Good morning from Lake Fork, Texas—Artificial Lure here with your latest fishing report for Saturday, October 11, 2025. We’re kicking off the fall bite right after a light front pushed through yesterday, bringing cooler temps and a brisk northwesterly breeze that’s put fish on the feed early and late in the day.
Sunrise comes in at 7:18 a.m. and sunset at 6:55 p.m., so you’ve got solid daylight to get after it. We’re sitting under a waning gibbous moon, and the major feeding windows today hit from 2:38 to 4:38 a.m. and again from 3:07 to 5:07 p.m., with minor activity peaking late morning and just after dark. The water’s cooling, clarity’s decent, and fall patterns are fully engaged.
Largemouth bass have fired up around the creek channel swings and main lake points. According to this week’s Lake Fork, Texas Daily Fishing Report, suspending jerkbaits in pearl or shad patterns and downsized swim jigs around timber in 4 to 8 feet are scoring well right now. After the front’s chill, slow presentations pay off: finesse jigs or a shaky head worm, especially around shaded docks and brush. Word is, a few 7–8 pounders were caught this week, mostly early with topwaters, switching to chatterbaits and Texas rigs as the sun climbs.
Crappie action is strong—fish are schooling up tight on bridge pylons and brush piles in that 12 to 18 foot zone. Tie on a 1/16-oz shad-pattern jig or drop a live minnow and you’ll fill a bucket. If you’re targeting panfish, stay mobile and hit several piles for the best odds.
Catfish—both blue and channel—are steady on ledges and main-lake flats where the wind has pushed bait. Cut shad or punch bait fished on the bottom is your best bet. No trophy flatheads lately, but plenty of eaters up to 5 pounds are coming to hand.
White bass have schooled up on the midlake flats, especially in the afternoons. When you spot birds working bait, throw a small spoon or jigging slab and you’ll get bit fast.
Best bait overall: match local shad. If you see two-inch shad flipping at the surface, stick with smaller crankbaits and swimbaits for more hookups. Top local producers include Keitech Swing Impact swimbaits and the classic Cotton Cordell lipless crank in chrome/blue.
For hot spots, don’t miss the bridge at Caney Creek—it’s loaded with crappie and has produced steady bass catches all week. The mouth of Little Caney, where the channel swings in, is also holding good numbers of green bass and the occasional kicker. In the afternoons, the flats near the SRA point have been blowing up with schooling white bass, so keep a spoon handy.
Weather’s cooperating with high clouds and highs barely reaching 77°, light wind from northwest at 8–12 mph. Tidal swings aren’t significant here, but that cooling trend and shad migration have really flipped the bite on.
That’s the scoop from Lake Fork—tight lines to everyone getting out. Thanks for tuning in, don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report, and always check your regulations before you launch.
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