Artificial Lure here with your Lake Sam Rayburn fishing report for Saturday, September 6, 2025, coming at you live from the heart of the East Texas pineywoods. If you’re wetting a line today, sunrise rolled in around 7:04 AM and you’ve got daylight until almost 7:36 PM, giving you plenty of fishing hours to chase that East Texas lunker. Temperature’s starting out humid, creeping up near 90 by afternoon, with water temps hovering around 80 degrees and a fair bit of stain to the water—nothing unexpected for late summer in these parts.
The lake is sitting about seven feet below pool, so keep an eye out for shallow structure, exposed stumps, and some drifting clumps of hyacinth and weed mats that washed in from the creeks lately. A little junk in the water isn’t stopping the bite, though—local guides are reporting lots of bass hugging the shallows. Early morning is still producing the best action on topwaters around pencil grass, reeds, and any cover you can find. Yellow Magic poppers and walking baits have gotten the most action before the sun breaks high.
After that early bite, the fish are pushing a bit deeper to the edges and drains. Try working crankbaits along points and jigs or Carolina rigs off the ledges and structure once the sky’s up. The bite’s slow but steady in the midday heat, so don’t be afraid to slow your presentation and stay patient—those bigger fish might need a little coaxing.
Crappie are sliding out toward deeper brush piles and standing timber. It’s not on fire, but patient anglers using small jigs or minnows are bringing in slabs off the deeper piles. White bass are schooling off main lake points—keep an eye on the surface for splashes, as those schools can go off quick. Catfish are moving to deeper creek channels and ledges; cut bait, especially shad, is drawing in blues and channels for some solid stringers.
Today’s solunar tables predict minor activity peaking midmorning from about 9:25 to 10:25 and a major window late this afternoon from 4:26 to 6:26 PM, so plan to be near your best spot when things pick up. The moon’s just a quarter full and still growing, so fish might be a touch more cautious with all that overhead sunlight—downsizing your presentations and using natural colors could put more fish in the boat.
As far as bait, plastics in watermelon red, junebug, and green pumpkin have been hot. Paired with Texas rigs in the grass or flipping jigs near wood, you’re in good shape. Best early goes to topwater walkers and poppers, mid-morning to deep-diving crankbaits and soft plastics. For the crappie, stick with chartreuse or monkey milk jigs in brush, and for cats, you can't beat fresh cut shad or prepared punch bait.
Recent catches include a few double-digit largemouths pulled offshore in the last week, some big stringers of eating-sized channels, and a couple of limits of crappie out of the deeper piles. Nothing’s quite like the spring bite, but there's plenty of action for the September angler wanting to stock a freezer or just feel that thump.
Two hot spots worth your time today: the Five Fingers area is holding shallow bass—work the edges of that vegetation line, especially in the early hours. Harvey Creek’s main channel timber and adjacent brush can turn up both bass and crappie if you’re willing to bounce spots until you find the right pile.
That’s your real-world rundown from Lake Sam Rayburn on Saturday, September 6. Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure’s report—make sure to hit that subscribe button so you never miss an update. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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