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Lake Austin rolled into early fall this Friday with classic Central Texas conditions—clear skies at dawn, a crisp 67 degrees on the shoreline, and highs poised to touch the mid-80s by afternoon. Sunrise hit right around 7:20 AM, and with the full moon phase just a couple days past, night-and-early-morning fish activity has been spirited, especially for bass ambushes along shaded banks. Sunset will roll in at 7:25 PM, and you’ll find that last hour of light still brings a solid bite as water temps hover in the upper 70s.

Water clarity remains good, just a mild stain after last week’s brief showers which helped cool things a notch—perfect baitfish conditions along the deeper hydrilla lines and docks. Wind is light this morning and predicted to gust only midday from the south-southeast, making all the creek mouths and main lake points accessible, whether from a bass boat, kayak, or right off the bank. Based on the lunar tables, major fish activity spikes are pegged for mid-morning (right now, in fact!) and again just before dusk. No tidal reports necessary for Lake Austin, but recent moon phases are helping push a healthy shad migration into the coves and up the creeks—prime time for predators.

Largemouth bass continue to be the main draw, with both numbers and some quality fish in play. Just this week, local guide reports highlighted several 3- to 5-pounders released along the Emma Long Park stretch and the mouth of Bull Creek. Deep diving crankbaits in sexy shad have been pulling bass from hydrilla edges, while early risers burning buzzbaits and white frogs over thick grass mats are getting viscous blowups during first light and twilight. Soft plastics—especially watermelon red Senkos and Texas-rigged creatures—have also landed fish near laydowns and docks mid-lake, with slow presentation taking more bites as the sun gets higher.

Don’t overlook the sun-kissed bank at City Park for solid panfish action—bluegill and redear are still biting on live worms fished just under a float. In the rocky stretches by Oyster’s Landing, a handful of channel catfish have shown up on cut shad and stinkbaits, especially after sundown. Hybrid stripers are occasionally busting schools of bait in the wider open sections near the 360 Bridge, with chrome lipless crankbaits and swimbaits accounting for most hook-ups.

The consensus from the Texas Parks & Wildlife recent creel surveys lines up with local buzz: there’s a good mix of keeper bass, chunky bluegill, and the odd bullhead cat coming in, with top-performing baits being medium-diving shad-pattern crankbaits, 1/4 ounce chartreuse spinnerbaits, and live nightcrawlers. Top artificial lures this week have been Strike King Red Eye Shads, green pumpkin Chatterbaits, and for that topwater fix, classic Zara Spooks.

If you’re looking for a couple of hot spots, start your day at Emma Long Park’s hydrilla beds for bass, or try the outflow by City Park for bluegill and cats—both have been steady all week. Midday, head up to the Bull Creek mouth, work docks with soft plastics or jigs, and keep an eye out for surface action indicating striper or white bass schools.

Thanks for tuning in to this Lake Austin report! Stay sharp, mind the weather and boat traffic, and don’t forget to subscribe for weekly updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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