Artificial Lure here with your up-to-the-minute Lake Okeechobee fishing report for November 19, 2025.
We’ve got another crisp fall morning on the Big O, with sunrise at 6:45 AM and sunset around 5:31 PM. Weather’s keeping it pleasant, highs in the mid-70s and a light north wind, perfect for a few solid rounds of casting. Water levels are steady, hovering just above 13.7 feet, a touch down from earlier this month but still providing good access to the grass lines and canal mouths. If you’re planning your outing, keep an eye on those afternoon winds—they tend to pick up just as the bite cools down.
Bass activity’s heating up after that sharp cold front rolled through last week. The Bassmaster Elite Qualifier just wrapped up and showed Okeechobee’s still got big fish ready to play. Local pro Caleb Hudson locked down a three-day total over 52 pounds, fishing the Rim Canal with a Spro McDart jerkbait and a light jighead minnow. The winning pattern lately has been working a jerkbait just under the surface, then switching to a finesse minnow on calmer water. Third-place finisher Fisher Anaya picked up a monster 8-pound, 13-ounce largemouth out of Harney Pond Canal on a Rapala Mavrick jerkbait.
If you’re fishing for numbers, most folks are catching 15 to 30 bass in a half-day, with a handful of strong 5- to 7-pounders showing up for those working the patterns right. Bite windows are best early and late, so hit it hard from daybreak through 10 AM, then again from 3 PM to sunset. The Rim Canal on the southwest side and Harney Pond Canal continue to be the hottest zones for aggressive bites. Jighead minnows, jerkbaits, and soft swimbaits are all putting fish in the boat right now—colors like “sexy shad,” chrome, and translucent baitfish are working best with the current water clarity. For those preferring live bait, you can’t beat a hand-picked wild shiner drifted near the edges of hydrilla inside the first grass line.
Spec (crappie) fishing’s seeing steady action too. According to Gerard Tackle’s November update, anglers are reporting solid numbers with every trip—catching 40 fish and bringing home a 20-speck limit isn’t uncommon. Chartreuse and blue jigs, especially under a slip float, have been top producers. The J&S Canal on the east side is another good call if you’d rather target crappie or want a break from the bass bite.
Don’t forget, Okeechobee’s infamous frog bite is starting to build in the backwater grass. A popping frog or speed worm worked over thick mats is already snagging a few hawgs, and it’s only going to improve as we get closer to winter. For those willing to work reaction baits slow, a Shimano World Minnow jerkbait or the new Berkley Chop Block soft glide bait are worth a look, especially when fish are suspended in the canals.
Watch for occasional blue-green algae patches, especially near Harney Pond and the north shore. It hasn’t shut down the bite, but keep up to date on any health advisories if you’re cleaning or keeping your catch.
Two hot spots to put on your list: The southwest Rim Canal near Clewiston and the Harney Pond Canal up by Lakeport—both areas are putting out numbers and size. For slab crappie, J&S Canal is the place to be.
Thanks for tuning in, folks. Don’t forget to subscribe for next week’s report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI