Good morning anglers, this is Artificial Lure with your August 15th Lake Austin fishing report. Here’s what’s happening on the water today.
We’re kicking off a hot and humid Friday, with early temps already nudging 80 and highs expected around 99 degrees. There’s light wind on the lake, with humidity staying up, so get your lines wet early if you want to avoid baking in the sun. According to Time and Date, sunrise hit at 6:56 a.m. and sunset’s at 8:07 p.m., giving you plenty of daylight to work those banks and docks. Skies are mostly clear, with only a small chance of scattered afternoon clouds and an even smaller shot at rain—bring sunscreen and lots of water.
Lake Austin’s water remains at typical August levels, with slightly reduced flow due to ongoing conservation efforts. Water temps are holding steady in the high 80s. While tidal changes don’t mean much on this stretch of river-lake, boat traffic on summer weekends can churn things up through mid-morning and late afternoon, so shorelines and shaded pockets see the most consistent bites.
Fish have been fired up all week. Local guides are reporting steady action for largemouth bass, especially along the rocky ledges and under shaded docks. The prime window has been early—sunrise to about 9:30 a.m.—and again during that last hour before sunset. Several anglers this week pulled in bass pushing 6 pounds, and the ShareLunker program from Texas Parks and Wildlife reminds everyone to report any double-digit catches for a shot at gear and prizes.
Topwater baits like Whopper Ploppers and Zara Spooks are working magic right at dawn—just make sure to work them near grass and timber lines where the bluegill are popping. As the sun climbs, switch over to soft plastic stick worms, Senko-style in watermelon or green pumpkin, rigged weightless or wacky. Jigs with a blue-black or natural craw pattern are picking up bigger fish tight to cover. For hard baits, scale down to shallow-running squarebills in shad or chrome finishes.
Live bait fans have been getting steady bites using large nightcrawlers and shad under slip bobbers near deeper holes and bridge pillars. Bluegill and sunfish are active along the shallows all day, especially near brush piles and submerged timber. Kids are having a blast catching panfish off docks with tiny hooks and doughballs.
Catfish activity is fair, with a handful of nice blues and channels reported on cut bait and stink bait overnight, especially near the mouths of creeks. Crappie action remains spotty until the water cools, though persistent anglers are still pulling up slabs from planted brush piles using minnows.
Recent tournaments at the Lake Austin Pier saw mixed bags—largemouth bass, a few drum, and plenty of sunfish weighed in, with swim jigs and finesse worms taking most of the top spots, according to The Grove Resort’s most recent results.
If you’re looking for a couple of hot spots, don’t sleep on the stretch below the Pennybacker Bridge (360 Bridge) or the banks near Emma Long Park. The bridge pylons hold bass, and the park’s coves see lots of schooling bait—perfect ambush territory for big green fish.
Before you head out, make sure to check your parks pass, mind those idle zones, and pack out what you bring in. The water’s busy with summer crowds, so stay patient, wave to your fellow boaters, and stay safe out there.
That wraps up today’s report from Lake Austin. Thanks for tuning in and don’t forget to subscribe for daily updates and local tips. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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