Lake of the Ozarks greeted anglers this Friday morning with classic mid-November chill—temps standing in the upper 40s at dawn, reaching to the mid-50s by midday, and a reliable south wind working in about 8–12 mph. The overnight rain gave way to patchy clouds, which should break up into late afternoon sunshine. Today’s sunrise hit at 6:47 a.m. and sunset’s lined up for 4:59 p.m. No tidal shifts to worry about on the Lake, but water level’s steady post-rain.
The lake’s holding in the low 60s for water temp, just right for fall fishing action. Fish are feeding up ahead of winter and the shad are thick in the main pockets, especially those secondary points about three-quarters back in the coves. Bass have been on the move and reports from local guides say the bite picks up quick once the sun punches up over the timber—midday to early afternoon has been prime time.
In the last 48 hours, folks have hauled respectable numbers of largemouth and spotted bass—a steady run of solid 2- to 4-pounders. Tournament chatter puts the best success around mid-lake, with some top bags weighed on 3/4-ounce Crock-O-Gator Football Jigs paired to a NetBait Paca Chunk Sr., and that old reliable buzzbait, especially in shad and bone white, running hot with the cloud cover and wind chop. Don’t put away the lipless rattlers—fall is notorious for surprise runs on the Aruku Shad Jr., and plenty of good-sized bass are falling for them in the shallows lately. Spinnerbaits in natural shad or flashy chartreuse have made their mark, especially just off wind-blown docks, and swimbaits in Tennessee Shad are a solid fallback.
For crappie chasers, the bite has perked up on standing timber and brush piles at 10–15 feet. Bobby Garland Baby Shad (Monkey Milk color is the ticket) plus live minnows are drawing bigger slabs than usual this year. Folks out at the Gravois and Niangua arms report good messes coming in, with most keeper fish hitting the box by mid-morning.
Catfish are still moving, but slowing down as temps drop; best action lately has been off major creek channels with cut shad and shrimp. Nighttime bank boys are still landing a few chunky blue cats on fresh bait and big hooks.
If you’re looking to shake things up, a paddle-tail worm or Johnson Silver Minnow, especially in gold or silver tipped with a twin-tail grub, will get you bites through submerged grass or off points—bass haven’t seen much of it lately and will strike out of curiosity.
Best baits for the day:
- Crock-O-Gator Football Jig with soft plastic trailer
- Buzzbait (white, chartreuse, bone)
- Lipless crank (Aruku Shad Jr.)
- Spinnerbait (shad color)
- Monkey Milk Baby Shad for crappie
- Live minnows for slabs
- Cut shad or shrimp for cats
Top hot spots right now:
- **Gravois Arm:** Docks and creek channel edges for crappie and bass.
- **Niangua Arm:** Secondary points and brush piles for slabs and schoolie bass.
- **Between the toll bridge and PB2:** Look for bass on wind-blown pockets and docks—midday is best.
Remember to check creel limits and area regs, get your permit, and be mindful of fellow anglers—etiquette keeps the Lake a gem for everyone. Weather is brisk but no fronts moving in, so it’s a good day to bundle up and chase the bite.
Appreciate everyone tuning in to today’s Lake of the Ozarks fishing report—don’t forget to subscribe for regular updates, tips, and local news to keep your tackle box dialed.
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