Good morning from Lake Okeechobee, this is Artificial Lure with your Friday fishing report for August 29, 2025.
We’re rolling into late summer and the “Big O” is showing all its seasonal quirks. The sun crested the horizon right around 6:55 AM and you’ll see it drop just before 7:55 PM, so we’ve got a solid window for those early and late bites. The forecast is calling for **hot and humid conditions, partly cloudy skies, and highs near 91°F**. Expect light winds from the southeast, making most areas fishable, but be sure to keep an eye on those afternoon pop-up storms—late summer on Okeechobee can turn quick.
**Water clarity** is still on the low side with that typical summer stain—Lake.com recently named Okeechobee as “America’s dirtiest lake,” citing high turbidity and algae-friendly nutrients. Don’t let that scare you off; the bite’s still there, but ya gotta adjust. The lake’s in its annual transition, so weed lines and submerged hydrilla patches are breaking up and bluegill are finishing up their beds, which means fish activity is shifting every week.
**Bass fishing** is a grind, but the rewards are real. Morning action has been best if you stick close to healthy grass mats and swinging points—15 to 20 bites isn’t out of the question if you cover water quickly with a **white swim jig, spinnerbait, or a shad-colored swimbait**. Once the sun is high, it’s all about flipping heavy cover; work a black-and-blue or green pumpkin creature bait with a 1- to 1.5-ounce tungsten weight deep into the thick stuff. According to local guides, you’ll weed through plenty of smaller fish, but keep grinding—any bite after 11AM could be a 5- to 7-pounder if you’re in the right area.
Tournament reports this week have been impressive. Just two days ago, local teams brought bags topping **28 pounds**, with several bass over 7 pounds weighed in at the Roland Martin Marine Center event (as reported on Instagram by Scott Martin and others). Still, many folks went home early when the midday bite died, so patience is paying off.
**Live bait**—especially wild shiners—remains the top choice if you want to put a big fish in the boat quick, but don’t count out artificial lures. Wacky rigs and Texas-rigged worms in watermelon red or June bug are pulling solid fish around scattered reeds and buggy whips. The flipping bite with beaver-style baits has been the ticket for those who grind it out in the heat—sometimes all afternoon—with persistence being rewarded by quality bites.
**Hot Spots:** Head for the **Monkey Box** and **Harney Pond Canal** early, focusing on outside grass edges and any mats that look more alive than the rest. If the crowds are heavy, the East Wall and Tin House Cove are also holding fish, especially if you can find moving water or isolated hydrilla patches.
Non-bass species are present too; the bluegill bite is winding down but you’ll still pick up a mess if you target the last of the bedding areas with crickets or red wigglers. The catfish bite on cut bait or stink bait picks up on the rim canal, especially as the water warms in the afternoon.
No significant tidal swings affect Okeechobee, but localized water movement from wind or locks can concentrate fish, so watch wind blowing into grass points for your best shot at a kicker bass.
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