are good, size is hit‑or‑miss, with a few 4–5 pounders mixed in. Best bite has been: - Topwater early: walking baits and poppers over main‑lake points and bluff ends. - Mid‑morning: green pumpkin or watermelon red finesse jigs and shaky heads on gravel points, 8–15 feet. - Mid‑day: Carolina rigs and football jigs on offshore humps in 15–25 feet. **Smallmouth** are showing up around the bluffs and rocky main‑lake points near the dam and up toward Cookson. Think clear‑water finesse: 3–4" natural‑colored swimbaits, smoke or shad‑pattern grubs, and small Ned rigs on light line. **Crappie** have slid off the banks and are holding on brush and timber in 12–20 feet. Folks checking brush piles report solid messes of 10–12" fish with some bigger slabs. Best bet is a 1/16–1/8 oz hair jig or tube in chartreuse/white or monkey milk, or a small minnow just above the brush. **White bass and hybrids** are roaming. Look for schooling activity early and late over the river channel and big flats. When they push shad up, throw small chrome spoons, 2–3" shad‑style swimbaits, or a little lipless crankbait and hang on. **Catfish** are decent on cut shad, punch bait, and nightcrawlers along channel edges and where the river current hits points. Set up in 15–25 feet and give them some time. Best **lures and baits** right now: - Topwater: walking bait in bone or clear, small popper in shad pattern. - Plastics: green pumpkin, watermelon red, and junebug worms on Texas or shaky heads. - Finesse: Ned rigs in green pumpkin, goby, or natural shad. - Crappie: small jigs in chartreuse/white, monkey milk, or blue/white; minnows always work. - Catfish: cut shad, liver, punch bait. A couple of local **hot spots** to try: - The **Cookson Bend area**: work main‑lake and secondary points at first light with topwater, then drag jigs and worms down the breaks. - The **dam and lower end**: clear, deep water for smallmouth on rocky points and bluffs; also watch for schooling whites and hybrids out over the channel. Remember, this lake changes day to day—if you find bait and a little current, you’ll find fish. Move until you get bit, then slow down and work it over. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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Lake Tenkiller Bass Bite Heats Up: Points, Topwater, and Long Summer Evenings
Artificial Lure here, checking in with your Lake Tenkiller fishing report out of the Cookson hills of eastern Oklahoma. We don’t worry about tides here on Tenkiller since she’s a deep-water Arkansas River reservoir, but the water level is sitting near normal pool and clear to slightly stained on the lower end, with a little more color up the river arms. Surface temps are running in the upper 70s to low 80s after these warm days and mild nights. Sunrise is hitting right around six in the morning, with sunset close to eight forty-five in the evening, giving you a long window of low-light action. Overnight we’ve had light south winds and a mostly clear sky, and today you can expect warm, humid conditions, highs in the upper 80s to low 90s, and a steady south breeze around 5–15 miles an hour. That wind will stack bait on the wind-blown points and make for a solid reaction bite. Bass have been the headliners lately. Local reports from around Chicken Creek and Carter’s Landing say largemouth and spots are set up on main-lake and secondary points in 8–18 feet, with some smallmouth roaming the bluffs and gravel banks closer to the dam. Anglers have been boating decent numbers of keeper spots and smallmouth, with a mix of short fish and a few 3–4 pounders each trip. Night fishermen are picking off some better quality fish on the steeper banks. Best lures right now: - Early and late, throw **topwater** – walking baits and poppers over points, pockets, and along bluff walls. - Once the sun’s up, switch to **medium-diving crankbaits**, **3.8–4.3" swimbaits** on 1/4–3/8 oz heads, and **Carolina rigs** with creature baits or French fry–style worms. - For numbers, a **drop shot** or **Ned rig** with a natural shad or green pumpkin plastic will clean up on those deeper points and brush piles. Crappie have slid a bit deeper but are still very catchable. Folks around Cookson Bend and Standing Rock are finding them on brush in 15–25 feet, suspending just above the cover. Limits are still doable if you stay mobile, with a lot of 10–12 inch fish and a few slabs mixed in. Best baits are **small tube jigs**, **hair jigs**, and **1/16 oz marabou** in white, chartreuse, or monkey milk, or a **minnow on a slip cork** set right over the tops of the brush. Stripers and white bass activity has picked up in the lower lake and near the river channel bends at first and last light. Look for surface schooling when the wind slicks off. **Half-ounce chrome spoons**, **small topwaters**, and **flukes on jig heads** are taking fish when they push shad to the top. Expect a mix of whites, a few hybrids where they’re present, and the occasional big striper cruising the breaks. Catfish action is steady on channel swings and main-river humps. Local jugliners and rod-and-reel anglers are catching a mix of channels and blues using **cut shad**, **chicken liver**, and **prepared stink baits** in 10–25 feet. Set up on the upwind side of the structure and let that scent trail work. A couple of hot spots for you: - **Cookson Bend to Standing Rock**: great for bass on points and nearby brush, plus solid crappie piles off the main creek channel. - **Lower lake near the dam and party cove points**: clearer water, strong smallmouth bite on bluffs, and good shot at schooling whites and the odd striper. That’ll do it from Lake Tenkiller today. Thanks for tuning in, and be sure 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. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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Lake Tenkiller Early Light: Topwater and Finesse in Clear, Deep Water
