Lake Austin Fishing Report Today

Lake Austin Early Summer: Topwater at Dawn, Deep Structure by 9 AM

3 min · 22. Juni 2026
Episode Lake Austin Early Summer: Topwater at Dawn, Deep Structure by 9 AM Cover

Beschreibung

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake Austin fishing report. We’re sitting on a warm, muggy early-summer pattern. Overnight temps dipped to the low 70s, climbing into the low 90s this afternoon with high humidity and a light south breeze around 5–10 mph. Skies are mostly clear to partly cloudy, so expect plenty of sun and a building recreational boat bite by late morning. Sunrise is right around 6:30 a.m., with sunset just after 8:30 p.m. That gives you a long low-light window at dawn and again the last hour of daylight, which is when this lake really turns on. Barometric pressure is steadier than yesterday, so fish should be more predictable and willing to roam a bit shallower during the prime windows. Lake Austin isn’t tidal, but it does get a “pseudo-tide” from power generation and water releases. If you notice the current pick up, that’s your feeding bell. When the water starts moving along seawalls, points, and under docks, expect a short but strong window where bass set up on corners and eddies. Recent action from local anglers around Emma Long and up toward Steiner Ranch has been solid for largemouth, with most fish in the 1–3 pound class and the occasional 4–6 mixed in. Night guys working docks have been putting 10–20 fish in the boat in a few hours when they hit the right stretch. There have also been scattered reports of schooling white bass and small stripers chasing shad in the main-lake channels at first light. Early, focus on shallow grass edges, dock walkways, and shade lines. A **white or bone walking topwater**, a **popping bait**, or a **buzzbait** slow-rolled around bulkheads and over grass is money before the sun gets high. Follow that up with a **weightless fluke**, **wacky-rigged stickbait** in green pumpkin or watermelon red, or a **Texas-rigged creature bait** pitched tight to docks, ladders, and brush. Once the sun’s up and the wake boats get rolling, slide off to deeper structure: channel swings, the ends of main-lake points, and deep bluff walls. A **3/8–1/2 oz football jig** in natural craw colors, a **Carolina rig**, or a **deep-diving crankbait** in shad pattern will pick off better fish hanging on bottom transitions and rock. For numbers, a small **shad-colored swimbait** slow-rolled along bridge pilings and grass edges is a safe bet. Live bait folks drifting or anchoring near deeper bends with **live shad or large minnows** on a simple Carolina rig are picking up mixed bags of bass and the odd catfish. For cats specifically, **cut shad, chicken liver, or punch bait** on bottom around channel holes and creek mouths is working after dark. Couple of local hot spots to key on: - **Emma Long / City Park stretch**: Grass lines, long docks, and mid-depth rock. Great for early topwater and mid-morning finesse. - **Pennybacker Bridge area**: Steep banks, current, and bait. Hit the shade lines and the pilings with jigs and swimbaits, especially when the water’s moving. Best windows today will be daybreak to about 9 a.m., then again the last hour of light into early night, especially if you can line that up with increased flow. 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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Episode Lake Austin Early Summer: Topwater at Dawn, Deep Structure by 9 AM Cover

Lake Austin Early Summer: Topwater at Dawn, Deep Structure by 9 AM

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake Austin fishing report. We’re sitting on a warm, muggy early-summer pattern. Overnight temps dipped to the low 70s, climbing into the low 90s this afternoon with high humidity and a light south breeze around 5–10 mph. Skies are mostly clear to partly cloudy, so expect plenty of sun and a building recreational boat bite by late morning. Sunrise is right around 6:30 a.m., with sunset just after 8:30 p.m. That gives you a long low-light window at dawn and again the last hour of daylight, which is when this lake really turns on. Barometric pressure is steadier than yesterday, so fish should be more predictable and willing to roam a bit shallower during the prime windows. Lake Austin isn’t tidal, but it does get a “pseudo-tide” from power generation and water releases. If you notice the current pick up, that’s your feeding bell. When the water starts moving along seawalls, points, and under docks, expect a short but strong window where bass set up on corners and eddies. Recent action from local anglers around Emma Long and up toward Steiner Ranch has been solid for largemouth, with most fish in the 1–3 pound class and the occasional 4–6 mixed in. Night guys working docks have been putting 10–20 fish in the boat in a few hours when they hit the right stretch. There have also been scattered reports of schooling white bass and small stripers chasing shad in the main-lake channels at first light. Early, focus on shallow grass edges, dock walkways, and shade lines. A **white or bone walking topwater**, a **popping bait**, or a **buzzbait** slow-rolled around bulkheads and over grass is money before the sun gets high. Follow that up with a **weightless fluke**, **wacky-rigged stickbait** in green pumpkin or watermelon red, or a **Texas-rigged creature bait** pitched tight to docks, ladders, and brush. Once the sun’s up and the wake boats get rolling, slide off to deeper structure: channel swings, the ends of main-lake points, and deep bluff walls. A **3/8–1/2 oz football jig** in natural craw colors, a **Carolina rig**, or a **deep-diving crankbait** in shad pattern will pick off better fish hanging on bottom transitions and rock. For numbers, a small **shad-colored swimbait** slow-rolled along bridge pilings and grass edges is a safe bet. Live bait folks drifting or anchoring near deeper bends with **live shad or large minnows** on a simple Carolina rig are picking up mixed bags of bass and the odd catfish. For cats specifically, **cut shad, chicken liver, or punch bait** on bottom around channel holes and creek mouths is working after dark. Couple of local hot spots to key on: - **Emma Long / City Park stretch**: Grass lines, long docks, and mid-depth rock. Great for early topwater and mid-morning finesse. - **Pennybacker Bridge area**: Steep banks, current, and bait. Hit the shade lines and the pilings with jigs and swimbaits, especially when the water’s moving. Best windows today will be daybreak to about 9 a.m., then again the last hour of light into early night, especially if you can line that up with increased flow. 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

