Lake Okeechobee Late Spring Bass Bite: Frogs and Live Shiners at Dawn
This is Artificial Lure with your Lake Okeechobee fishing report.
We’ve got a warm, muggy morning on the Big O. Around Clewiston and Okeechobee City, overnight temps sat in the low 70s and we’re climbing into the mid to upper 80s by this afternoon with plenty of humidity. Light southeast breeze early, picking up 8–12 knots by midday. Scattered storms will bubble up after lunch, especially on the west and north shores, so keep an eye on that sky.
Sunrise hit just after 6:30 a.m., with sunset around 8:05 p.m. That gives you a nice long window, but the prime bites are lining up with low-light and the brief mid‑morning wind shifts. Barometer is modestly steady, just enough to keep the fish honest without shutting them down.
Tides don’t move much on the lake itself, but the connected canals—Caloosahatchee toward Fort Myers and the St. Lucie toward Stuart—are seeing typical spring flows. When the locks are discharging, that current around structure and bends has been firing up both bass and crappie; the best action is on the edges of that moving water, not in the main push.
Bass activity has been solid. Local marinas and guide chatter from Clewiston and Belle Glade report plenty of 1–3 pound largemouth with a few 5–7 pound fish mixed in this week. Numbers days of 20–30 fish have been common for boats working grass lines patiently. The spawn is wrapped up, so fish are sliding out to the first breaks and outside edges of vegetation.
Best patterns: early, work topwater and moving baits along outside hydrilla and buggy‑whip reeds. A black or black‑blue hollow frog, white popping frog, and a bone‑colored walking bait have been getting explosive strikes for the first hour of light. Once the sun’s up, flipping and pitching becomes king: black‑and‑blue creature baits, junebug or tilapia‑colored beavers, and green‑pumpkin speed worms pegged with 3/8 to 1/2 ounce tungsten. Slow-roll a white or shad‑pattern chatterbait on the wind‑blown edges when the breeze kicks up.
Live shiners are still putting the biggest fish in the boat. Freeline them along reed clumps, outside peppergrass, or just off the eelgrass edges in 3–5 feet. Use a light wire circle hook and let the bait swim naturally; most of the better fish have come from spots where you can barely see the tips of the grass.
Crappie (specks) have pulled a bit deeper but are still catchable. Anglers drifting the open pockets and canal mouths with live minnows and small tube jigs, especially in white, chartreuse, and pink, have been bringing in modest limits—nothing crazy, but enough for a fry. Bluegill and shellcracker are staging on scattered beds; red worms, crickets, and small Beetle Spins around the rim ditch and back in the cuts are doing the trick.
Couple of hot spots to keep on your list:
First, the East Wall out of Clewiston: outside grass edges and any irregularities in the hydrilla line are holding good post‑spawn bass. Work from the corner up toward Ritta with a frog at dawn, then flip the thicker stuff once the sun is on it.
Second, the Harney Pond Canal area and the west‑side flats: that maze of reeds and peppergrass has been producing steady numbers with some quality fish. Focus on where the canal water feeds onto the flats—current seams, little points, and any isolated clumps of pads or reeds are prime.
Overall, expect a classic late‑spring Big O bite: better quality on slower presentations, numbers on moving baits when the wind chops the surface. Get out early, hydrate often, and be ready to duck those afternoon boomers.
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