Lake Okeechobee Fishing Report: Steady Bite, Trophy Bass, and Crappie Bonanza Podcast By  cover art

Lake Okeechobee Fishing Report: Steady Bite, Trophy Bass, and Crappie Bonanza

Lake Okeechobee Fishing Report: Steady Bite, Trophy Bass, and Crappie Bonanza

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Artificial Lure here with your June 21, 2025 Lake Okeechobee fishing report, coming to you local and lively from the heart of Big O country.

Sunrise hit today at 6:32 am and sunset’s rolling in around 8:21 pm, giving us prime daylight to put lines in the water. Weather’s staying true to early summer: muggy mornings climbing to the upper 80s by afternoon with a persistent southeast breeze, and a chance of those classic Florida pop-up showers by late day. Water level’s hovering near 11 feet this week, meaning lots of exposed vegetation and some shallow access points tightening up—watch your props and stay alert for submerged hazards, especially off the shoals and marsh edges, according to the latest from Capt. Angie Douthit and Florida Fish and Wildlife.

Tides aren’t a big factor on Okeechobee itself, but the Kissimmee River and major feeder canals are moving water steadily, which has kept the bite steady for river and canal anglers.

Bass anglers are still cashing in on the tail end of the spawn, with big post-spawn females lurking on the outside edges and in the deeper ledges of the rim canal. The hot setup this week has been big 10-inch worms in junebug or red shad, texas-rigged and worked slow along drop-offs, as well as deep-diving crankbaits in bream or tilapia colors. Swim jigs and mid-size swimbaits—think white, watermelon red, or natural shad—are producing around thick reed patches and beneath rafts of floating hyacinth. Topwater action is turning on early, so walk-the-dog baits like a Zara Spook or popping frogs over the grass lines at first light have pulled some trophy bass, with at least two “trophy catch” entries—bass over 8 pounds—reported in the last week. If you’re using live bait, you can’t beat a fresh golden shiner under a float, especially for those lunker bites.

The crappie bite is surprisingly hot for June, with guides reporting 100-fish days in the river and around bridge pilings using live minnows and white or chartreuse jigs. Most keepers are in the 12–14 inch, 1.5 to 2-pound range. The bluegill and shellcracker action is also non-stop for families, with bedding fish around Tin House Cove and Indian Prairie, hammering red worms and crickets beneath a cork.

Looking for hotspots? Hit the Shoal on the west side for bass and bluegill, especially the outside grass lines near Monkey Box—if you see diving birds, the shad (and bass) are close. For more crappie and panfish, the Kissimmee River mouth and the point at Horse Island are tough to beat right now. Don’t overlook the canals, either, especially during the heat of the day.

That’s the bite, straight from your neighbor on the lake, Artificial Lure! Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for tomorrow’s updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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