22. Juni 20263 min
Episode Lake Austin Summer Bite: Early Light and Deep Shade Under 360 Bridge Cover

Lake Austin Summer Bite: Early Light and Deep Shade Under 360 Bridge

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake Austin fishing report. We’ve got classic Central Texas summer conditions on tap. Around Lake Austin today, Weather.gov is calling for a hot, mostly clear day, light south to southeast breeze early, building into the 8–12 mph range this afternoon, with a chance of a pop‑up storm late day. Air temps are running from the low 70s at first light up into the mid to upper 90s by mid‑afternoon. Humidity’s up there, so expect that heavy, sticky feel on the water. Timeanddate’s solar tables put sunrise right around 6:30 a.m. and sunset close to 8:35 p.m., giving you a long window to work low‑light periods. The best fishing today is likely around first light through mid‑morning and then again that last 90 minutes before dark, especially if the wind lays down. Lake Austin doesn’t have a true tide, but as locals know, it *does* have current that acts like one. Watch the LCRA generation schedule and when they’re pulling water through the chain, that flow will position bass tight to breaks, docks, and grass edges. When current’s moving, crankbaits and swimbaits shine; when it’s slack, slow down with plastics. Recent talk around the ramps and marinas has been steady on the largemouth bite. Anglers have been boating anywhere from 3–10 bass on a half‑day, with a few solid 3–5 pounders and the occasional bigger fish coming at night or very early. Mixed in, folks are picking up some sunfish and the odd catfish on live bait or cut shad. The big schools of magnum fish are tougher with the summer boat traffic, but patient anglers working shade and deep structure are still sticking good ones. For lure selection, think summer pattern: - Soft plastics: Texas‑rigged or weightless **flukes**, **Senkos**, and **creature baits** in watermelon red, green pumpkin, and junebug. Skip them way up under docks and around overhanging trees. - Topwater: Early and late, **walking baits**, **buzzbaits**, and small **poppers** along seawalls, grass lines, and dock walkways. White and bone are local staples. - Moving baits: **Swimbaits**, **swim jigs**, and **medium‑diving crankbaits** in shad or bluegill patterns when there’s current or wind pushing on points. - Night option: Black or dark purple **spinnerbaits** and **big worms** around lit docks and bridge pilings. If you’re soaking bait, live shad, minnows, or large nightcrawlers on a Carolina rig will pick up bass and the occasional catfish, especially around deeper channel swings and dock edges after dark. A couple of local hot spots to consider: - **Under and around the 360 Bridge**: Current funnels here, and there’s good depth, rock, and shade. Fish the pilings, nearby ledges, and any visible bait on your graph. - **The grass and dock lines between Quinlan Park and Steiner Ranch**: When there’s boat traffic, bass tuck into that grass and dock shade. Work soft plastics and topwater baits parallel to the cover. Boat traffic will ramp up by late morning, so if you can be on the water at gray light, you’ll beat the crowds and hit the most active window. Hydrate, wear sun protection, and give yourself extra time around the ramps—summer Sundays bring everyone out. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more local fishing updates and stories from the water. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

