Kansikuva näyttelystä Red River Shreveport Fishing Report Today

Red River Shreveport Fishing Report Today

Podcast by Inception Point AI

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Stay updated with "Red River, Shreveport Fishing Report Today," your go-to podcast for the latest fishing conditions, tips, and local insights. Tune in daily to get expert advice, weather updates, and catch reports straight from Shreveport's Red River, ensuring you have the best fishing experience possible. Perfect for anglers of all levels! 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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jakson Red River Summer Bite: Bass at Dawn, Cats All Day Near Shreveport kansikuva

Red River Summer Bite: Bass at Dawn, Cats All Day Near Shreveport

This is Artificial Lure with your Red River fishing report around Shreveport. We’ve got a classic North Louisiana summer setup on the river. A warm, muggy morning, light south wind, and building heat by midday. Expect temps climbing from the 70s into the low 90s with high humidity, mostly clear to partly cloudy skies, and only a slight chance of a pop‑up afternoon thunderstorm. Sunrise comes early, just after six, with sunset a little after eight, so you’ve got a long window, but the best bite is in that first three‑hour stretch after daylight and again the last two before dark. The Red isn’t tidal here, so no saltwater-type tide swings to worry about, but the Corps has been keeping flow moderate and fairly steady. Water is running a bit stained to muddy, normal for this time of year, with better visibility in the back cuts and oxbows. Level changes from power generation and rain upstream can nudge the bite; if you see the river falling slightly, key on the outside bends and deeper laydowns. Bass action has been decent the last few days. Local reports talk about solid numbers of spotted and largemouth bass, mostly in the 1–3 pound range, with a few 4s and the occasional kicker. Best pattern has been current breaks: riprap along the I‑220 bridge, barge tie‑ups, and laydowns on the first third of major cuts. Topwater has been strong at first light – walking baits and poppers in shad patterns – then switching to Texas‑rigged creature baits and green pumpkin worms once the sun gets up. Crankbaits in chartreuse/blue back or red craw, bounced off rock in 4–8 feet, are still producing. Catfish have been steady. Folks soaking cut shad, chicken livers, and punch bait on the edge of the channel are reporting good numbers of blues and channels, with some fish in the 5–10 pound class. Look for that seam where the heavy current meets the slower eddies behind wing dikes and at the mouth of creeks. A simple slip‑sinker rig with a 3/0–5/0 circle hook is all you need. Crappie are a bit scattered, but you can still pick up some slabs in the oxbows and barge slips. Minnows and small jigs in monkey milk, black/chartreuse, and natural shad colors are doing the work around deeper brush piles and bridge pilings in 10–15 feet. The bite is softer now with the heat, so watch your line more than you feel for a thump. For bream, bring the kids to the calmer backwater pockets and marinas. Red wigglers, crickets, or small pieces of worm under a cork will keep rods bent on bluegill and redear along grass lines and around dock posts. A couple of local hot spots to try: - The stretch around the I‑220 bridge and adjacent riprap and barge tie‑ups – good for bass, cats, and the occasional drum. - The backwater pockets and oxbows just off the main channel north of downtown Shreveport – better water clarity, solid bass and crappie, plus plenty of bream. Best overall lures right now: topwater walkers and poppers at dawn, medium‑diving crankbaits in shad and craw patterns, 3/8 to 1/2‑ounce jigs in black/blue or green pumpkin, and Texas‑rigged plastics. For bait: fresh cut shad and livers for catfish, live minnows for crappie, and worms or crickets for panfish. That’s your Red River 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

22. kesä 2026 - 3 min
jakson Red River Summer Bass and Catfish: Beat the Heat with Early and Late Light Bites kansikuva

