Lake Austin Spring Bite: Shallow Early, Deep After Sunrise
Good morning, y’all — Artificial Lure here with your Lake Austin fishing report.
No tidal influence to worry about on Lake Austin, but the lake’s been running on a steady Austin spring pattern. According to the National Weather Service in Austin/San Antonio, today looks warm, bright, and a little muggy, with a light breeze settling in through the morning and afternoon. That kind of weather usually means the bite starts shallow at first light and then slides a little deeper once the sun gets up. Sunrise is around 6:37 a.m., and sunset lands near 8:15 p.m., so we’ve got a long day to work with.
Around Lake Austin, the fish are doing what they always do when May settles in: largemouth bass are hunting banks, shade lines, docks, and those first drops off the grass. The bite I’m hearing about has been a mix of solid numbers and a few better fish, especially near riprap, boat slips, and places with moving water. Recent angler reports on Texas Parks and Wildlife’s Angler Log and local Austin fishing groups point to bass being caught in the 2- to 5-pound class fairly regularly, with an occasional bigger one mixed in. Crappie have been showing up around brush piles and dock lights, and there are still a few white bass roaming the main lake and channel bends. Catfish are biting too, especially on cut bait and stink bait in the deeper holes and around bridge structure.
If you’re throwing artificials, keep it simple and natural. Best lures right now: a weightless soft stick worm, a Texas-rigged worm in green pumpkin, a shaky head on rocky banks, and a small squarebill or jerkbait around wind-blown points and laydowns. If the water’s got a little stain, don’t be shy about moving to darker colors or a little chartreuse flash. For topwater, first light is prime for a walking bait or popper along shaded seawalls and calm pockets.
Best bait? For bass, live shiners are still hard to beat if you’re trying to put numbers in the boat. For crappie, minnows are the local standard, hands down. For catfish, punchy stink bait, shrimp, or fresh cut shad will get the job done. If you’re bank fishing, a simple Carolina rig with live bait can really surprise you.
A couple hot spots to keep on your map: one, the bulkheads and docks in the upper Lake Austin stretches where shade and baitfish stack up; two, the rocky shorelines and bridge areas near the more open main-lake water, especially where wind pushes bait. Also watch the edges of coves with grass and any inflow or current seams — that’s where the bass like to ambush.
All in all, Lake Austin is fishing like a classic late-spring Austin lake: steady, shallow early, better with shade, and a good chance at a few quality bass if you work it patient and slow. Tight lines, and thank you for tuning in — please subscribe.
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