Good morning folks, this is Artificial Lure coming to you with your June 1 Lake Fork, Texas fishing report. The sun crested the horizon at 6:16 a.m. this morning and it’ll tuck back behind the trees at 8:25 p.m., giving us a nice long day on the water. Weather’s shaping up with highs in the low 80s, a light southerly breeze, and the water sitting in the low to mid-70s thanks to a few cool fronts last week. That means active fish and comfortable fishing conditions—prime time on Fork.
Recent reports from the Texas Parks and Wildlife and several guides around the lake say we’ve transitioned fully to early summer patterns. Black crappie are stacking up heavy on structure: bridges, underwater roadbeds, brush piles, and laydowns are absolutely loaded—sometimes over a thousand schooling up on a single spot near timber. The big reef right out from the Highway 154 public ramp is by far the hottest spot right now for crappie numbers. Most of these fish are under the 10-inch mark, but you can catch hundreds in a day using small jigs or live minnows right off the bottom. A 1/16-ounce hand-tied jig with a 1/4-ounce egg weight pegged above it on 10–12 lb. fluoro is the go-to setup, and swimming jigs will light ‘em up all day.
Bass fishing is just as hot—Lake Fork’s famous for big girls and June is prime time. Guides report quality largemouth holding on deeper offshore structure, with many moving into the mid-20 foot range as temps climb. Your best bet is to use your electronics to find the schools—they’re tight and feeding up. Carolina rigs, big crankbaits, and spoons are all putting fish in the boat. A Bomber crankbait is a killer choice, especially around the 164 bridge and Chicken Ridge Hump—both are producing consistent catches right now. Early mornings, toss a topwater or soft-plastic fluke up shallow near shad spawns, then transition out deeper as the sun climbs.
Catfish action is steady as ever, especially around the bridges. Punch baits and fresh shad fished on Carolina rigs in 6–15 feet are pulling in plenty of eaters. Try the dam area or 164 bridge for a mixed bag.
To sum it up:
- For crappie: Bridges, brush piles, and underwater reefs like the 154 ramp area with small jigs or minnows
- For bass: Deep structure, Carolina rigs and crankbaits around the 164 bridge and Chicken Ridge Hump
- For catfish: 6–15 feet near bridges and the dam, using punch bait or shad
Hot spots include the big reef off 154, 164 Bridge, and Chicken Ridge Hump.
Expect increased boat traffic this weekend as folks get out to enjoy early summer and post up on their favorite spots.
That’s the word from Lake Fork this morning. Thanks for tuning in—don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.