Arkansas Fishing Reports

Posted 12/29/04

 

Beaver Little Red River Kings River Bull Shoals Greers Ferry
Beaver Tailwater Millwood Norfork Norfork Tailwater White River


Add your Fishing Report


State record Blue Cat caught at Lake Texoma
A Madill man caught a 98-pound blue catfish Nov. 11 on Lake Texoma, breaking the previous state record by more than 10 pounds.
BJ Nabors, who was only on his second catfishing trip with his father-in-law and two other anglers, caught the record fish around 8 p.m. while fishing from the bank with whole shad. "I enjoy fishing for bass and crappie, but hadn't gone catfishing much," said Nabors. "I guess you could say I was just along for the ride. I'm sure I'll go back. I'm hooked now." Nabors was using a 12-foot Eagle Claw fishing pole and a Shakespeare spinning reel spooled with 20-pound test Stren. The angler wrestled with the fish for several minutes before beaching it. "I was holding' on pretty good," he said. "We actually had two fish on at once. I held on for what seemed like forever, but it was probably only 10 or 15 minutes." The 54 and 1/2-inch long fish had a 39 and 1/2-inch girth and came from an area of Lake Texoma locally known as "Murray 23," located in the Tishomingo National Wildlife Refuge. The fishing hole is a noted blue catfish hotspot, with the winter months being the primary time of year when serious anglers pursue the large blue cats. Oklahoma's previous blue catfish record was set only last year, also in Lake Texoma. That fish weighed in at a little over 87 pounds and was caught in March. Nabors said that at first he wasn't aware the fish was a potential state record. "We had absolutely no clue it was a state record," he said. "We had some 100-pound scales and when it bottomed those out, we started looking for some certified scales." Fisheries personnel with the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation brought portable certified scales to the lake and after verifying it as a state record, transported the fish to a local fish hatchery. It has since been transported to the Oklahoma Aquarium in Jenks where it will be displayed following a brief quarantine.

Little Red River

Rainbow Trout and Brown Trout  The river clarity is good. Trout fishing is good using corn or wax worms with marshmallows or Power Bait.  The fly fishermen are doing well on the shoals using egg patterns, sow bugs and wooly buggers.

Back to Top

White River

Report by Ripple Outfitters

The river is high.

Trout fishing is good using live worms and yellow or orange Power Eggs


Back to Top

Greers Ferry

Lake Elevation at Normal Pool: 462.5 Temperature: 

Outflow:861 cfs. Level: 1.11 feet low

Walleye No Report

Largemouth Bass fair in 20 feet of water using plastic worms and jigs

Bream No Report

Crappie No Report 

Channel Catfish No Report

Bluegill No Report

Back to Top

Beaver

Lake Elevation at Normal Pool: 1121.4 Temperature: 52

Outflow: 1230 cfs. Level:  1.01 feet low

Bream good using crickets

Crappie poor 

Stripers are deep using umbrella rigs and deep cranks and live shad

Largemouth Bass good using crankbaits and fish slow 

White Bass No Report

Catfish very good using goldfish

Back to Top

Beaver Tailwater

Report by Ripple Outfitters

No Report

Back to Top

Kings River

Temperature: 

Report by Ripple Outfitters

No Report

Back to Top

BULL SHOALS

updated 12/29/04

Lake Elevation at Normal Pool: 657.0  Temperature:  46 to 47 

Outflow: 5161 cfs Level: 4.31 feet low

Lake Map

Fishing Report by:     Wilderness Trail       "Braggin Board"

WALLEYE SEMINAR
MARCH 5th and 6th
DETAILS WILL BE AVAILABLE AFTER JANUARY 1ST
If you are interested in this seminar call 870-445-2703 to receive a registration form

December 27, 2004
Merry Christmas – we certainly hope everyone had a wonderful Christmas and that Santa brought you lots of fishing stuff for you to try out this spring. We had 2 to 3" of snow last week and temperatures in the 20’s. Ice and snow on the ramps and roads leading to the marinas shot down fishing for most of the week. Lake level this week is 653.97, less than ½ foot below normal pool. Lake clarity is about 16 feet and the lake temperature dropped to 46 to 47 degrees with the snow and freezing night time temperatures. Crappie will be doing their "winter thing", suspending over channel swings and in the pole trees along the bluffs. They will be 35 to 55 feet deep using shad as the their main source of food. Crappie tubes, crappie minnows on bright jig heads and small spoons will be your key baits throughout the winter.

