Late Summer Bass Bonanza: Fishing Lake Austin's Dam-Controlled Waters Podcast Por  arte de portada

Late Summer Bass Bonanza: Fishing Lake Austin's Dam-Controlled Waters

Late Summer Bass Bonanza: Fishing Lake Austin's Dam-Controlled Waters

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Lake Austin locals are enjoying classic late-summer Texas fishing weather today—sunny skies, temperatures pushing up to the high 90s by late afternoon, and only a whisper of a southern breeze cooling the banks. According to the National Weather Service, sunrise hit at 7:09 AM and sunset will fall at 7:49 PM, giving more than enough daylight to chase both morning and evening bites. We’re between moon phases, so tidal swings aren’t much of a factor on Lake Austin’s dam-controlled waters, but water clarity is good and levels remain stable, making for ideal angling conditions.

Bass fishing remains the bread and butter here. Recent catches reported by local guides and shared on regional angler networks include multiple largemouths in the 2 to 6-pound range, with several over 7 pounds landed in the past week. Bluegill and sunfish are thick around dock pilings, and the odd channel cat has shown up in deeper brush piles near Emma Long Metropolitan Park. A few anglers even reported energetic Guadalupe bass near the Pennybacker Bridge, especially where cool creek inflows are present.

Fish activity peaked early today, right around first light, and again promises to pick up during that golden hour just before sunset as the lake quiets once the weekend crowd clears. The bite has been solid for those working shallow drop-offs and submerged hydrilla beds in 6 to 12 feet of water, especially along the western shorelines and up into smaller coves.

For lures, nothing is beating classic Texas-rigged soft plastics in green pumpkin or watermelon red, especially craw shapes and Senkos. Early risers working topwater baits—like Whopper Ploppers and Zara Spooks—have drawn explosive strikes along grass lines near City Park and under low-hanging shade trees. During the heat of the day, anglers dragging deep-diving crankbaits or slow-rolling natural-colored spinnerbaits along deeper ledges are hauling in solid fish. Bass Fishing Daily regularly highlights the effectiveness of downsizing to a finesse shaky head or wacky rig when the bite slows, and it’s paying off here this week.

Catfish fans are reporting steady action with chicken liver and punch bait on bottom in the main channel just north of the 360 bridge—try evening hours to avoid boat traffic and sun glare.

Looking for a red-hot spot? Longhorn Dam remains a perennial favorite, especially for bass and the occasional white bass run. The stretch between Walsh Boat Landing and Ski Shores Café also delivers consistently, particularly for kayak anglers seeking quiet pockets and rocky points. Locals are quick to point out that working under the MoPac bridge at dusk can be lights-out for big bass as they cruise in to ambush baitfish.

Labor Day weekend may have passed, but the fishing pressure is easing up and the action is just heating up with subtle hints of fall in the air. The Texas Parks and Wildlife Department is reminding anglers to help keep our lake free of invasives—so clean your gear and keep an eye out for unwanted hitchhikers at the ramp.

Thanks for tuning in to today’s Lake Austin fishing report. Be sure to hit that subscribe button so you don’t miss a bite of what’s happening on the water. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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