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Sam Rayburn Fishing Report - August 10, 2025: Topwaters, Shaky Heads, and Lunkers on the Menu

Author
Quiet. Please
Published
Sun 10 Aug 2025
Episode Link
https://www.spreaker.com/episode/sam-rayburn-fishing-report-august-10-2025-topwaters-shaky-heads-and-lunkers-on-the-menu--67317836

Good morning, folks, this is Artificial Lure bringin’ you today’s fishing report from Lake Sam Rayburn, Texas, for Sunday, August 10, 2025.

The sun came up right at 6:40 AM and you’ll have daylight until 7:49 PM, with over 13 hours to wet a line. The weather today is starting mild and muggy, typical for southeast Texas in August—expect that humidity to hang heavy through mid-morning, with highs pressing into the upper 90s by afternoon. Light southwest winds this morning will pick up just a touch later, and we’re looking at a mostly sunny day: perfect Sam Rayburn summer conditions.

The moon’s in its waning crescent phase at about 33%, with a moonrise at 3:27 AM and moonset at 2:21 PM. As for bite windows, the Solunar tables point to two strong major feeding times: 8:41 to 10:41 this morning and 9:06 to 11:06 tonight. Minor periods hit just before dawn, from 3:31 to 4:31 AM, and midafternoon around 2:58 to 3:58 PM, so plan your prime casts accordingly, especially as that morning major overlaps with prime topwater activity.

Recent fishing action on Sam Rayburn has been good and the bass bite is showing summertime consistency. The Toyota ShareLunker program confirmed Sam Rayburn and Lake Tyler pulled off a rare double-lunker day back in March, landing two Legacy Class largemouths over 13 pounds in a single day—the genetics and fishery management continue to pay off for anglers at Sam Rayburn. Over the last week, local guides and social reports note solid numbers of largemouth in the 2-4 pound range on main lake points and brush piles, with a few bigger fish up shallow at first light. Tournament action is picking up, too—Tacklewarehouse Invitational anglers, like Cody Meyer, have been weighing in some impressive limits, including a few five-bass sacks pushing 25 pounds.

Crappie are holding deep, mostly suspended over timber in 20-28 feet; you’ll get bites jigging around brush or submerged cover with small minnows or curly-tail jigs. Catfish are solid as ever on cut bait and stink bait in creek channels—expect steady numbers. Bream are stacked up on deeper docks and biting worms or small jigs.

For bass, start off early with **topwater walkers or poppers**—Bone or shad-color Spook Juniors and Whopper Ploppers have been getting crushed on calm points and along grass lines before the sun gets high. As light fades, switch to **shaky head worms**, dark Texas-rigged creature baits, or deep-diving crankbaits fished slow on the outer edge of hydrilla mats near points and creek channel swings. Local favorites are June bug, watermelon red, and blue fleck. During the day, Carolina rigs with chartreuse pepper lizards or drop-shot finesse worms in green pumpkin keep putting fish in the boat. Don’t overlook big flutter spoons or swimbaits around main-lake humps.

Hot spots this weekend:
- **Veach Basin:** Hit the submerged timber early for bass and later for slab crappie.
- **Jackson Hill area:** Main-lake points with hydrilla edges are prime for early topwater and midmorning deep cranking.
- **Ebuck and Needmore Points:** Consistently produce big bites for experienced anglers working Carolina rigs and heavy jigs.

That’s your Sam Rayburn fishing report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in—don’t forget to subscribe for the latest local angling lowdown. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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