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake Tenkiller fishing report, coming at you like you’re driving down 82 just before first light. We’ll start with the conditions. Tenkiller’s a deep, clear highland lake, so think finesse. Air temps today run mild at daybreak, warming fast by afternoon under mostly clear skies. Light south breeze most of the day, picking up a bit after lunch. Water’s seasonably warm in the upper 70s to low 80s on the surface, cooler down deep. No true tides here, just slow generation-related level changes, so don’t worry about tidal swings—focus on wind and light. Sunrise hits the water a little after six, with sunset a bit after eight-thirty. That gives you a strong low-light window from first safe light to about 9 a.m., then again the last two hours of the day. Midday is tougher in this clear water unless you go deep or go vertical. Fish activity’s been solid. Local dock talk and area tackle shops report: – **Largemouth and smallmouth**: Best at dawn on rocky points, bluff ends, and main-lake pockets with a little wind pushing in. Fish are hanging in 8–18 feet early, then sliding deeper to 20–30 as the sun gets high. – **Spotted bass**: Relating to offshore structure—humps, roadbeds, and brush piles. If you’ve got good electronics, this is your numbers game. – **Crappie**: Still coming off brush piles and deeper docks, 12–18 feet, especially in the mid-lake creeks. – **Catfish**: Channel cats and blues picking up on cut bait and stink bait along channel swings and the upper river arms in the evening and at night. – **Stripers/white bass**: Sporadic schooling near the lower lake during low-light hours; keep an eye out for surfacing bait. As for what’s been catching them: – For bass, locals are leaning on **topwater walking baits** and small **poppers** at first light on calm banks, then switching to **medium-diving crankbaits**, **3/8 oz spinnerbaits**, and **swimbaits** when the wind ripples the surface. Once the sun gets up, it’s a **finesse game**: green pumpkin or watermelon **Ned rigs**, **dropshots** with 4–5 inch worms, and **shaky heads** dragged slow over rock and brush. Fluorocarbon and light line help in this clear water. – For crappie, **small jigs** in natural shad or monkey milk colors and **minnows** fished right over brush are doing work. – For catfish, go with **cut shad, chicken liver, or punch bait** on simple bottom rigs; set up on bends or where a creek dumps in. Recent catches, based on local chatter and marina talk, include steady numbers of 1–3 pound spotted bass with a few largemouth in the 4–6 pound class, especially early on topwater and midmorning on finesse plastics. Crappie limits are still possible if you hop brush piles and keep moving until you find the right depth band. Catfish guys are reporting decent messes in the evenings, mostly eating-size channels and a few blues. A couple of hot spots to circle: – **Chicken Creek area**: Good mix of secondary points, brush piles, and docks. Bass at first light on topwater and finesse later; crappie on brush in that 12–18 foot range. – **Dam and lower-lake bluff walls**: Clearer, deeper water, perfect for spotted bass. Work vertical with dropshots and small swimbaits, and keep a rod ready for schooling fish if shad push up. If you’re heading out today, launch early, fish fast and shallow till the sun shows itself, then slow down, go deeper, and let your electronics do the work. Evenings, slide back shallow with topwater or a buzzbait around wind-blown banks and laydowns. 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. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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Lake Tenkiller Fishing Report: Early Summer Topwater Bite and Deep Structure Action
This is Artificial Lure checking in with your Lake Tenkiller fishing report. We don’t worry about tides here in the Cookson Hills, but the **water level and weather** are what matter. The lake is sitting near normal pool with good clarity on the lower end and a light stain up the river arms after recent showers. Overnight temps were cool, with morning air in the low 60s and an afternoon warm‑up into the 80s. Winds are light out of the south, just enough chop to help the bite without beating you up. Sunrise hit a little after 6 a.m. local, with sunset coming a little after 8:30 p.m., so you’ve got a long window to work that low‑light bite. The best action is early and late; the mid‑day bite has been tougher unless you go deep or finesse. **Bass:** Largemouth and spots have been pretty active at first light around rocky points, secondary points, and bluff pockets. Folks have been boating good numbers of 1–3 pound fish, with an occasional kicker closer to 5. Topwaters have been the ticket early – walking baits and poppers in shad patterns along the main‑lake points and over submerged brush. Once the sun gets up, the fish slide off to 15–25 feet. Carolina‑rigs, drop shots, and football jigs on gravel points and humps are producing steady bites. Green pumpkin, watermelon red, and natural shad colors are hard to beat. **Smallmouth:** Down by the dam and along the steeper rocky banks, smallmouth have been chewing on finesse baits. Ned rigs and small tubes in goby or green pumpkin, dragged slow along the rocks, are picking up solid bronzebacks, especially on overcast stretches and late evening. **Crappie:** Crappie have moved to summer haunts – brush piles, docks, and timber in 12–20 feet. Anglers are catching nice slabs on small jigs and minnows, with the better bite coming just off the main river channel bends. Slow‑rolling a 1/16‑ounce jig in chartreuse/white or monkey milk around brush is putting fish in the boat. **Stripers/Hybrids & White Bass:** Out toward mid‑lake, schooling activity has been picking up on calm mornings. Watch for surface busts and bird activity. Slab spoons, small swimbaits, and chrome topwaters worked through the schools are producing quick limits of whites and the occasional hybrid. Keep a spoon tied on and ready. **Catfish:** Channel and blue cats are biting decent on cut shad, chicken liver, and prepared stink baits on channel edges and where creeks dump in. Set up on ledges in 15–25 feet and give each spot some time; once they find you, the action can be steady. Best **lures and baits** right now: - Topwaters in shad patterns for bass and schooling fish - Carolina‑rig and drop‑shot plastics in green pumpkin or shad - Ned rigs, tubes, and finesse worms on rocky banks - Small crappie jigs and minnows over brush - Cut shad, liver, and punch bait for cats A couple of **hot spots** to check: - The **dam and lower‑end points** for clear‑water smallmouth and schooling whites - The **Cookson Bend to Chicken Creek stretch** for largemouth on points, docks, and nearby brush piles That’s your Lake Tenkiller rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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347