21. Juni 20263 min
Episode Lake Austin Fishing Report: Topwater at Sunrise, Shade Through Midday Cover

Lake Austin Fishing Report: Topwater at Sunrise, Shade Through Midday

This is Artificial Lure with your Lake Austin fishing report. We’re sitting on a light south breeze this morning with air temps starting in the mid‑70s and climbing toward the low 90s by mid‑afternoon. Skies are mostly clear with some high clouds, humidity is up, and we’ve got that typical muggy Central Texas feel. Wind on the lake will run about 5–10 mph out of the south to southeast, just enough to put a little chop on the main lake and keep it from glassing off. Sunrise is right around 6:30 a.m. and sunset about 8:35 p.m., so the best windows will be first light through about 9 a.m. and then again from 7 p.m. to dark. Midday is already hot enough that the better fish are sliding deeper or tucking into shade. Lake Austin doesn’t have real ocean tides, but with the constant‑level chain and periodic releases through Tom Miller Dam, you’ll notice a “fake tide.” When water is moving, the bite picks up. If you hear generators humming or see noticeable current at bridge pilings or main‑lake points, that’s your go‑time. Slack water today will fish tougher; focus on precise casts into shade and cover. Recent reports from local Austin bass clubs and social posts from Lake Austin regulars say fish activity has been decent but not wide‑open: numbers of smaller largemouth with a few better 3–5 pounders mixed in, plus some white bass and the occasional catfish off dock edges and deeper channels. Most folks boating 8–15 bass in a morning are working grass edges, seawalls, and docks in 4–12 feet, then backing off to 15–25 feet as the sun gets high. Best lures right now: - For early low‑light: topwater walking baits in bone or shad, poppers along seawalls, and buzzbaits run tight to grass and docks. - Once the sun’s up: weightless or lightly weighted Texas‑rigged soft plastics in green pumpkin, watermelon red, and junebug, skipped under docks or pitched to grass lines and rock transitions. - For deeper fish: Carolina‑rigs and mid‑depth crankbaits in shad or natural craw colors along channel swings, bridge pilings, and offshore humps. - For numbers: small paddle‑tail swimbaits on a 1/8–1/4 oz jighead slow‑rolled along grass edges and over deeper points. Best bait for a more relaxed day: live nightcrawlers or cut shad on Carolina‑style rigs for catfish in 20–30 feet near the river channel bends, and live minnows around docks and lighted areas at night for mixed bag action. Couple of hot spots to consider: - The 360 bridge stretch: work both banks and the pilings; current funnels bait here and there’s good depth and structure. Early topwater around the shade line, then plastics and cranks once the sun hits. - Steiner Ranch / mid‑lake grass lines and docks: plenty of cover, good depth changes, and consistent reports of keeper‑size bass. Focus on outside grass edges and the first drop into 10–15 feet. If you’re out this afternoon, slow down and fish shade: pontoon boats, docks, overhanging trees, and the shadow side of any hard structure. Finesse plastics on lighter line will get more bites when the sun’s high and the lake traffic picks up. That’s your Lake Austin 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

20. Juni 20263 min
Episode Lake Austin Early Summer: Topwater at Sunrise, Deep Grass at Midday Cover

Lake Austin Early Summer: Topwater at Sunrise, Deep Grass at Midday

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake Austin fishing report. Lake Austin woke up to classic early-summer conditions: warm, muggy, and calm at first light, with a light south breeze building as the morning goes on. Local weather data shows temps starting in the low 70s, climbing into the upper 80s to near 90 by mid‑afternoon, with humidity staying high and only a slight chance of a pop‑up shower. Skies are mostly clear to partly cloudy, so expect plenty of sun on that clear water. Sunrise over the lake comes just after 6:30 a.m., with sunset a little after 8:30 p.m., giving you a long low‑light window in the morning and a solid evening bite. Those two windows will be your best shot at quality largemouth and schooling action. We don’t have true tides up here, but Lake Austin does get a “fake tide” from steady releases out of Mansfield Dam and downstream movement toward Tom Miller. When the water’s moving, the bite picks up along main‑lake points, bridge pilings, and the mouths of creeks. Watch for current seams around bends and inside grass lines. If the river authority is pulling water this afternoon, expect a stronger bite from mid‑afternoon into early evening. Recent reports from Central Texas bass forums and local guides say the lake is fishing fair to good. Numbers have been better than size, with most anglers putting 5–10 keeper largemouth in the boat on a half‑day trip, plus a few undersized spots and an occasional catfish or big sunfish mixed in. Several local guides are talking about solid 2–3 pound largemouth being common, with a few 5‑plus pound fish coming from deeper grass edges and dock shadows. Fish activity has been centered on three patterns: 1. Early‑morning topwater over shallow grass and along seawalls. 2. Mid‑day suspending bass around docks, cables, and bridge pilings. 3. Evening fish sliding up to feed on main‑lake points and at the mouths of coves. Best baits right now: - Topwater: *Walking baits* like a Zara Spook‑style plug in bone or shad, and *buzzbaits* in white or black, are getting crushed at first light along seawalls, riprap, and shallow grass. Work them right along the shade line. - Finesse plastics: A *wacky‑rigged stick bait* in green pumpkin, watermelon red, or a subtle shad color is hard to beat around docks, overhanging trees, and boat lifts. A *drop‑shot* with a 4–5 inch straight‑tail worm in natural colors is picking up suspended fish in 10–18 feet. - Bottom contact: *Texas‑rigged creature baits* and *3/8–1/2 oz jigs* in green pumpkin, black‑blue, or a bluegill pattern are producing better‑than‑average fish along deeper grass edges and rocky breaks. Drag them slowly; most bites are pressure bites. - Moving baits: When the water’s moving, *small swimbaits* on a ball head and *medium‑running crankbaits* in shad or bluegill patterns are solid for covering water along current breaks. For live bait, medium shiners or live perch fished on a slip float or Carolina rig around docks and drop‑offs will get bit by bass, cats, and the occasional striper or hybrid that wanders through. A couple of local hot spots to focus on: - **Pennybacker Bridge / 360 Bridge area**: The channel swings tight to the bluff walls and bridge pilings. Work topwater early around the pilings and nearby rock, then switch to drop‑shots, jigs, or swimbaits once the sun gets up. Current here really helps; if you see ripples pushing through the pilings, it’s go time. - **Mouths of Bull Creek and Bee Creek**: Both have good depth changes, scattered grass, and baitfish. Start on the outside points with a topwater or small swimbait at first light, then slide out to 10–18 feet with a Texas‑rig or jig once the sun hits the water. Also keep an eye on shaded seawalls and long docks on the west bank in the afternoon. Pitching wacky‑rigged stick baits and skipping jigs way back into the shade can turn up a quality fish even in the heat of the day. That’s your Lake Austin 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 Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

