Fisherman Mike D reports excellent bass and crappie fishing at
Editor’s Note: Thanks for the report Mike! Mike is an aspiring to become a professional bass fisherman and is looking for sponsors…
Fisherman Mike D reports excellent bass and crappie fishing at
Editor’s Note: Thanks for the report Mike! Mike is an aspiring to become a professional bass fisherman and is looking for sponsors…

Editor’s Note: Thanks for the report David! Check out David’s site at
For the eighth year in a row Lake Konawa ranked number one in the number of bass caught per hour in reservoirs over 1,000 acres according to the 2006 spring electrofishing data recently released by the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation. Covering 1,300 acres in Seminole County, Konawa produced 132 bass per hour of electrofishing during this year’s surveys.
“It’s really no surprise Konawa is number one again – it is simply a great bass lake. Not only does Konawa have good numbers of bass, the population is also well balanced – it ranked first in the number of larger bass (over 14 inches) among lakes over 1,000 acres in the survey,” said Kim Erickson, fisheries chief for the Wildlife Department.
Coming in second was
In lakes under 1,000 acres, Lake Okmulgee came in first place with an impressive 149 bass per hour. Coon Creek Lake, near Wilburton, came in a very close second with 148 bass per hour. American Horse Lake, a Wildlife Department lake near Geary, took third place with 133 bass per hour. Located south of Lawton near the Wichita Mountains, Lake Elmer Thomas claimed fourth place with 119 bass per hour. Carlton Lake, located in Robbers Cave State Park in southeast Oklahoma took fifth place with 107 bass per hour.
Editor’s Note: Read the entire 2006 spring electrofishing story at:
Avid fisherman Terry Evans reports the fishing at Lake Hudson has been excellent. He went fishing on Saturday the 8th around 7pm and caught 4 bass around 3lbs each in a 30 minute span using an electric blue worm around brush piles in a cove on the north end of the lake in the shade.
Editor’s Note: Thanks for the report Terry! Got any pictures you want to share with us?

Our friend Darris, who sends us notes on smallmouth bass fishing at
Editor’s Note: Way to go Darris! Buying a boat is a big decision and yours looks like a lot of fun! Can the staff of OKFG hang out and fish with you sometime?

Guide David Clark reports the fishing has been really good lately at
Editor’s Note: Thanks for the fishing report and picture Dave! David offers guided fishing trips on Lake Skiatook, Lake Sooner,

Anglers fishing on Lake Texoma are reporting excellent striped bass fishing over the last several weeks with large numbers of big fish being caught. However, warm water conditions can be stressful for stripers when they are caught in deep water.
Lake Texoma, located on the Red River along the Oklahoma and Texas border, has earned a reputation as being one of the top striper lakes in the nation. Known for their outstanding fighting abilities, striped bass are long-lived and fast growing. Stripers are voracious predators with a diet consisting mainly of threadfin and gizzard shad.
“This time of year schools of stripers will often move to deeper water to find cooler temperatures,” said Paul Mauck, south central region fisheries supervisor for the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation. “There can be problems when you pull a big fish up quickly from 30 feet or deeper and then try release it. Their air bladders cannot compensate for the quick changes in pressure and the fish can die.”
Anglers are allowed to keep two stripers 20 inches long or longer and Mauck is urging anglers to exercise caution once they catch a limit of fish over 20 inches.
“Everybody, including myself, loves catching stripers. But it is important that we as anglers are aware of this issue and take responsibility for our actions. When the fishing is good, it can be hard to move to another spot or try a different technique, but it is simply the right thing to do if the methods we are using are hard on the fish that we all love,” Mauck said.
Larry Manering, law enforcement chief for the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation, pointed out that the issue goes beyond just good fishing ethics. “No good angler wants to waste this great resource, but this is more than just an ethical issue, it is also a legal issue. In the state of Oklahoma it is against the law for an angler to release a dead or dying fish,” Manering said.
Mauck offered several tips for releasing healthy striped bass during the summer months, including:
Editor’s Note: Texoma Striper handling tips courtesy of the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation. Photo courtesy of Trails Guide Service, Lake Texoma.
We were recently in Seattle and while at Pike’s Place Market, saw a very funny T-Shirt with the following fishing saying:
Give a man a fish and he will eat for a day.
Teach a man to fish and he will sit in a boat all day and drink beer!
Editor’s Note: Got any funny fish or fisherman sayings? If so, email us for posting here or on our main site,

GW Chisholm of
Stripers are giving us about 2-3 hours of awesome action first thing in the morning in the Preston peninsula area.
Top water baits (large & green) are the best for the first 45 minutes for big fish. Then as the light drives them down, live bait (5-6″ shad) seems to take charge producing lots of fish (2-10lbs.) for the next couple of hours.
Editor’s Note: Thanks for the report GW. Everybody heading to Lake Texoma for the 4th of July weekend should be drooling right about now!