
Sam Rayburn Fishing Report: Summer Bite Firing on All Cylinders
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Sunrise hit at 6:13 a.m. and you’ll have until sunset at 8:22 p.m. to get your lines wet. The lake is holding just under half a foot above pool, and water temps are running in the mid-80s after a week of steamy Texas sunshine and some passing early-summer storms. The water’s stained but clarity is decent. You’ll feel a light southeast breeze and, with the Corps still releasing a bit of water, the level is slowly dropping—prime conditions for that summer bite to keep firing.
Bass fishing is solid and squarely in summer pattern. Most spawners have wrapped up and fish are stacking up on main lake points, humps, and those classic creek channel ledges in 10–20 feet. Best action early remains shallow in the pencil and hay grass, especially if there’s shade or baitfish flickering—topwater frogs and poppers have been getting crushed at first light, especially up around Veach Basin and Harvey Creek. Once the sun gets high, work those deeper brush piles and timber with Carolina rigs loaded with watermelon red or plum worms, as well as Texas-rigged big worms. Deep-diving crankbaits are doing the trick on off-shore structure. If you’re still seeing good water up in the buckbrush or flooded cover, flipping soft plastics or jigs is still worth a shot—there are still some quality keepers shallow, especially with the water still a tad high.
For crappie, fish are moving out to deeper brush piles and standing timber, and the bite is steady on jigs and minnows in 12–20 feet. Catfish are solid on cut shad or punch bait in the creek channels and along ledges, especially after sunset. White bass have been schooling on the main lake points—give slabs, small spoons, or a white grub a toss when you see ‘em busting the surface.
Best lures right now: topwater frogs and poppers at dawn, watermelon red or plum straight-tail worms on Carolina or Texas rigs, deep-diving crankbaits for offshore bass, and jigs or minnows for crappie. For catfish, bring the stink with cut bait or punch bait.
Hotspots this weekend are Veach Basin for that topwater morning bass bite and Harvey Creek for numbers of both bass and crappie, especially around the deeper standing timber. Don’t overlook Black Forest for offshore ledge action once midday hits.
Fish are biting, the weather’s holding, and Lake Sam Rayburn is firing on all cylinders. Make sure to drain your boat to help keep our lake zebra mussel free. Thanks for tuning in—don’t forget to subscribe for the latest reports, gear tips, and all things Big Sam. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.