Red River Summer Bass and Catfish: Beat the Heat with Early and Late Light Bites

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Red River fishing report around Shreveport. We’re working with classic North Louisiana summer river conditions: warm, muggy, and mostly stable. Expect morning air temps in the low 70s climbing into the upper 80s to low 90s by afternoon, light south wind around 5–10 mph, and humidity you can just about cut with a knife. Skies will lean partly cloudy, with a chance of a pop‑up shower late day if the heat really builds. Sunrise is right around 6:00 a.m., with sunset close to 8:30 p.m. That gives you a long window, but the best bite is still that first two‑to‑three‑hour stretch after first light and the last hour before dark, when the river cools a touch and the boat traffic settles down. Red River doesn’t have true coastal tides up here, but it does have current swings with the lock and dam releases and any recent rain upstream. Watch the gauge near Shreveport and Bossier; when the river’s just off normal pool with a gentle fall, that’s prime. Slightly stained water with 1–2 feet of visibility is about perfect. If the Corps is pulling water and the current picks up, focus on eddies behind points, barge pilings, and laydowns. Recent talk at the ramps and bait shops has been steady: - Largemouth bass have been fair to good on the main‑river ledges and the mouths of oxbows. Folks are reporting mixed bags, 5–10 keepers a trip, with the occasional 4–5‑pound kicker. - White bass and hybrids are schooling here and there on shad; when they push bait to the surface, fast limits are possible. - Catfish action has been solid, especially on the edge of the channel and around bends, with blues and channels in the 2–10‑pound range. - Crappie are a little scattered but still coming off brush piles and deeper barge tie‑ups, more of a “grind” bite than a slam‑fest. For bass, think “shad and craw.” Early and late, work topwater around riprap and current seams: walking baits, buzzbaits, and popping plugs in bone, chrome, or shad patterns. Once the sun gets up, switch to: - Medium‑diving crankbaits in red craw or chartreuse/blue along rock and hard cover. - Texas‑rigged creature baits and worms in green pumpkin or black/blue, pitched to laydowns, barge pilings, and willow clumps. - A 3/8‑ to 1/2‑ounce jig in black/blue or green pumpkin around any wood on the ledges. For catfish, you can’t beat cut shad, skipjack, or chicken livers on a simple Carolina rig, set on the upstream side of channel bends or below barge tie‑ups. Let the scent ride the current. Nighttime or low‑light will pick up the bite. Crappie guys should stick with live minnows or small tube jigs in chartreuse, white, or monkey milk, fished vertically over brush in 12–18 feet or around deeper barge structures. Electronics help, but if you don’t have ’em, just work every piece of obvious cover thoroughly. “Hot spot” wise, two areas are worth your time: - The main‑river stretches and oxbow mouths near downtown Shreveport and under the big bridges. Those riprap banks and pilings hold bass, white bass, and the occasional striped hybrid when shad stack up. - The bends and outside edges down toward the Red River South area. The combination of barge tie‑ups, drop‑offs, and scattered wood there has been giving up solid catfish and some good bass on cranks and jigs. Keep an eye on floating debris, especially after any rain. Life jacket on, kill switch clipped, and be courteous at the ramps; it’s busy out there. 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

21. kesä 2026 - 3 min
jakson Red River Summer Bass: Chase the Shade and Current Breaks Near Shreveport kansikuva