Lake Tenkiller Report: Bass on the Break, Crappie Going Deep
This is Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake Tenkiller fishing report. We’ll start with the conditions. Lake Tenkiller’s a clear, deep highland reservoir, so think finesse and structure. No tides to worry about here, just steady lake levels and the usual pull from power generation. Sunrise is right around early six o’clock, with sunset near eight-thirty in the evening, giving you nice, long low-light windows on both ends of the day. Weather around Tenkiller today is seasonably warm. Mornings are starting off cool and comfortable, building to a hot, sunny afternoon with light to moderate south wind and only a slight chance of a pop‑up shower. That sun and clear water will push a lot of fish off the bank once it gets bright, so plan your day around dawn, dusk, and shade. Bass have been the main story. Local reports from marinas and ramp chatter say spotted and largemouth bass are coming in steady on main-lake points and the first breaks off bluff walls in 10–20 feet. Most folks are boating solid numbers, with the better fish in the two- to three‑pound class and a few fours mixed in. A couple of evening tournaments out of Chicken Creek have taken 14–17 pound bags on five fish, mostly on soft plastics and small swimbaits. Best bass baits right now: - Early and late, work **topwater walking baits** and **buzzbaits** over gravel points and along steeper rock banks. - Once the sun gets up, switch to **green pumpkin or watermelon finesse worms**, **Ned rigs**, and **drop‑shots** with shad‑colored plastics in 12–25 feet. - A **3.3–3.8 inch swimbait** on a ball head, slow‑rolled along the bottom, is picking up both spots and smallies. Crappie are still being caught but have slid a bit deeper. Folks are finding them on brush piles, standing timber, and dock corners in 12–18 feet, suspending around mid‑depth. Minnows are putting numbers in the livewell, but small **baby shad jigs** in natural colors are taking the better slabs. Expect a mix of keepers with some ten- to twelve‑inch fish fairly common. Striper and hybrid action below the dam in the Illinois River tailrace has been spotty but worth a shot at first light. Anglers drifting live shad or throwing **½‑oz flukes and bucktail jigs** are picking up a few strong fish when the generators are running. Up on the main lake, watch for schooling white bass and small hybrids pushing shad in the evenings on calm days; a **small spoon** or **tiny topwater** will get hammered. Catfish are reliable as always. Channel cats are eating **cut shad**, **stink bait**, and **chicken liver** on flats and gently sloping banks in 8–15 feet, especially near creek mouths. A few bigger blues are coming off deeper ledges on fresh cut bait. Nighttime has been best, but an overcast afternoon can turn them on. A couple of local hot spots to circle on your map: - **Chicken Creek area** on the mid‑lake: good mix of gravel and rock points, nearby channel swings, and some brush. Solid for bass and crappie, with catfish on the adjacent flats. - **Snake Creek and the adjacent main-lake points**: clear water, steep structure, and good smallmouth potential. Work topwater at dawn, then finesse plastics down the breaks. If the lake is clear and calm, downsize your line and go natural on color. If the wind picks up or you find stained pockets from recent rain, don’t be afraid to throw a spinnerbait or chatterbait up shallow for a reaction bite. That’s your Lake Tenkiller rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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346
Lake Tenkiller Early Summer Bass: Dawn Topwater and Deep Structure Guide
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake Tenkiller fishing report out of the Cookson hills. We’ll start with the conditions. We’ve got a warm, early‑summer pattern settling in: morning lows in the upper 60s, climbing into the mid‑80s this afternoon under mostly clear skies with a light south breeze. Humidity’s up, but not brutal yet. Sunrise came just after six, and sunset will be mid‑evening, giving you a long window to work those low‑light bites. With this stable weather and light wind, the lake should stay pretty clear on the lower end, a little more stain up the river arms. No true tides here in Oklahoma, but water level on Tenkiller usually sits near normal this time of year, with slow generation below the dam. Think gentle current at best, so you’ll want to make your own movement with the trolling motor and focus on structure changes rather than current seams. Bass first. Largemouth and spots are sliding into their early summer haunts: main‑lake points, secondary points in the bigger coves, and those steep rock transitions Tenkiller’s known for. Fish activity has been best at first light and the last hour before dark, with a tougher but still workable mid‑day bite if you go deeper. Recent trips around the lake have been putting 10–20 bass a day in the boat for decent anglers, mostly 1–3 pounds with the occasional four‑plus on deeper structure. Best lures right now: – Topwater walking baits and small buzzbaits at dawn around rocky points and shallow flats. – Medium‑running crankbaits in shad colors over 8–12 feet of water. – Green pumpkin or watermelon red shaky heads and finesse jigs on those bluff ends and brushy ledges in 12–20 feet. If you’re after smallmouth, they’re hanging on the clearer, rockier stretches near the dam and along the main river channel breaks. Light line, small jerkbaits early, then switch to ned rigs and tube baits once the sun gets up. Crappie action has slid a little deeper. Look for brush piles on main‑lake flats and along creek channels in 12–18 feet. Recent reports out of local marinas say folks are still bringing in solid messes, 10–20 keepers per trip when they stay on the brush. Best bet is a 1/16‑ounce jig tipped with a small minnow or a natural‑colored plastic, fished just above the top of the brush. Stripers and hybrids below the dam can be hit‑or‑miss, but