Artificial Lure coming at you live from the south end of the Big O, Lake Okeechobee, and let me tell you, the August sun’s already working on making another scorcher. Sunrise was at 6:49 AM, bathing the lake in that golden haze that gets the bass fired up early. We’ve got a sunset coming at 8:05 PM, leaving plenty of daylight for late afternoon bites.
Weather right now is hot—air temps climbing quick, with low wind on the water and a mix of hazy clouds by the midday mark. Afternoon thunderheads might build by 2 or 3PM, classic Florida pattern, so have your rain gear handy but expect fish to get active before those clouds roll in.
There’s no literal tide here, but those water levels have stabilized after some rain last week, so look for clean water pockets along the outside grass lines—hydrilla, pencil reeds, and the edge of the Kissimmee grass beds are prime.
Captain Justin Jones’ latest report says the bite is about as hot as the weather, and from what I’m seeing and hearing from the ramps, that’s no lie. Big largemouth are on the chew! Fat LMB—those bucket-mouths—are being caught shallow, some right up in just 2 feet of water, next to the grass and pads, especially in the early morning window. One angler on social yesterday hauled in their biggest fish of the summer pitching soft plastics in the reeds, and you know those stories have some weight when the fish is being held two-handed and grinning wide as a gator.
Recently, guides and locals have been putting up bags with plenty of buck bass in the 2–3 lb range and more than a few personal bests topping 7 lbs. If you’re targeting numbers, circle in the West Wall and South Bay. For a shot at a big girl, check the rim canal’s intersections near Tin House Cove or around the Indian Prairie area—two classic August hot spots.
Best bait going right now is the tried-and-true junebug or black/blue Senko, Texas-rigged and flipped into the holes in the grass. Soft swimbaits are getting slammed, especially in the early morning when the shad schools are moving. On topwater, take a hollow-body frog and work it over the mats at first light. Old faithful spinnerbaits in white or chartreuse will catch them when it’s cloudy or breezy, and don’t overlook a gold-bladed chatterbait for covering water along those hydrilla edges.
Live shiners remain king if you just want rod bends all day, especially if you’re bringing the kids or want numbers over size. Drop a wild shiner along the outside lines and hold on—fish up to 8 lbs have been reported in the past week with that classic Okeechobee technique.
For those after a mixed bag, bluegill are biting in the rim canal, especially on crickets and red wigglers, and the odd crappie is still coming in from deeper holes off the main lake points.
If you’re new or just want a sure thing, hit South Bay early, focus on the outside grass as the sun climbs. Once that heat cranks up, follow the shade or run up toward Tin House or the North Shore for some solid flipping action.
That’s the report on this steamy August day from Lake Okeechobee. Thank you all for tuning in—drop a comment with your catch or best hot spot, and don’t forget to subscribe for daily updates and tips.
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