Red River Summer Bass: Chase the Shade and Current Breaks Near Shreveport

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Red River fishing report around Shreveport. We’ll start with the conditions. Red River’s running its usual light current through town, levels near normal pool for summer with decent clarity in the main channel and a little stain in the backwaters. With no tides to worry about here, your “tide” is really the daily flow pulses from upstream releases and any local rain. Mornings have been the sweet spot, with a light south breeze early and a stronger wind kicking up by midday. Afternoon heat has been pushing the heat index up, so plan to be on the water at first light or the last couple of hours before dark. Sunrise is right around 6 a.m., with sunset close to 8:30 p.m., so you’ve got a solid low‑light window both ends of the day. That early shade along the riprap and barge walls has been key. Once the sun gets high, the bite slows and fish tuck tight to wood and ledges. Bass activity has been fair to good in the mornings. Anglers up and down the pool this past week have reported steady numbers of 1–3 pound largemouth with the occasional kicker. Most of the fish are coming off main‑river current breaks: the ends of wing dams, laydowns on outside bends, and the mouths of little cuts and drains. A few spotted bass are mixed in on the steeper rock. Crappie are still giving up some limits for folks who know their brush piles. Most keepers are coming 10–14 feet down on deeper timber off the main channel and near the edges of old oxbows. Catfish action has been solid on the flats and below any kind of flow restriction—good eater‑size blues and channels, with a few bigger blues reported in deeper holes. Best lures for bass right now: - In the low light, a **black buzzbait** or **walking topwater** along riprap, barge ties, and grass edges. - Once the sun’s up, **Texas‑rigged creature baits** in green pumpkin or black/blue flipped to wood, and **3/8–1/2 oz jigs** on hard cover and rock transitions. - On the points and ledges, a **medium‑diving crankbait** in shad or chartreuse/blue back is picking off better fish. For crappie, small **hair jigs** and **soft plastics on 1/16–1/8 oz heads** in natural shad or chartreuse, dropped right into brush, are producing. Minnows will still out‑fish plastics on tougher days. Catfish bait is classic Red River: **cut shad**, **cut skipjack**, and **stink bait** on slip rigs. Anchor upstream of a hole or seam, toss baits back into the current edge, and give each spot 20–30 minutes. Couple of local hot spots to keep in mind: - The main‑river bends and barge tie‑ups near downtown Shreveport and under/around the major bridges—good current breaks, riprap, and plenty of baitfish. - Any of the backwater cuts and oxbows just off the main channel south of town—look for deeper outside bends with laydowns for bass and mid‑depth brush for crappie. If you’re out there today, think early, think shade, and think current breaks. Keep moving till you bump into active fish, then slow down and pick that area apart. 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

20. kesä 2026 - 3 min
jakson Red River Summer Bite: Early Morning Bass and Steady Catfish Around Shreveport kansikuva

Red River Summer Bite: Early Morning Bass and Steady Catfish Around Shreveport

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Red River fishing report around Shreveport. River’s running a little stained to muddy with the usual Red River chocolate milk tint, but levels are manageable and most ramps are open. Current’s moderate along the main channel with softer seams off the ends of the jetties and around the oxbows and backwater cuts. No real tide to speak of this far upriver, so current changes from dam releases and wind shifts are what matter. Weather-wise, we’re in a warm, muggy pattern: light wind early, building to a steady breeze by midday, hot by afternoon with a chance of pop-up thunderstorms. Expect a classic North Louisiana summer feel: humid, hazy, and better fishing early and late. Sunrise is right around 6 a.m., sunset about 8:25 p.m., so you’ve got a long low-light window to work with, but the prime bite has been that first two hours after sunup and the last hour before dark. Fish activity’s been solid for folks willing to move. Bass have been chewing around shallow wood, riprap, and grass edges when the current’s pushing. Best reports are 1–3 pound largemouth with the occasional 4–5 mixed in. Anglers have been putting 10–15 keepers in the boat on a good morning, fewer mid‑day when the sun gets high. White bass and stripers are schooling sporadically on shad in open stretches and near the mouth of cuts; watch for surface busts. Catfish action is steady along the ledges and outside bends, with both channels and blues being boxed. On bass, the go‑to lures right now are classic river baits. Early, throw a **squarebill crankbait** in shad or craw color banging off rock and laydowns, or a **white or white/chartreuse spinnerbait** slow‑rolling along current breaks. Once the sun climbs, a **Texas‑rigged creature bait** or **green pumpkin stick worm** pitched tight to wood and barge pilings is putting fish in the boat. A black/blue **jig** with a chunk trailer is hard to beat around the heavier stuff. If the water’s a little clearer in the backwaters, a **white or bone topwater walking bait** has been drawing some explosive strikes at daybreak. For catfish, best bet is **cut shad, chicken liver, or punch bait** on a simple Carolina rig, set just off the bottom on the downstream side of channel bends, drop‑offs, and around the tail ends of sandbars. Night bite’s been good, but you can still load a cooler if you park on them during the day. Folks soaking **live shiners or small bluegill** around deeper timber are picking up a few bonus flatheads. Couple of local hot spots if you’re launching around Shreveport: – The stretches around the **I‑20 and I‑220 bridges** have been productive, especially the riprap and barge fields; work those eddies and seams. – The **backwater pockets and oxbows off Pool 5**, especially where there’s a mix of wood and scattered grass, have been giving up solid numbers of keeper bass and some schooling whites when the shad push in. If you’re bank fishing, try the public access areas with riprap and current breaks; toss a bottom rig for cats and a small crankbait or spinner for bass and whites. Keep an eye on afternoon storms and be ready to bug out if lightning shows up. That’s the Red River 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

