Artificial Lure here with your Lake Okeechobee fishing report for Saturday, November 1st, 2025. It’s a classic fall morning: calm after that strong front rolled through earlier in the week, with skies clearing up and a light chill on the air—just enough to bring on that bass bite. Sunrise crept in at 7:36 AM, and you’ll see the sun dip down tonight at 6:38 PM. Temps are kicking off in the mid-60s and climbing toward 80, with a northeast breeze picking up by midday. Expect mostly sunny skies, gentle winds, and glassy runs early—ideal for working your favorite water.
Lake Okeechobee’s water is cooling off, and with the full moon just a couple nights ago, tides and solunar tables are lighting up major feeding windows in the early morning and again late afternoon. According to FishingReminder, your best action will run from sunrise through about 10 AM, then pick up again between 3 PM and sunset. If you’re planning weedline or structure fishing, time those casts for when bait is most active.
Bass reports have been red-hot—Captain Nate Shellen and other guides say solid numbers of largemouth are still feeding heavy before winter patterns set in. Fish are schooling up on outside grass lines and points, with catches this week topping 40–50 bass during the morning bite, and plenty in the three- to five-pound range. A few folks have even stuck double-digit fish near Tin House Cove, Buckhead Ridge, and the north shore reeds. If you want numbers and maybe your personal best, find those offshore hydrilla beds and you won’t go wrong.
For techniques, it’s classic Okeechobee: topwater frogs and buzzbaits just after dawn in the shallow grass, then switching to black-and-blue or junebug Senkos, ChatterBaits, and swim jigs once the sun gets up. Live wild shiners are still flat-out unbeatable right now for both numbers and big girls—get a dozen in the livewell if you want to fool a lunker. For the artificial crowd, white or shad-pattern swimbaits near the peppergrass have also been producing solid strikes. If you’re chasing crappie, shoot docks and thicker grass clumps with live minnows or chartreuse jigs; the cooler temps have started stacking papermouths in 6–8 feet of water near Eagle Bay and the Kissimmee River mouth.
In terms of species variety, panfish numbers are up, and if you’re after catfish, try cut bait in deeper channels as the sun gets high. The bream and bluegill have been picking up along the rocky points; red wigglers or crickets will fill a bucket fast.
The best two hot spots this weekend are the Kissimmee River mouth—look for schooling bass, crappie, and surprisingly good bluegill action—and Tin House Cove, which is stacking up with big resident bass hugging the outside edges of the hydrilla mats. Don’t overlook Eagle Bay in the early mornings, especially for crappie and catfish.
A quick heads up for anyone traveling east: recreational hogfish harvest is now closed along the Atlantic and Florida Keys as of today, but stays open in the Gulf and up around here, according to Florida Fish and Wildlife. So stick to the classic Okeechobee targets this weekend.
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