How To Fish The Lake Texoma Flood




Bob Faulkner has been fishing Lake Texoma his whole life, and he'll tell you stories of camping and fishing here with his dad MANY years ago...

For the last 27 years he's been a striper guide on Lake Texoma, so he has experienced both the 1990 flood and the 2007 flood as a fishing professional.

I decided to get his advice for us now, since the floodwaters provide some advantages and some distinct disadvantages to anyone desiring to get out on the deep water and catch some fish now. Especially in the next few days forecast to be sunny!

The following advice is straight from Bob Faulkner - read it and DO IT!

"It's not safe to be out there in a boat right now without an experienced, knowledgeable guide who KNOWS THE LAKE and especially the structures underneath the water. I know where to go and where not to go. That's important.

"And I don't go full blast now in this high water. I go slow. You don't know what you're going to run into, literally. Yesterday I saw one of the channel buoys out in the middle of the lake. Good guides will not run wide open now unless it's an emergency.

"I've had 16 trips cancel and reschedule in the last few weeks, so some of my customers will still be fishing later in the year, probably in the fall. I always tell them I want them to have the best experience, and since they come here from all over the country I tell them I'll let them know the day before their trip if I think it's going to work for them.

"I have to buy shad now, since it's too hard to catch enough, and costs me up to $100 a day for bait. So I have to be sure the trip will be successful before taking people out there to have a great time.

"Striped bass are sight feeders and finding clear water is getting very hard for them, so fish won't be eating as much, making them harder to catch. But when we catch fish, and we DO catch fish every trip, they are good, big fish.

"The goal is safety and having a good time. Even if we don't catch our limits as usual we catch BIG FISH and people really like catching big fish.

"Of course catfishing right now is phenomenal because they are muddy water feeders, and right now they are up in the grass after worms and bugs, even in people's yards! 

"The other day one of my long-time customers brought his grandson who caught four 27" stripers himself. Of course we sat in the slip for 3 hours waiting for the rain to quit before we could get out there and catch them.

"One of the things that concerns me the most is floating debris coming in from upstream. Now that it cannot float freely beneath the Willis Bridge and the Roosevelt Bridge it's likely to start piling up against the bridges, and that's really a safety hazard.

"Naturally, I always have my phone and my radar on all day to stay safe. But it really aggravates me that I can't take all my customers out on their trips right now because they really enjoy their trips, and I really enjoy that!"

 




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Lake Texoma Current Weather Alerts

There are no active watches, warnings or advisories.

 

Lake Texoma Weather Forecast

Thursday

Sunny

Hi: 68

Thursday Night

Clear

Lo: 48

Friday

Sunny

Hi: 68

Friday Night

Clear

Lo: 50

Saturday

Mostly Sunny

Hi: 68

Saturday Night

Mostly Cloudy

Lo: 60

Sunday

Chance Rain Showers

Hi: 73

Sunday Night

Rain Showers

Lo: 62


Lake Texoma Water Level (last 30 days)


Water Level on 11/13: 617.44 (+0.44)



Lake Texoma

Fishing Report from TPWD (Nov. 13)

GOOD. Water stained; 69 degrees; 0.28 feet below pool. Striper fishing is great on live bait throughout the day, especially the afternoon bite as the moon becomes brighter each night. Topwaters are effective early along gravel shorelines near main lake points for bigger fish, both early and late. On deep flats use live bait in 35-45 feet of water. We are seeing fish schooling well under the boats, eagerly eating live bait, so limits are possible every trip. Crappie fishing is picking up. Use jigs and small shad under dock floats and along the tops of brush piles in 6-12 feet of water. Electronics help locate active fish suspended throughout the brush. Catfishing is also improving with the inflow of water. Start looking at deeper flats near the river inlets, in 25-40 feet of water. Drift with cut shad or whole gizzard shad for bigger fish. Good numbers are still found on cut shad and prepared baits in 35-55 feet of water near river channels on the main lake points. Bass fishing will continue to improve as temperatures drop and water levels rise. Look for bass to be more active, chasing baits and making more mistakes. Try Alabama rigs with flukes and hard baits off the banks towards the middle of shallow coves and near docks in 5-12 feet of water. Use electronics to locate brush and structure bait will be holding on with bigger bass roaming the ledges. Report by Jacob Orr, Lake Guaranteed Guide Service. Striped bass are excellent on topwaters early in the day. Cooler weather has improved the bite will daily limits possible. Birds will lead the way to feeding striped bass then cast slabs beneath. Report by John Blasingame, Adventure Texoma Outdoors.

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