Lake Fork, Texas Fishing Report Today

Late Fall Bass and Crappie Bonanza on Lake Fork


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Here’s your Lake Fork report for Friday, November 21, 2025.

Weather rolling across East Texas this morning is typical late November—crisp air with a few patchy clouds. Winds are light out of the northwest after yesterday’s front, and temps are starting low, climbing into the upper 60s by midafternoon. According to FishingReminder, sunrise hit at 6:54 AM, with sunset expected at 5:23 PM, so you’ve got solid fishing hours ahead. Lake levels are stable, water clarity is good, and surface temps are sitting near 62°F.

Lake Fork’s legendary largemouth bite remains steady, with recent big bass catches making headlines again. Major League Fishing just highlighted five Mercury Pro anglers landing double-digit bass here during this week’s tournament action. Most of the weight came from fish holding tight to timber and creek channel edges—a classic late fall pattern.

East Texas lake reports echo that bass are fair on main lake docks, points, and along deep channel swings. The best bite has come from slow-rolled bladed jigs, squarebill crankbaits, and spinnerbaits, especially in shad patterns. Local pros say a vibrating jig along the timber or a Squarebill in crawfish or chartreuse colors should be in every boat this morning. If the water’s calm, try a weightless Senko or fluke pitched around the post-spawn brush—you might just spook up a trophy.

Numbers of bass per boat have ranged from a half-dozen up to 40, with the mix running from 2–4 lbs and occasional true giants over 8 lbs reported by those targeting isolated timber with forward-looking sonar. Nighttime anglers are still sniping a few good ones with big black buzzbaits or thumping jigs.

Crappie are solid right now—especially on brush piles and deep creek bends in 15–22 foot depths. Bobby Garland jigs in pearl white or blue/chartreuse have been the colors of the week, and a handful of slabs over 2 lbs hit the cleaning tables yesterday. Catfish are fair on cut shad fished around deep channels, with most catches coming at night, and blue cat numbers slowly improving as water cools.

Bait-wise: shad-imitators are gold. Try a Strike King Square Bill, 6th Sense Curve Finesse, or Chatterbait in shad or chartreuse. For crappie, keep it small—bright jigs or minnows do best. Catfish are still coming on cut baits but don’t overlook fresh nightcrawlers.

Lake Fork’s hot spots today:
- The “Deer Stand”: classic for double-digit bass. Timber meets creek edge—be meticulous with electronics and throw vibrating jigs or Texas-rigged plastics.
- Little Caney Creek arm: deep brush piles producing big crappie and bass, especially mid-morning.
- Dale Creek area: spinnerbait bite on points and docks just after sunrise.

A quick sidebar: Texas Parks & Wildlife reminds everyone that rainbow trout stocking kicks off statewide starting November 26—not at Lake Fork, but plenty of local ponds nearby get the stock if you want to try something different next week.

Lure up, stay safe, and mind those timber stumps—Lake Fork is fishing right on schedule for a stellar late-autumn run. Thanks for tuning in to the Artificial Lure Lake Fork Report. Hit subscribe so you never miss a bite, and remember to keep your lines wet and your hooks sharp.

This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease.ai.

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Lake Fork, Texas Fishing Report TodayBy Inception Point Ai