Red River Shreveport: Summer Bite Heating Up - Early and Late Windows Best
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Red River fishing report for the Shreveport stretch.
We don’t have true tides up here, but river level and current are the big movers. The Red’s been running near normal pool with a steady pull in the main channel and a softer slide along inside bends and backwater cuts. Focus on current seams, eddies below sandbars, and the mouths of little drains and bayous.
Weather today around Shreveport is warm and muggy, light south breeze, climbing into the upper 80s to low 90s by afternoon, with a mix of sun and clouds and a decent shot at pop‑up storms late. Sunrise is right around 6:00 a.m., sunset near 8:20 p.m., so your best windows will be that first hour or two after daylight and the last hour before dark when the river cools a touch and the bait pushes shallow.
Fish activity has been classic early‑summer pattern. Black bass have been holding on laydowns, riprap, and barge tie‑ups, plus any brush on the first break off the bank. Recent local reports and dock talk say numbers have been good, with plenty of 1–3 pounders and the occasional 4–5 mixed in. White bass and schooling spots are roaming shad balls on the main river, especially where the current hits a point or wing wall. Catfish catches have been steady: channels and blues on cut shad and stink bait, with a few flatheads coming off live bream around heavy cover.
For lures, think shad and bream imitators. Early and late, a **bone or shad‑pattern walking topwater**, **buzzbait**, or **black/blue frog** around grass and wood will draw some violent strikes. Once the sun’s up, switch to a **chartreuse/white spinnerbait**, a **medium‑diving crankbait in sexy shad or red craw**, and a **Texas‑rigged green pumpkin creature bait** pitched to timber and brush. On slower bites, a **wacky‑rigged finesse worm** in watermelon red has been putting fish in the boat.
Best bait for cats is **fresh cut shad**, skipjack if you can get it, or **punch bait** on a slip sinker rig in 15–25 feet along ledges, outside bends, and the downstream side of big barge pilings. For numbers of smaller cats, nightcrawlers or chicken liver will still keep the rod tips bouncing.
Couple of local hot spots to keep in mind:
- The stretch around the **I‑20 and I‑220 bridges**: riprap, pilings, and barge ties hold bass and cats, with schooling whites pushing bait in the evening.
- The **cuts and backwater pockets just upstream and downstream of downtown Shreveport**: good for flipping wood, throwing topwater early, and drifting bait for cats along the drop.
If the river stains up after a storm, upsize your profile, go darker colors, and get that bait bumping bottom or banging cover. When it’s clearer, back down to more natural colors and lighter line.
That’ll do it for today from the Red. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report.
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