19. Juni 20264 min
Episode Lake Austin Early Summer Bite: Low Light Windows and Shade Are Key Cover

Lake Austin Early Summer Bite: Low Light Windows and Shade Are Key

This is Artificial Lure with your Lake Austin fishing report. We’ll start with the conditions. Overnight we had warm, muggy air with light south to southeast wind and a typical early-summer pattern settling in. Expect a humid morning in the low to mid 70s, climbing into the upper 80s to low 90s this afternoon, with a light breeze rippling the lake. Clouds may drift through, but no major fronts are pushing the fish around today. Sunrise is right around 6:30 a.m. and sunset close to 8:30 p.m. That gives us a long low-light window at both ends of the day. On a river-lake like Austin, there’s no real tide, but generation and boat traffic act like it. Early morning before the ski boats spool up, and again the last hour of light, are your prime feeding periods. Midday will fish tougher and push the bite tighter to shade and current seams. Bass activity has been classic early-summer. Local anglers around Steiner Ranch and near the 360 bridge have been reporting steady numbers of **largemouth** in the 1–3 pound range, with the occasional 4–6 pound fish coming off deeper structure. Schooling-sized fish have been busting small shad on the main-lake channel edges when the wind puts a little chop on the surface. Around marinas and docks, spotted and smaller largemouth are picking off bluegill and small baitfish. Catfishermen soaking baits on the lower end near the dam have been picking up **channel cats** and the odd **blue cat**, mostly eater-sized. Panfish action has been strong in the coves; kids and ultralight anglers are getting good numbers of **bluegill** and **sunfish** tight to docks and bulkheads. For lures, think “matching shad and bluegill.” Best producers: - **Topwater**: Walking baits and small poppers in bone or shad colors at first light along bluff walls, the 360 bridge pilings, and points near Emma Long. Work them fast when you see surface activity, slower over calm water. - **Swimbaits and flukes**: 3–4 inch soft swimbaits or flukes in white or pearl on light jigheads along grass edges, riprap, and the first drop off the bank. - **Texas rigs and shaky heads**: Green pumpkin and watermelon red worms in 6–7 inch lengths dragged along rock ledges and dock walkways are putting numbers in the boat when the sun gets up. - **Jigs**: Compact 3/8-ounce jigs in brown or green pumpkin with a matching trailer, skipped under shaded docks, are a good way to tempt a bigger bite. - For cats, **cut shad, chicken liver, or prepared stink bait** on simple Carolina rigs off the bottom in 15–25 feet is the ticket. - For panfish, a **small piece of worm or crappie nibble** under a bobber near any shaded dock or laydown will keep rods bending. A couple of local hot spots to focus on: - **Pennybacker (360) Bridge area**: Work the bridge pilings, nearby rock ledges, and the adjacent points at dawn with topwater and swimbaits, then switch to worms and jigs as the sun climbs. - **Emma Long / City Park stretch**: Long rocky banks and scattered docks; great for covering water with a moving bait at first light, then slowing down with plastics on the deeper edges. - **Upper-lake creek mouths**: Where the feeder creeks dump in, look for current seams and bait activity; good for both bass and cats, especially in low light. Overall, expect a solid early-summer bite if you hit those low-light windows, pay attention to shade, and keep your presentations natural and around bait. 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

18. Juni 20263 min