when they’re on, they’re on. Early morning is your window; work swimbaits or live shad through the deeper holes, especially if the Corps is pulling any water at all. Catfish are steady. Channel cats are taking nightcrawlers, stink bait, and cut shad on shallow flats and the upper river when the light gets low. Blues are better on fresh cut bait along deeper ledges and around the channel bends. A couple of hot spots to circle on your map: – The area around Chicken Creek: classic Tenkiller mix of rock, brush, and points, good for bass and crappie with just enough stain to let you throw power baits. – The lower end near the dam and Carter’s Landing: clear water, bluff walls, and chunk rock for smallmouth and deeper‑holding largemouth, plus a shot at schooling fish when shad push up. If you’re bank fishing, hit the public access around Snake Creek or Cookson Bend in the evenings with a topwater, a Texas‑rigged worm, and a slip‑float rig for panfish or cats. That’s the word from Lake Tenkiller. 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. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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345
Lake Tenkiller Early June Bite: Shallow Start, Deep Finish
Good morning from **Lake Tenkiller**, where the bite is shaping up like a classic early-June day in eastern Oklahoma. I’m **Artificial Lure**, and for a local-style run-down: with no live report feed available here, I’d treat today as a warm, rising-water-column morning with the best action coming shallow at first light, then sliding a little deeper as the sun gets up. **Tidal report:** none to speak of on Tenkiller, since this is a reservoir and not a tidal fishery. **Weather:** plan on a bright summer start with warming temps through the morning, so expect fish to feed best early before boat traffic and sun push them off the bank. **Sunrise and sunset:** for early June in eastern Oklahoma, sunrise is around 6:00 a.m. and sunset is near 8:30 p.m., giving you a long window, but the best window is still that first light bite. Around Tenkiller right now, the fish activity should center on **bass, crappie, and catfish**. If you’re chasing bass, look for fish moving with bait around rocky points, laydowns, and shaded pockets. Crappie should be hanging near brush, docks, and submerged cover, while catfish will be prowling creek channels, flats, and baited shorelines. If I were rigging up for Tenkiller today, I’d lean on: - **Bass:** white or shad-pattern spinnerbait, squarebill crankbait, wacky-rigged stick worm, and a shaky head for clear-water edges. - **Crappie:** small jigs in chartreuse, white, or black, plus live minnows if you want the most consistent bite. - **Catfish:** chicken liver, cut shad, punch bait, or nightcrawlers depending on whether you’re fishing channel cats or blues. For **hot spots**, I’d start with: - **Rocky main-lake points near deeper water** - **Mouths of creeks and coves with bait present** - **Boat docks and shade lines** - **Brushy pockets off the main channel** If you’re hearing about recent catches around the lake, the usual story this time of year is a mixed bag: bass up shallow early, crappie pulled from cover, and catfish biting steadily once the water warms. The key is following the bait. If you find shad flicking on the surface or see bluegill around cover, the predators won’t be far behind. Best advice for today: start early with moving baits, slow down once the sun climbs, and fish the shaded side of structure. On a lake like Tenkiller, clear water often means a little more finesse wins by midmorning. Thanks for tuning in, subscribe for more, and this has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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344
Lake Tenkiller Early Summer: Points, Topwater, and Generation Schedule Bites
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake Tenkiller fishing report. We’ll start with the conditions. Tenkiller’s a hydro lake, so no true tides, but the daily “tide” is the **generation schedule**. Expect levels to bump up and a little more current when they’re pulling water at the dam; that’s when the bite usually perks up along main‑lake points and below the dam in the tailrace. Weather today is classic early‑summer Oklahoma. Morning temps starting cool in the low 60s, climbing into the 80s by afternoon, light south wind, and mostly clear skies. Humidity’s up, but not brutal yet. Sunrise comes just after 6 a.m., with sunset right around 8:30 p.m., so you’ve got a long low‑light window on both ends of the day. Water’s clearing back up in the main lake with a light green tint; pockets and creeks still have a little stain. Surface temps are pushing into the mid‑70s on the lower end and a touch warmer up the river arms. That’s got fish sliding off the banks and stacking on **points, brush, and rock transitions**. Recent reports from local anglers and bait shops around Cookson and Keys say: - **Largemouth & spots**: Solid postspawn/early‑summer pattern. Numbers have been good, with some 2–4 pounders and the occasional 5+ coming from 8–18 feet. Carolina rigs with green pumpkin creature baits, shaky heads with straight‑tail worms, and small jigs in brown or green pumpkin have been steady producers. Early and late, a walking topwater or a chrome/blue spook‑style bait over gravel points is getting crushed. - **Smallmouth**: Fewer, but quality fish. They’re hugging rock piles, bluff ends, and wind‑blown chunk rock. Think brighter, more “smallie” colors: smoke or shad‑pattern swimbaits, and translucent topwaters. A 3–4 inch paddletail on a ball‑head jig slow‑rolling along steep banks has been putting a few in the boat. - **White bass & hybrids**: When they push shad to the surface, it’s quick mayhem. Watch for birds working and surface schooling mid‑lake. Small chrome spoons, tail‑spinners, and 2–3 inch shad‑style swimbaits will keep you busy. Evening seems strongest. - **Crappie**: Bite’s moved off the banks to brush and pole timber in 10–20 feet. Minnows and 1/16‑ounce jigs in natural shad or monkey milk colors, fished just above the brush tops, are taking decent slabs. Not limits for everyone, but enough for a good fry if you stay on them. - **Catfish**: Channel cats and a few blues along river bends, flats near channel swings, and