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Okeechobee Bass Bonanza: Secrets of the Big O's Fall Feeding Frenzy

Author
Quiet. Please
Published
Wed 03 Sep 2025
Episode Link
https://www.spreaker.com/episode/okeechobee-bass-bonanza-secrets-of-the-big-o-s-fall-feeding-frenzy--67617983

Artificial Lure here with your Lake Okeechobee fishing report for Wednesday, September 3, 2025. Sunrise this morning crept in just after 7:00 AM, and we’re looking at sunset a little before 7:40 PM—plenty of daylight for anglers to wet a line and hook into some legendary Florida bass.

Weather’s been what we expect for early September in South Central Florida: mild winds shifting from north to west today, topping out at about 5 to 10 knots according to the National Weather Service. The water’s got just enough chop to keep oxygen moving, but not too rough to limit where you can go. Skies are showing a good mix of clouds, and there’s an increasing chance of afternoon thunderstorms, so keep an eye out and maybe bring the rain gear. Expect those storms to really pop after lunch, with a continuation into the evening.

Tides don’t much impact the “Big O” since it’s inland, but rain and runoff from recent storms have kept water levels healthy. The hyacinths and eelgrass are thick along the west and south ends, and fish are definitely using that cover right now.

Now, for the fishing: According to Captain Robin Clegg’s September 2nd report, fall bass fishing on Okeechobee just started its annual ramp-up. He and his clients boated a mix of largemouth ranging from two to over six pounds, focusing on points around Harney Pond and the Shoal. They noticed bass schooling up and chasing shad in shallow water, especially right before the storms rolled in yesterday.

Soft plastics are getting the most action this week—Senko-style worms in June Bug and the classic Okeechobee Craw color are hot, especially rigged Texas-style and flipped into the grass mats, inspired by Bass Tackle molds and the 3.5 Phantom Grub from Angling AI. If you’re a fan of reaction baits, white and chartreuse spinnerbaits are also picking up fish early in the morning around fishable gaps in the vegetation. Captain Clegg suggests topwater frogs at sunrise, especially in the Kissimmee grass lines, while rattling lipless cranks and chatterbaits shine when bass are pushing shad schools up into open pockets.

For live bait, nothing’s come close to beating wild shiners drifted along edges and around isolated reed heads. Several local guides, talking to Bassmaster and Bass Fishing Daily, report their clients catching double-digits of bass each outing using shiners—some even flirting with the 8- to 9-pound mark, but most fish are running solid, chunky, and aggressive.

If it’s numbers you’re after, bluegill and shellcrackers are still holding in moderate numbers along the rim canal and around Tin House and Belle Glade, with red wigglers and small crickets doing the trick. Catfish activity is steady along deeper cuts and the boat basins, thanks to all the rain and stirred-up flow.

Hotspots to hit today: Try the Shoal just north of Clewiston for active bass chasing bait, and don’t sleep on Fisheating Creek’s entrance to the west for both bass and panfish. If you’re launching near the city, Tin House Cove is producing consistent bites at sunrise.

Remember, the afternoon storms are likely, so get your best action early and keep a weather eye on the horizon. Swap your tactics when the clouds roll in—the bite can really fire up just before a front.

Thanks for tuning in to today’s Lake Okeechobee fishing report. If you want more tips, tricks, and local scoop, don’t forget to subscribe. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease dot ai.

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