Largemouth bass, smallmouth bass and Kentuckys will be wintering along the channel swings in the creek arms, deep sides of points and on bluff walls throughout the lake. A number of baits and techniques are proven to work well during the winter months. Spooning is #1, drop shot with small baits can put the bait on their noses, Stingray or Beaver tail grubs are winter favorites and football jigs on the bottom in 40 to 50 feet of water can be worked very slowly triggering some feeders. When Mother Nature gives us a few sunny days find the banks that have large boulders on them, the bass will move to that type of bank to warm themselves. Fish these banks with tubes, Spider Jigs and grubs for some exciting winter action.

Walleye spend the winter around deep structure such as big boulder rocks, flooded timber and humps. Graphing is a big part of walleye winter fishing, it takes some time to find a few and then comes the challenge – trying to catch them. Best baits through the winter are Rapala Jigging spoons, Mann’s, Cotton Cordell or Hopkins Jig Spoons, ball jigs tipped with shiners and jig and grub combination. After a few sunny warm days in a row, trollers can pull small shad baits on lead core about 45 to 55 feet down around the outside of large feeding flats and maybe find a few walleye that are roaming searching for shad.

PWT Tour Offers Walleye Anglers a Challenging 2005 Brainerd, Minnesota…The In-Fisherman Professional Walleye Trail announced a challenging 2005 season for the world’s top-ranked walleye anglers. The PWT is a Pro-Am format. Pro anglers are fishing ambassadors who share their boats, tackle and tactics with amateur/co-anglers and those who’ve always wanted to fish a special lake can do it as amateurs/co-anglers. Call PWT headquarters at 218-824-2542, for entry blanks, or go to www.professionalwalleyetrail.com. Entry forms are also available at Wilderness Trail and Bull Shoals Boat Dock.

Trout on the White River are biting on yellow and white Berkley Power Eggs when there is not much generation. Super Dupers, Little Cleo’s and Mepps are working when there is generation. Fly fishermen are doing well on floating egg patterns in peach and chartreuse and olive and white Woolly Buggers. Browns can be caught on Suspending Rogues, Flat Fish and Rapala Countdowns.

This will be the last report for the year. We would like to take this opportunity to thank all of our readers for their support. May you all have a wonderful New Year. We will be back with the report the first week in February.

Remember to keep only what you can eat and release the rest for another day. Rick Culver of Wilderness Trail does the research for this report and the writing of this report. For more information call Rick or Sue Culver at Wilderness Trail at 870-445-2703, e-mail us at wtrail@bullshoals.net

Back to Top

Millwood

Lake Elevation at Normal Pool: 259.20 Temperature: 49 - 56

Outflow: 602 cfs. Level: 0.25 feet high

Report by: Millwood Lake Guide Service

}><(((º> Millwood Lake Fishing Report 12/27/04 <º)))><{

Millwood Lake Guide Service reports water temps 49º-56º ; approx 2 inches above normal pool, heavy stain, reduced current. Release rate at dam: 2 gates, release = 600 CFS.

Largemouth bass remain fair to good on black/blue colored jigs with Uncle Josh 101 or 11A Pork frog trailers on stumps and cypress trees in 6-12 feet depth areas, and fair during the heat of the day, on Rat-L-Traps in red colored crawfish pattern or red chrome. On cloudy days, gold Rat-L-Traps still seems to be working best around dying vegetation along the Little River edges. Shallow to medium diving red, brown, orange crankbaits like the bandit brown back/orange belly craw patterns are working on points and in mouths of creek channels deflecting off stumps. The jig bite continues improving as continual drop in water temps of another 5º this past week.

Zoom brush hogs and baby brush hogs are catching some good keeper bass on stumps along the edges of the river in 8-12 feet depths. Back off the edges of the river bank to where you find stumps and timber in approx 10 feet depths is where we have been finding the better bite, more aggressive bass. Best colors in the past week are blackberry or black neon. Heavy 3/4 oz War Eagle Spinnerbaits in white/chart color patterns in the remaining vegetation & dead lily pads are taking fair keepers on shallow flats close to the river and deeper water. Tip: use a large #6 or bigger thumping colorado blade in gold to attract their attention. The larger bass remain slightly deeper in the creeks, and closer to the deeper haunts of the river drops at the creek mouths dumping into Little River. The larger fish continue hitting the larger 3/4 oz Rat-L-Traps, fished slower, in the same areas. Southern Pro Fat Butt Tubes in black/red flake, or pumpkseed/chart tail pitched in on the base of cypress trees, are catching decent bass in those areas. Tip, put a rattle in your jigs or tubes in this muddy water, it draws their listening ear to investigate the noise. Also use a garlic or anise fish scent to mask your human scent, and the fish will hold the bait longer, or swim with it.

