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.
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