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Okeechobee Fishing Report: Steamy Bite, Trophy Bass, and Panfish Bonanza - Quiet Please Podcast

Author
Quiet. Please
Published
Wed 27 Aug 2025
Episode Link
https://www.spreaker.com/episode/okeechobee-fishing-report-steamy-bite-trophy-bass-and-panfish-bonanza-quiet-please-podcast--67527080

Good morning, anglers—Artificial Lure here with your Lake Okeechobee fishing report for Wednesday, August 27, 2025. The water’s steamy and the bite is hot, so let’s dive right in.

Weather out on Okeechobee is classic late-August stuff: muggy with temps already creeping into the low 80s at sunrise and expected to tap the low 90s by afternoon. Winds are light from the southeast, bringing enough breeze to keep bugs at bay but not enough to churn up the water. There’s a scattered cloud cover early, but nothing threatening storms until late day—so get out there early if you want to dodge both sunburn and rain.

Sunrise hit the water at 6:58 AM locals, and sunset will be at 7:52 PM—plenty of daylight to take advantage of the early and late bite when these bass are most aggressive.

Tide-wise, Okeechobee isn’t a tidal lake, but rainfall levels and water flows from up north are keeping levels healthy. There’s good movement along the Kissimmee River outflow and the rim canals, which are both pulling in hungry fish.

According to Captain Justin Jones, the August bite is “about as hot as the weather.” Local guides are reporting fantastic numbers of largemouth bass being caught, with a solid mix of two-to-five pounders and the occasional goliath over eight showing up, particularly under thick weed mats and in the deeper channels. Early morning anglers have also connected with scattered bluegill and shellcracker beds around the edges, picking up panfish using crickets and red worms.

Lure selection is classic for this time of year: topwater action at daybreak is killer with Berkley Choppo and buzzbaits, while the Berkley Powerbait Power Swimmer swimbaits and Senko-style worms in watermelon or junebug colors are pulling bass off the edges as the sun climbs. Pitching creature baits like Zoom Brush Hogs weighted Texas-style into hyacinth mats and pencil reeds has been the ticket for those trophy bites—be sure to gear up with heavy braid! For live bait lovers, shiners remain unbeatable for numbers and size, especially if you want to put a kid on their first Okeechobee lunker.

Recent catches have been strong. Just this weekend, tournament anglers in town for qualifiers weighed in dozens of fish topping four pounds, and recreational boats all around South Bay and Tin House Cove have been filling stringers with quality bass and enough bluegill for a fish fry. Even casual boaters launching at Moore Haven or Harney Pond can expect solid action, especially if targeting the outside weedlines near moving water, per the latest Good Sam boating updates.

Hot spots you shouldn’t miss:
- South Bay, with its healthy grass beds and access to deeper, cooler water
- Tin House Cove, especially early morning for big blow-ups on frogs and topwater baits
- The rim canal from Harney Pond to Clewiston, for steady action with both bass and panfish
- The Kissimmee River mouth—always productive, especially around bridges and riprap

That’s the story on the Big O today. Thanks for tuning in—remember to subscribe for your next Lake O update! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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