This time of year can be feast or famine for large bass. One day the temperature will be 25º freezing your line guides on your rod and the wind blowing 30mph and muddies up the entire lake. Few bites. Next day sun is out and high is near 60º, water clearing and shallow areas warming, cant get a hook in the water quick enough, and good, decent bass bites on every pitch with a tube or 10" power worm. Sharp hooks in soft plastic or crankbaits, are a must for those slow and deliberate (few) bites! Also, slowing the crankbait retrieve to a mere crawl seems to have the best results in this colder water climate.

Crappie are suspended over planted brush piles in 14-18 feet along the Little River between North Hickory and Outlaw trail. Large shiners were taking a few keepers early in the week as the lake began clearing. Not many crappie fishermen on the lake past week.

Blue Catfish remain good in Little River on trot lines, using cut shad or chicken livers, and cottonseed mill cakes or dog food prepared baits, in the outside river bends between Jack's Isle, and Pugh Slough and also between Hurricane creek and the 2nd entrance to Horseshoe Lake off Little River, set approx 14-16 feet deep.


}><(((º> Millwood Lake & River Conditions Report <º)))><{

For those fishing the river and below the spillway, as of Monday, December 27, with recent increase in lake release at the spillway, the lake level has returned to almost normal conservation pool, and lake elevation is 259.35, and falling, with 600CFS being released at the dam. As of Monday, 2 gates are open this week, gate #1 at 1 foot and gates #2 at 1/2 foot. Water clarity in the river, has remained muddy last week, but now is improving. River visibility and clarity is improved to approximately 3-5 inches. Clarity is somewhat worse on the river (in heavy current) and main lake, due to high winds and current toward the dam. Northeastern sector of the lake remains extremely muddy with increased current and muddy water in the Saline River.

The upriver oxbows such as McGuire, Horseshoe, Mud Lake, Cemetery Slough, etc, away from the current in Little River still have much better water visibility, estimated at approx 1-2 feet in places. Current in Little River is increased again this week. Water temperatures have also dropped in the last week, and range approx 49ºF early to 56ºF later in the day, depending on area of the lake, wind and sunlight penetrations.

Be advised the US Army Corps of Engineers recently replaced many of the missing river buoys in Little River, although there are still some stretches along the river that are still being worked on. We have seen several of the buoys washed up onto the south bank, between Pugh Slough and Jack's Isle.

With the increase in current in the river, and floating debris from the recent 3 foot rise, many logs and submerged hazards are floating down Little River. Use EXTREME caution while navigating Little River in low light conditions, and SLOW DOWN! Careful watch for floaters and debris in Little River's current is a requirement. Keep in mind there are a few sections of Little River, where the river buoys have moved out of position or have disappeared, although the USACE is working to get all these buoys replaced as soon as possible, and are working on the navigation daily.

Don't forget, be safe, and respect the other guy's right to use the lake too. Release those big bass to spawn and fight again, and take home those little 16"ers to fry up! Use caution in low light conditions, wear your Life Preserver and SUNSCREEN! If you are suddenly thrown from your boat, or knocked unconscious, your life preserver can potentially be your only hope to survive, so PUT IT ON!

Back to Top

Norfork

Lake Elevation at Normal Pool: 552.0 Temperature: 

Release Rate: 1293 cfs. Level: 1.78 feet low

Lake Map

Report by:  Ripple Outfitters

No Report

Back to Top

Norfork Tailwater

Report by Ripple Outfitters

No Report

Back to Top


This page was updated Thursday, April 17, 2008

 

 

If you would like to Advertise on Anglers Fishing Info, Click Here

 

Anglers Fishing Info Home page Arkansas Fishing Reports
Fishing Message Boards Illinois Fishing Reports Fishing Report Archives

Around
The Ole Fishing Hole

(Fisherman's Chatroom)

Kansas Fishing Reports Lake Maps
Missouri Fishing Reports
Classified Corner Nebraska Fishing Reports
Oklahoma Fishing Reports Contact Anglers Fishing Info

Copyright © 1997-2008 Anglers Fishing Info. All rights reserved