Lake Fork Fishing Report 5/19/2025: Bass Bite, Crappie Transition, and Catfish Shallow Podcast Por  arte de portada

Lake Fork Fishing Report 5/19/2025: Bass Bite, Crappie Transition, and Catfish Shallow

Lake Fork Fishing Report 5/19/2025: Bass Bite, Crappie Transition, and Catfish Shallow

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Good morning from Lake Fork, this is Artificial Lure with your latest fishing report for Monday, May 19, 2025.

The weather today is shaping up classic for May in East Texas: expect mild morning temps that rise fast, with a bit of humidity hanging over the water. Sunrise is just after 6:15 AM and sunset will come around 8:15 PM, so there’s a good long window for chasing that trophy bass bite. The lake’s sitting about 0.4 feet above pool, and the water temperature’s been running 69 to 78 degrees, trending toward the warmer end in the afternoons as this last week’s heat kicks in[1][2][4].

Fish activity is solid across the board. Bass are fair to good right now, especially early, when they’re pushing shad up shallow on main and secondary points. The topwater bite really fires up at first light in the pondweed and shallow grass, especially if there’s a breeze—bring your favorite frog pattern or buzzbait for that. After the sun gets up, switch to squarebill crankbaits or wacky rigs in three to six feet, then start probing secondary points in 5 to 16 feet with Carolina rigs, deep-diving cranks like the XD 5-6, or big worms. The shad spawn isn’t quite finished in some areas, so keep an eye out for birds, especially Blue Herons, to clue you in on bait activity[3][4][5].

Crappie fishing is transitioning into the summer pattern. Numbers of small black crappie are thick on brush piles, laydowns, docks, and bridges, but the bigger black crappie are harder to come by. Still, you can catch them by sifting through the smaller fish, and the large white crappie are stacking up on deeper summer pattern trees. Fish anywhere from 10 to 30 feet, using minnows or colored jigs. Sometimes the crappie are hugging just below the surface or right on the bottom, so watch your electronics closely[4].

Catfish are prowling the shallows—channel cats in two to four feet are taking cut bait and punch bait, and big bream have moved in shallow, eager for worms, small jigs, or even wooly bugger flies if you’re fishing ultra-light[4].

As for hot spots, check out the points and submerged timber near SRA Point and the area around the east arm near Little Caney. Both spots have been producing quality bass and crappie as fish transition from shallow to deeper post-spawn locations[3][5].

Best baits today: topwater frogs at sunrise, squarebills and wacky rigs early, then Carolina rigs, crankbaits, and drop shots out deeper by midday. For crappie, anything with a minnow or small bright jig head is working well, and for channel cats, stick with punch bait or cut shad.

That’s it from Lake Fork today. Tight lines and good luck out there!
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