wind‑blown banks. Punch bait, cut shad, and nightcrawlers are your best bet. Set up on a contour edge in 10–25 feet and give each spot a little time. Best lures and bait today: - For bass: **topwaters at first and last light**, then Carolina‑rigged plastics, football jigs, and mid‑depth crankbaits in shad or craw patterns once the sun gets up. - For crappie: live minnows and small tube jigs. - For cats: fresh cut shad, chicken liver, and prepared stink bait. A couple of hot spots to circle on your map: - **Cookson Bend area**: Main‑lake points and the first couple of secondary points inside the coves are holding mixed largemouth and spots. Work those points slow once the sun’s up; they’re good for both numbers and a kicker. - **Upper Illinois River arm**: Slightly more stain and a touch more current. Great for white bass runs, catfish on bends and flats, and some feisty smallmouth along the rock seams and laydowns. Also keep an eye on **Chicken Creek** and **Cates Landing** humps and points for schooling whites and the occasional striper or hybrid blowing up in the evenings. 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. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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343
Lake Tenkiller Early Summer: Topwater at Dawn, Finesse by Noon
This is Artificial Lure with your Lake Tenkiller fishing report. We’re looking at a classic early-summer pattern on Tenkiller. Skies are starting mostly clear with a light south breeze, building to 10–15 mph by afternoon. Air temps will climb from the 60s into the mid‑80s, with a warm, muggy feel by midday. Expect a slight chance of a pop‑up storm late afternoon, typical for this time of year. Water temps are generally in the low to mid‑70s, with visibility still pretty good on the lower end and a little more stain coming in from the river arms after recent showers. Sunrise is right around 6 a.m. local, sunset close to 8:30 p.m., giving you a long prime window to work low‑light periods. There’s no real tide action on Tenkiller, but you’ll see that “pseudo‑tide” effect when the Southwest Power Administration starts pulling water at the dam. When they generate, the river side current picks up and the bite usually follows. Call the generation schedule or check their online release report before you launch. Bass action has been solid. Folks working first light are boating good numbers of spotted and largemouth bass, mostly in the 1–3 pound range, with an occasional 4‑plus. The better bites are coming on main‑lake and secondary points, as well as chunk rock banks leading into coves. Early, a topwater like a walking bait or a popper in shad colors has been money over 8–15 feet. Once the sun gets up, switch to a green pumpkin or watermelon red shaky head, a finesse jig, or a small Alabama rig slow‑rolled over 15–25 feet near brush and standing timber. Crappie are sliding a bit deeper, but anglers are still picking up decent messes. Look for brush piles, standing timber, and docks in 12–20 feet of water. A 1/16‑ounce chartreuse or monkey‑milk jig, or a small minnow under a slip bobber set just above the brush, is getting bit. Most fish are in that 10–12 inch keeper range, with a few slabs mixed in. Striper and white bass action up toward the upper Illinois River and below the dam has been spotty but worth a run if they’re moving water. When that current kicks in, throw white bucktail jigs, swimbaits, or live shad. Hybrids and whites will stack in the seams and behind points, and you can get into some fast action in a hurry. Catfish are cooperating for the set‑line and anchor crowd. Channel cats are coming on punch bait, chicken liver, and cut shad on shallow flats in 5–15 feet, especially at night. Blues are hanging a little deeper on humps and channel edges; fresh cut shad or sunfish is the ticket. Drift‑fishing mid‑lake flats with a light breeze is putting some good fish in the boat. Best artificial lures right now: shad‑pattern topwaters, medium‑running crankbaits in sexy shad or green gizzard, 3–4 inch swimbaits, and finesse worms on a shaky head in natural colors. For live bait, you can’t go wrong with minnows for crappie, shad for stripers and catfish, and nightcrawlers for a little bit of everything. A couple of hot spots to consider: 1. The area around Chicken Creek and the nearby main‑lake points: good for early‑morning topwater bass and daytime finesse bites on points and brush. 2. The dam and lower end near Cookson Bend: clearer water, solid smallmouth and spotted bass action off rocky points and ledges, plus striper chances when they’re pulling water. 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. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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342
Lake Tenkiller Early Summer Bass: Topwaters at Dawn, Deep Plastics by Mid-Day
This is Artificial Lure with your Lake Tenkiller fishing report. We don’t deal with tides out here in the Cookson Hills, but we do watch the wind and barometer. This morning expect a light south breeze, building to a moderate wind by afternoon, with warm, humid air and a slight chance of a pop‑up shower. Skies run partly cloudy most of the day. Sunrise hits a little after six, sunset a little after eight‑thirty, so you’ve got a long daylight window to work with. Water on Tenkiller is running clear to slightly stained on the upper Illinois River arm, with better clarity near the dam. Level is near normal pool, with typical early‑summer boat traffic building by late morning. Surface temps are in that low‑ to mid‑70s zone, which has kicked off a good early bite before the sun gets high. Bass action has been solid at first light. Folks have been boating good numbers of spotted and largemouth bass off rocky points and bluff ends, with a few smallmouth mixed in down toward the dam. Best producers have been topwaters at dawn—Zara‑style walking baits, small poppers, and hollow‑body frogs over shallow bushes in the creeks. Once the sun’s up, they’re sliding off to 10–20 feet. That’s when a green pumpkin finesse jig, a shaky‑head worm, or a drop‑shot with a 4–5 inch finesse bait starts doing work on those steeper banks and points. Crappie are still giving up some nice slabs on brush piles and docks in about 12–18 feet. Minnows on light