Lake Fork Texas, November 6, 2025—this is Artificial Lure with your boots-on-the-dock morning fishing report. Stick around for the details, real conditions, and the local scoop on where to catch ‘em hot.
Sunrise hit at 6:44 AM today, with sunset coming at 5:28 PM. The moon’s waxing toward the First Quarter, giving us some good after-dusk visibility and amped-up fish movement. Major bite times are 5:15 to 7:15 AM and again 5:32 to 7:32 PM, with minors rolling in from 12:53 to 2:53 PM and 10:12 to 12:12 AM—so early mornings and evenings are prime window opportunities. According to FishingReminder, night fishing is promising this week thanks to clearer moonlit skies.
Weather’s pretty friendly for November: currently crisp and cool, hovering in the low-to-mid 50s at dawn, high should stretch up near 68°F by mid-afternoon. Winds are generally northwest at 5–9 mph, keeping the water stir just enough for some action but not too much chop. Forecasts call for sunny skies and steady barometric pressure—the kind of day where the big bass cruise up shallower by mid-morning, then ease out to the creek channels and main lake drop-offs in the afternoon.
Tidal info isn’t a factor at Lake Fork, but stable conditions and warming temps have the largemouths on the move. With the fall turnover winding down and water temperatures dropping to the low 60s, expect those fish to key on baitfish and shad balls near the edges of submerged timber, creek mouths, and deeper points.
Recent catches show Lake Fork living up to its legendary rep. Over the past few days, folks have put several healthy double-digit largemouths in the boat, most notably on the lower end and secondary points around the mouth of Little Caney and Chaney Branch. Schoolie bass are chasing shad like mad just off main lake drop-offs and around bridges, too—especially in the evenings.
Crappie have turned on over deep brush piles at 25–30 feet, mainly in mid-lake areas. Bait shops local report stringers of 25–30 slabs taken yesterday, most on hand-tied jigs and small swimbaits.
Catfish: the blues and channels are biting steady just off wind-blown rocky banks and creek bends. Chicken liver, stink bait, and fresh shad chunks have all put fish in the cooler the last 48 hours.
For bass, best lures today:
- **Shad-pattern swimbaits** and **squarebill crankbaits** over points and flats at first light.
- **Chrome or blue Rat-L-Traps** over grass edges late morning.
- **Football jigs** and **Texas-rigged big worms** (think 10-inch straight-tail) fished deep timber and creek channels as the sun gets up.
- If the surface calms down, switch to finesse—**Senko-style stickbaits** and **wacky rigs** in green pumpkin and junebug.
Crappie hot bait:
- **White/Chartreuse hand-tied jigs**
- **Live minnows** fished on drop-shots or slip bobbers above brush
Catfish best bet:
- **Fresh cut shad**
- **Punch baits** on slip sinker rigs
Hot spots worth trying:
- **Little Caney Creek timber line**: Big bass early, crappie stacked up mid-morning.
- **Chaney Branch points**: Schooling bass on moving baits at sunrise, deep bites on plastics by lunch.
- **Highway 515 bridge pilings**: Consistent crappie and some bonus bass.
- **Wolf Creek flat**: Best for both cats and bass when the wind picks up.
Water clarity is medium stain, so favor baits with a little flash or vibration to get noticed. If you see birds working off a point or in the backs of coves, that’s a sure sign shad are up and bass are right under ‘em.
That’s your Lake Fork update for November 6, 2025. Hope you found this report useful—thanks for tuning in! Don’t forget to subscribe for future tips and local action. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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