This is Artificial Lure with your Lake Fork fishing report for October 1, 2025. Sunrise hit at 7:18 a.m., and sunset will be about 7:08 p.m. We're kicking into early fall rhythm, but these warm days aren’t letting go just yet. Surface temps are hovering in the low 80s to touching mid-80s, with mostly clear to partly cloudy skies and that classic Texas humidity sticking around. Winds have been light out of the south at 5–10 mph, keeping the water calm for those morning and evening bites.
Lake Fork doesn’t have tides like the coast, but barometric pressure and moon phases are important—today’s waxing crescent will keep fish active during low-light periods. According to the Texas Parks and Wildlife’s Prairies & Lakes Region fishing report from today, largemouth bass are moving off their deepest summer patterns, following shad as they migrate to creeks and shallower flats. That means it’s time to focus on main-lake points, creek mouths, and edges of timber.
The bite is picking up, especially in the early hours and again before dusk. Largemouth in the 3–8 pound range are being caught with decent frequency. Shad-colored crankbaits, white and chartreuse spinnerbaits, and Texas rigged creature baits in green pumpkin and watermelon red have all drawn strikes. If you get a cloudy morning, try a shad-colored topwater like a Zara Spook or walking bait. Once the sun’s up, shift to deep-diving crankbaits off timber lines or a Carolina rig over points and ledges in 10–20 feet.
Crappie fishing is solid right now, especially around submerged timber, bridge pilings, and brush piles in 12–20 feet, with minnows and small hand-tied jigs working best. Some slabs over 2 pounds have hit the decks in the past few days. White bass are schooling up on main lake points and humps, and spoons or small slabs dropped below feeding birds mean fast action most mornings.
Catfish fans will find excellent numbers—channel cats biting on cut shad, punch bait, or fresh bluegill in 12–20 feet around creek mouths. For bigger blues, move deeper along channels with fresh cut bait.
For hot spots this week, don’t miss:
- **The mouth of Little Caney Creek**: Shad have stacked up here. Early risers are bagging quality largemouth on spinnerbaits and flukes.
- **SRA Point and adjacent timber edges**: Crappie and catfish catches have been steady, and largemouth are feeding at dawn and right before dusk along drop-offs.
Fly anglers—if you’re tossing streamers or poppers, do it early or just before dark along weed edges or over submerged grass. Big bass are chasing threadfin shad hard, and you might tempt a trophy if you’re persistent.
Remember, Lake Fork’s a trophy fishery. If you land a double-digit bass, handle her gently, snap a quick pic, and get her back for the next angler. The slot limit is still in effect—consult TPWD regs if you’re not sure.
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