line and small tube jigs in chartreuse/white or monkey milk have been putting fish in the boat. Work slow over the tops of brush and suspend just above the limbs. Stripers and white bass have been schooling sporadically near the dam and mid‑lake humps, especially early and late. When you see birds working or surface busting, throw small swimbaits, spoons, or white rooster tails and let ’em sink through the school. Keep a heavier jigging spoon handy if they push down out of sight. Catfish are steady for the folks setting juglines and rod‑and‑reel drifting channel edges. Best bait right now is cut shad, chicken liver, or punch bait. Focus on 15–25 feet around river bends and the mouths of creeks. If you’re bank‑fishing, nightcrawlers and small live minnows under a slip float around rocky banks and marina areas will pick off a mixed bag—sunfish, small bass, and the occasional crappie or channel cat. A couple of hot spots to keep in mind: - The lower end near Tenkiller Dam for smallmouth, schooling whites, and stripers. - The Cookson Bend to Chicken Creek stretch for early‑morning topwater bass on points and secondary coves, plus mid‑day crappie on brush. Best overall lures right now: walking topwaters at dawn, medium‑diving shad‑pattern crankbaits on wind‑blown banks, green pumpkin plastics on jigheads or Texas rigs, and 3–4 inch paddle‑tail swimbaits in natural shad colors. For bait, you can’t beat fresh cut shad for cats and live minnows for crappie. That’s your Lake Tenkiller rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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341
Lake Tenkiller Bass Bite Heating Up: Summer Patterns Starting Early with Cranks and Finesse
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake Tenkiller fishing report. We’ll start with the conditions. Air temps are mild at daybreak and warming fast into the afternoon, with mostly clear skies, light south wind, and only a slight chance of a pop‑up storm late. Humidity’s up, so expect that classic muggy Oklahoma feel by lunchtime. Sunrise comes early over the bluffs and you’ll lose workable light pretty quick after sunset, so your best window is the first three hours of daylight and the last two before dark. Tenkiller’s a reservoir, so no real tide to worry about, but water level has been running near normal pool with good visibility over the main lake and a light stain in the creeks after recent showers. Surface temps are in the upper 70s to low 80s, which is pushing a lot of fish into early summer patterns. Bass have been the main story. Local anglers around Cookson Bend and Carter’s Landing are reporting solid numbers of spotted and largemouth bass, with a few smallmouth mixed in off the rocky points. Most fish are coming in that 1½ to 3‑pound range, with the occasional kicker over 4. The better bites have been on main‑lake points, bluff ends, and secondary points halfway back in the creeks. For lures, think shad and craw. A medium‑running crankbait in shad colors, 8–12 feet, has been money when there’s a little wind on the points. When it slicks off, folks have been switching to green pumpkin or watermelon red finesse jigs and shaky heads on the rocks and ledges. After dark, a black or dark purple spinnerbait slow‑rolled along the bluff walls has been producing a few big bites for the night crowd. Crappie action is steady but not on fire. Most slabs are holding 10–15 feet down over brush piles and standing timber off channel swings. Minnows are still the top producer, but small tube jigs and hair jigs in chartreuse/white or monkey milk are taking fish when you hover right over the structure with a slip float. Stripers and hybrid‑type action is limited on Tenkiller, but white bass have been schooling sporadically on the main lake when the sun’s low. Keep a small chrome or pearl fluke‑style soft plastic or a little 1/4‑ounce spoon ready to toss into surfacing fish. They’re not huge, but they’ll keep a kid grinning. Catfish are a good bet if you want meat. Channel cats are biting on punch bait, chicken liver, and cut shad on flats adjacent to the river channel in 8–20 feet. Set up on a little current edge and give it time. A lot of folks are doing well just off the Illinois River arm and near the bridges. Best bait overall right now: live shad for bigger fish, medium shiners or minnows for crappie, and good old nightcrawlers if you just want steady action from anything that swims. For artificial, it’s hard to beat a shad‑pattern crank, a green pumpkin finesse worm, and a topwater walking bait for those low‑light flurries. A couple of hot spots to circle on your map: – The stretch from Cookson Bend down toward Sixshooter, working the main‑lake points and the first couple of secondary points inside each cove. – The lower end around the dam and the big coves just upstream, targeting rocky banks and humps where the depth breaks from 10 down to 20‑plus. That’s the word from Lake Tenkiller. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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340
Lake Tenkiller Late Spring: Points, Crankbaits, and Prime Light Bite
This is Artificial Lure with your Lake Tenkiller fishing report. We don’t worry about tides here in the hills, but water level and clarity are the name of the game. The lake’s sitting near normal pool, with 2–4 feet of visibility on the main body and a little more stain up the river arms. Surface temps are riding the low‑70s at daylight and warming into the mid‑70s by afternoon, classic late‑spring pattern. Weather today is about as good as it gets: light south wind 5–10 mph early, building a bit mid‑day, mostly clear skies, and a warm afternoon. Sunrise hit right around 6:10 a.m., sunset about 8:30 p.m., so you’ve got a nice long window to work that low‑light bite. A high, bright sun will push the fish tighter to cover once it gets up. Bass have been cooperating. Local anglers this week have reported decent numbers of spotted bass mixed with some quality largemouth off main‑lake points and secondary points in the creeks. Most fish are in 8–18 feet, hanging on chunk rock, brush, and the ends of docks. A few smallmouth are still showing up on windy gravel points near the dam. Best producers have been shad‑patterned crankbaits in the 8–12 foot range, 3.8" swimbaits on 1/4‑oz