Cover image of show Lake Tenkiller Oklahoma Fishing Report Today

Lake Tenkiller Oklahoma Fishing Report Today

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About Lake Tenkiller Oklahoma Fishing Report Today

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/3zF8GXk This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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363 episodes

episode Lake Tenkiller Report: Bass on the Break, Crappie Going Deep artwork

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

Yesterday - 3 min
episode Lake Tenkiller Early Summer Bass: Dawn Topwater and Deep Structure Guide artwork

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

8 Jun 2026 - 3 min
episode Lake Tenkiller Early June Bite: Shallow Start, Deep Finish artwork

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

7 Jun 2026 - 2 min
episode Lake Tenkiller Early Summer: Points, Topwater, and Generation Schedule Bites artwork

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

6 Jun 2026 - 3 min
episode Lake Tenkiller Early Summer: Topwater at Dawn, Finesse by Noon artwork

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

5 Jun 2026 - 3 min
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