19. kesä 2026 - 3 min
jakson Red River Summer Bite: Early Morning Topwater and Catfish on the Current Breaks kansikuva

Red River Summer Bite: Early Morning Topwater and Catfish on the Current Breaks

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Red River, Shreveport fishing report. We’ll start with the conditions. Red River’s running a little stained to muddy as usual, with normal summer flow and decent visibility along the edges and in the oxbows. Air temps are climbing fast after sunrise, pushing into the upper 80s and low 90s by afternoon, with light south to southeast wind most of the day and a heat‑index that’ll wear you out if you don’t hydrate. Humidity’s high, so expect that heavy river‑bottom feel by mid‑morning. Skies are mostly clear to partly cloudy with a small chance of a pop‑up thunderstorm late in the day. Sunrise is right around 6:00 a.m. local, with sunset close to 8:30 p.m., giving you a long low‑light window at both ends. There’s no lunar or coastal tide influence this far upriver, but you’ll see a “pseudo‑tide” from lock releases and barge traffic. When the river’s pulling a little harder, the bite typically picks up on current seams, especially on outside bends and below any rock or wood that breaks that flow. Fish activity is classic early‑summer pattern. The best bite is early and late, with a definite lull mid‑day unless you’re punching heavy cover or fishing deep ledges. Local chatter at the ramps and bait shops has largemouth bass, white bass, cats, and bream all cooperating if you time it right. For largemouth bass, folks have been doing well on riprap banks, barge tie‑offs, and brushy points. Spinnerbaits with double willow blades in white or chartreuse/white, squarebill crankbaits in shad or sexy shad, and Texas‑rigged creature baits in green pumpkin or black/blue are getting bit. Topwater has been strong at first light: buzzbaits, walking baits, and frogs over grass in the backwater pockets. The more stained the water, the more that black or dark profile helps. White bass have been schooling sporadically on the main river and in the mouths of the cuts, chasing shad on the surface. Small chrome or pearl lipless cranks, inline spinners, and little swimbaits on 1/8‑ounce heads are solid choices. Keep a rod rigged and ready; when they blow up, you’ve got a short window. Catfish action has been steady. Channel and blue cats are coming off cut shad, chicken liver, and stinkbait fished on the bottom along ledges and around the base of the wing dikes. A few bigger blues reported off the outside bends using whole or chunked shad. Night bite is strong if you can stand the mosquitoes. Bream are stacked along brush, laydowns, and any little eddies off the main current. Red worms, crickets, and small pieces of nightcrawler under a float are putting plenty in the bucket, especially for kids and casual anglers. Best baits and lures right now: - For bass: white or chartreuse/white spinnerbaits, squarebills, black/blue jigs, green‑pumpkin plastics, black buzzbaits, and hollow‑body frogs. - For cats: fresh cut shad, liver, stinkbait on simple Carolina or slip‑sink rigs. - For bream: live worms and crickets on small hooks. A couple of local hot spots to focus on: - The stretch around the Texas Street and I‑20 bridges, working riprap, pilings, and current breaks for bass and the occasional big cat. - The backwater oxbows and pocket lakes just off the main channel north of downtown, where you’ll find cleaner water, grass, and a strong early‑morning topwater bite. As always on the Red, watch for barge traffic, mind the channel markers, and keep an eye on the weather; those afternoon storms can pop up fast. 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. kesä 2026 - 3 min
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