heads slow‑rolling just off bottom, and green pumpkin finesse worms on shaky heads. When the wind lays down, a drop shot with a small baitfish‑style plastic in 15–20 feet has picked off some nicer spots. Early and late, a walking topwater in bone or chrome has been good for a short but exciting flurry. Crappie action has shifted a little deeper post‑spawn. Folks are picking up good eaters off brush piles and timber in 12–20 feet, especially mid‑lake. Straight minnows on a light rig or 1/16‑oz Bobby Garland‑style jigs in monkey milk or blue ice have been filling some nice limits when you stay mobile and hop brush to brush. Striper and hybrid‑type action isn’t a big story here, but the white bass are still popping up in small schools on the main‑lake flats when the wind pushes bait. Keep a small silver spoon or 2" paddle‑tail handy; watch for birds and surface activity in the evenings. Catfish have been steady. Channel cats are taking cut shad, chicken liver, and punch bait on wind‑blown banks and shallow points in 5–12 feet, especially toward dusk. A few blues are coming from deeper ledges with cut bait. For live bait, shiners and minnows are solid bets for crappie and bass if you prefer meat over metal. For artificials, think shad profiles and natural greens: crankbaits, swimbaits, and soft plastics. Fluorocarbon in that clear water will help, especially once the sun gets up. A couple of local hot spots to consider: – The Chicken Creek area: secondary points and brush in 10–18 feet for mixed spots and largemouth, plus nearby brush piles for crappie. – The Snake Creek arm: rocky main‑lake points near the mouth for smallmouth and spots, and deeper docks back in the creek for largemouth through mid‑morning. Focus on that first light and last light for your bigger bites, then slide deeper or tighter to shade as the day brightens. Work slow, pay attention to the wind, and let the boat sit a bit on each piece of structure—Tenkiller fish can be picky, but they’re there. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more reports and tips. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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Lake Tenkiller Late May: Bass on Points, Crappie Going Deep
This is Artificial Lure with your Lake Tenkiller fishing report. We’re sitting on a classic late‑May pattern here in eastern Oklahoma. Overnight temps slid into the low 60s, climbing into the low‑80s by afternoon. Winds are expected out of the south around 8–15 mph, with a few stronger gusts on the main lake. Skies are partly cloudy, and the barometer is steady to slowly falling ahead of a slight chance of afternoon storms. Sunrise comes a little after 6:10 a.m., with sunset just before 8:30 p.m. That gives us a long, productive low‑light window at both ends of the day. Tenkiller is a reservoir, so no true tides to worry about, but the Corps of Engineers has the lake just a touch below normal pool with a light, steady generation schedule. Any current you find around bluff points and near the dam will help concentrate bait and game fish. Water clarity is classic Tenkiller: clearer near the dam with 6–10 feet of visibility, getting more stained up the river arms. Surface temps are running mid‑60s at first light and creeping into the low‑70s by late afternoon, putting bass in a strong post‑spawn to early summer mix and crappie just sliding off the banks toward deeper cover. Largemouth and spots have been active early on rocky points and secondary points in the main creeks. Most folks have been reporting numbers more than giants: a dozen to 20 fish in a good morning, with bass in the 1½–3‑pound class pretty common and the occasional 4‑plus mixed in. Topwater has been the ticket at daybreak—walking baits, Pop‑Rs, and small buzzbaits in shad patterns—especially when there’s a little chop. Once the sun gets up, switch to finesse: green pumpkin or watermelon red shaky heads, Ned rigs, and small swimbaits worked down to 10–18 feet around chunk rock and brush. Smallmouth are still a highlight on the lower end. Look for them on gravel points and bluff ends where the wind hits. A 3–4 inch smoke or shad‑colored grub on a ball head, or a natural‑colored tube, will produce. If the wind really kicks up, a 3.5‑inch swimbait on a 1/4‑ounce head slow‑rolled along the breaks is putting some nice bronzebacks in the boat. Crappie anglers are doing well over brush piles and standing timber in 12–20 feet. Minnows on light rigs and 1/16‑ounce tube jigs in chartreuse/white or blue/white are taking good numbers, with quite a few keepers in the 10–12‑inch range. Focus on brush just off the main creek channels—those fish are sliding deeper but still hungry. Striper and white bass action has been fair to good near the dam and lower river. Early morning, keep an eye out for surface schooling; small spoons, Rooster Tails, and 2‑ to 3‑inch shad‑style swimbaits will handle both whites and schoolie stripers. Later in the day, trolling crankbaits or live shad a bit deeper along the river channel edges is a solid bet. For bait, live shad is king for stripers and bigger blacks. Nightcrawlers and minnows will keep kids busy on points and marina docks with sunfish and the occasional bonus bass or crappie. For artificial lures, think “shad and green pumpkin” and you’re in the game. A couple of local hot spots to keep in mind: – The lower end near Tenkiller Dam and the bluffs just up‑lake are prime for smallmouth and schooling whites when the wind is right. – Mid‑lake creek arms like Chicken Creek and Burnt Cabin have been steady producers for largemouth and crappie on those secondary points and mid‑depth brush piles. This is Artificial Lure, reminding you to fish the shade, watch the wind, and don’t be afraid to move until you find active fish. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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338
Lake Tenkiller Spring Bite: Bass, Crappie, and Long Days Ahead
