Artificial Lure reporting in from beautiful Lake Fork, Texas on this brisk Wednesday morning, October 29th, 2025. We’re deep into the heart of fall, and let me tell you, conditions are lined up for another classic, action-packed Lake Fork day.
Sunrise hit Lake Fork at about 7:35 AM today, and sunset’s coming just before 6:35 PM—that’s your daylight window, but with that first quarter moon hanging high, best fishing bites are pegged for early and late. The major feeding windows this morning ran from 5:15 to 7:15 AM, then crank it up again from 5:30 to 7:30 PM. If you’re out midday, there’s a minor flurry around 12:50 to 2:50 PM, and another close to midnight, but right now, dusk and dawn are your golden hours. According to FishingReminder, these solunar tables are prime for targeting big bass during their feeding up before tonight’s minor cold front.
Weather-wise, conditions are classic fall East Texas: cool to start, warming into the mid-60s under partly cloudy skies. Winds are out of the northwest at 8 to 12 miles an hour, stirring up just enough ripple to get the baitfish nervous on those windblown points. No big rain expected till at least Thursday night, so water clarity’s holding at 2-3 feet in most arms, but gets a little murkier up north.
Let’s talk about the fish. Lake Fork is living up to her reputation as a trophy bass factory—Texas Parks and Wildlife just updated their records and trophy-sized largemouths are moving shallow, chasing shad and gorging ahead of the next cold snap. Mike McFarland reports decent numbers of 3-7 pounders landed around the timber edges and along deeper creek bends, especially midlake and up Little Caney. A few double-digit fish have come shallow this week right at sunrise on topwaters, with some reports of an 8-pounder caught yesterday near Mustang Creek.
Crappie are firing up too—brush piles in 15-20 feet of water loaded with slabs. The guides are boating limits on minnows and small hand-tied jigs, especially around SRA Point and the 515 bridges. White bass are busting bait along main lake points in the afternoons; small silver spoons and roadrunners are working great.
Best lure right now for big bass: topwater walking baits early (Lucky Craft Sammy or Zara Spook in chrome), switching to shallow-running squarebills and Chatterbaits as the sun climbs. Shad patterns are unbeatable. As the wind picks up, pitch black and blue jigs or green pumpkin soft plastics into the timber—slow roll those in 6 to 10 feet for your chance at a real Lake Fork giant. For crappie, can’t beat a pink or chartreuse jig, or classic live minnows on light tackle.
Two hot spots you shouldn’t miss:
- **Wolf Branch**: Big fish pushing shad into the shallows, great for working topwaters at dawn.
- **SRA Bridge (Highway 515)**: Deep brush and bridge pilings loaded with crappie and white bass, best action from late morning on.
Just a quick reminder—Lake Fork remains catch-and-release for trophy bass over 16 inches, so take a photo and let 'em grow. SRA and public ramps are open, but watch those stumps running up the creeks.
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