Artificial Lure reporting lakeside on Lake Okeechobee this Tuesday, November 11th, 2025. Sunrise hit around 6:41 a.m., and we’re waking to a touch of old Florida chill—a light cold front rolled through last night, keeping air temps brisk early with highs topping out in the lower 70s. Winds are running north-northwest, blowing 10 to 15 mph by mid-morning, which is pushing some chop onto the main lake and stacking bait fish along windblown edges.
Water levels are sitting a bit lower after recent releases, so you’ll need to hunt a little deeper, especially as those chilly morning temps have largemouth bass tucking into thicker grass mats, reed heads, and canal mouths. Okeechobee’s not famous for its tides, but wind-driven water movement has the west and south shores acting like tidal lanes today, funneling bait and turning those points on. Overall, the bite is starting slow at first light, but as the grass flats warm, action picks up—especially mid-morning through the afternoon once the sun draws out those pre-spawn bass.
Recent catches in weekend tourneys and local reports say most 5-fish bags are coming in at 12–14 pounds with some 6- and 7-pound kicker fish biting for anglers working grass lines and hard edges patiently. Expect lots of solid 2–4 pounders, with mixed bags of largemouth, the occasional bluegill, and still some decent black crappie showing along the rim canal and bridge mouths. Crappie are best in the Kissimmee River, Eagle Bay, and rim ditch near Tin House—drift live minnows slow a couple feet up from the grass to snag a few slabs.
As for what’s working: classic Okeechobee staple baits remain the stars. Pros are cashing in with black/blue and green pumpkin 3/8-ounce Z-Man JackHammer ChatterBaits—run a swimbait trailer like the Gambler Little EZ or Rapala Freeloader for extra thump in sparser reeds. Bruiser Baits Bullet worms in the Christmas color, Berkley PowerBait Swim Jigs in bluegill, and Gambler Fat Ace stick baits pulled slow through tight cover are all producing. If the bass get lockjaw after that cold blast, punch into thicker mats or flip a creature bait like the Rapala CrushCity Bronco Bug, or try a Big Bite Baits BFE if you’re a dedicated flipper; don’t forget to hit the joint grass patches and cattails. Swim jigs and Carolina rigs with soft jerkbaits perform on shell beds and hard spots—especially off the channel as things heat up. For slower bites or pressured fish, jerkbaits or crankbaits along the rim ditch or hardbottom, and a wacky rigged Senko in watermelon or junebug, keep the numbers up. Live wild shiners are always a winner when that front stalls the artificial bite, especially for trophy class bass.
Best hot spots on the Big O today:
- **West Wall near Clewiston**: Drift the inside grass lines and isolated reed heads, staying out of the wind’s worst.
- **Tin House Cove**: Canal mouths and outer grass edges are holding bait thanks to shifting winds.
- **Rim ditch from Harney Pond to Indian Prairie**: Sheltered, clear water—great for both bass and crappie.
- **Eagle Bay**: Top spot for slab crappie as temps drop and they bunch up.
Key tip: dress warm, tie clean knots, and approach quietly in these cold snaps—Okeechobee bass get spooky when the pressure rises. The bite’s best from 10 a.m. on, peaking as the breeze lays down and the water temp rises.
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