This is Artificial Lure with your Lake Tenkiller fishing report. We’re sitting on a mild spring pattern right now. Overnight temps dropped into the upper 50s, highs pushing upper 70s to low 80s with a light south breeze. Skies are partly cloudy, barometer steady to slightly falling – good news for feeding windows. The lake is a little stained up the river arms, clearer toward the dam, with water temps generally in the low 70s on the surface. Sunrise hits a little after 6 a.m., sunset a little after 8 p.m., giving you long, fishable days. Your prime bite windows are first light to mid‑morning and then again the last two hours before dark when the wind lays and bait pushes shallow. No real tides here, but the “tide” you watch is generation. When the Illinois River’s pushing a little current and the lake’s moving, the bite picks up on points and along the old river channel. If the water’s flat and still, focus tighter on structure and shade. Black bass have been the stars lately. Local anglers are reporting solid numbers of spotted bass with a few largemouths and smallmouths mixed in, especially on main‑lake points and secondary points leading into spawning pockets. Most fish are running 1–2 pounds, with an occasional 3–4 pound kicker. A few smallmouth in the 18–20 inch class have come off rocky banks near the dam. Best bass baits: – Early: walking topwaters and smaller poppers over points and in the backs of small coves. – All day: green pumpkin and watermelon red finesse worms or creature baits on a shaky head or light Texas rig, worked slow around chunk rock and wood. – When the wind blows: 3.3–3.8" swimbaits on a ball head or a white/chartreuse spinnerbait slow‑rolled along windy banks and pea‑gravel points. Crappie are sliding a bit deeper after the spawn, holding on brush in 10–18 feet. Folks are still putting decent numbers in the livewell – not limits every trip, but enough 10–12 inch fish to make a fry. Small tube jigs in monkey milk, blue ice, or plain chartreuse, fished just above brush tops, are doing the work. Minnows under a slip bobber, set just off bottom, are hard to beat if they get finicky. Stripers and hybrids below the dam in the Illinois River tailrace have been hit‑or‑miss but worth a shot at first light. Anglers drifting live shad when generation’s running are picking off a handful of solid fish. When the turbines are off and the river’s calm, smaller swimbaits and flukes on 1/4 oz heads can still draw strikes, especially along current seams. Catfish action is improving with the warmer water. Channel cats are showing up on shallow flats and around riprap toward evening. Punch bait, cut shad, or chicken liver on simple bottom rigs will fill a stringer if you stay put and let them come to you. For bigger blues, set up on ledges along the river channel with fresh cut bait. A couple of hot spots to try: 1. The main‑lake points and bluffs near Tenkiller Dam – great for smallmouth and spots with clear water for finesse tactics. 2. The mid‑lake area around Chicken Creek and Cookson Bend – a solid mix of brushy crappie cover, bass on secondary points, and evening catfish along the flats. Keep an eye on wind direction and water color: that slightly stained, wind‑blown bank has been the money stretch more often than not. This is Artificial Lure wishing you good luck and tight lines out on Tenkiller. 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. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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Lake Tenkiller Fishing Report June 21, 2025: Summer Pattern Heats Up with Bass, Crappie, and Cats
Artificial Lure here with your Lake Tenkiller, Oklahoma fishing report for Saturday, June 21, 2025. Sunrise hit at 6:05 AM with a light drape of mist hugging over the coves, and we’re looking at a sunset around 8:34 PM tonight. Skies are partly cloudy, temps topping out in the mid-80s, and we’re getting a steady southeast breeze at 10 mph—perfect conditions to keep both the fish and the anglers active. The lake’s elevation is currently a foot or two above normal, and water temperature is hanging around 72–73 degrees, meaning some stain in the coves but decent clarity on main points. Action’s been hot as the summer pattern settles in. Early morning is prime time, especially for bass—both largemouth and smallmouth are feeding heavy right at first light. Hit the main lake rocky points and flooded brush from 6 to 9 AM. According to the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation, spinnerbaits, medium-diving crankbaits in shad or chartreuse, and bladed jigs are all putting fish in the boat. Power-fishing tactics are shining, with the recent Bassmaster Elite event confirming that Texas-rigged soft plastics, jigs, and vibrating jigs are catching quality bass shallow in flooded brush and wood cover. If there’s a bit of chop on the water, burn a spinnerbait along the edges. Crappie action is fair, with black and white crappie showing up around deeper brush piles and docks; small tube jigs and minnows are your best bet here. Channel and blue catfish are good right now, especially in the creek channels and along the main lake—try cut bait, chicken liver, or punch bait. Folks are reporting decent numbers of spotted bass mixed in, especially where gravel swings meet the main channel. Some white bass are still chasing schools of shad up the arms—a small chrome spoon or a white grub will get their attention if you find them schooling. Hot spots to try today include the stretch of rocky bluffs between Barnacle Bill’s and Cookson Bend, especially for bass in the early morning, and the brushy coves around Sizemore Landing for crappie and cats. If you’re after bigger bass, don’t overlook the deep brush piles off Chicken Creek, especially as the sun gets up. All in all, summer’s here and so is the action. Keep an eye out for floating debris near the ramps, and don’t forget to pack plenty of water. Thanks for tuning in to the Lake Tenkiller daily fishing report. Be sure to subscribe so you never miss the bite. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Stay updated with the latest fishing conditions at Lake Tenkiller, Oklahoma! Tune into the "Lake Tenkiller Oklahoma Fishing Report Today" for daily insights on fish activity, best bait, prime fishing spots, and expert tips. Perfect for anglers looking to make the most of their fishing trips. Subscribe now for your daily dose of fishing news and advice straight from Lake Tenkiller!For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXkThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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