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Kansas · Kansas & Arkansas Riversfreshwater· 5d ago

Kansas River at 67°F and 8,780 cfs as Bass Enter Prime Spawn Window

USGS gauge 06892350 recorded the Kansas River at 67°F and 8,780 cfs as of the evening of May 3 — squarely in the temperature band that triggers bass spawning. Wired 2 Fish featured a timely breakdown this week: lead with a swimbait to cover water and draw reaction strikes from bass holding near beds, stumps, and shallow structure, then follow up with a finesse bait to seal the deal. With flow running nearly 9,000 cfs, the main channel is pushing hard — concentrate efforts on eddies, wing dams, and backwater sloughs where current breaks. Channel catfish are entering their pre-spawn feeding ramp as water approaches 70°F, with cut bait drifted along current seams the reliable producer. White bass spring runs on both rivers typically wind down near this temperature, so if fish are still stacked at tributary mouths or dam tailwaters, now is the time. The waning Gibbous moon slightly dampens overnight surface-bite windows but won't shut down daytime shallow-water action on bedding bass.

Current Conditions

Water temp
67°F
Moon
Waning Gibbous
Tide / flow
Kansas River flowing at 8,780 cfs (USGS gauge 06892350) — elevated but below flood stage; target current breaks, wing dams, and backwater eddies.
Weather
Check local forecast before heading out.

New to these readings? What do water temp, cfs, tide, and moon phase actually mean for fishing?

What's Biting

Hot

Largemouth/Smallmouth Bass

swimbait to locate then finesse bait to close on bedding fish

Active

Channel Catfish

cut bait on the bottom in current seams and holes below wing dams

Slow

White Bass

in-line spinners and jigging spoons at tributary mouths — spring run tapering at 67°F

Slow

Flathead Catfish

live bait in deep holes; pre-spawn staging not yet fully underway

What's Next

**Flow and temperature trajectory**

With the Kansas River gauge at 8,780 cfs and 67°F on May 3, flow is elevated but well below flood stage. Expect current to remain brisk through the early part of the week. Wade fishing the main stem is impractical at this level; boat anglers should work tributary mouths — where current slackens — and the quiet pockets behind wing dams and riprap banks where bass, catfish, and white bass stack up during spring runoff.

**Bass: the next 48–72 hours**

At 67°F, largemouth and smallmouth bass are in the heart of the spawn window. Per Wired 2 Fish's breakdown this week, the most productive approach is to lead with a swimbait to locate active fish and provoke reaction strikes near beds and shallow structure, then switch to a finesse presentation for fish that won't fully commit. Target mid-morning through early afternoon when the bite typically consolidates. The waning Gibbous moon means fish fed hard around the recent full moon and may be in a short post-peak lull — but spawning behavior typically overrides lunar suppression, and shallow fish remain catchable throughout the day.

**Channel catfish ramp-up**

Channel catfish pre-spawn staging typically begins around 65–70°F, putting us right at the front edge now. Cut shad, chicken liver, or prepared baits fished on the bottom in current seams and holes downstream of wing dams should produce increasingly consistent action over the next several days. Check state regulations for current possession limits before harvesting.

**White bass window closing**

The white bass spring run is generally triggered in the 55–65°F range. At 67°F that run is at or past peak on both the Kansas and Arkansas rivers. If fish are still stacked at tributary confluences and dam tailwaters, hit it in the next day or two — action typically fades quickly once temps push past 68°F. Small in-line spinners and jigging spoons worked through current are the standard approach.

**Weekend outlook**

No forecast weather data was included in this update — check local conditions before heading out. Stable, mild weather over the next few days would be ideal for the bass spawn; a cold front pushing through would stall shallow fish and compress the bite window significantly.

Context

Early May is traditionally one of the most productive windows on the Kansas and Arkansas rivers. Water in the mid-to-upper 60s is on schedule for this region by the first week of May — aligning with peak bass spawning, the tail end of white bass runs, and the onset of catfish pre-spawn feeding. In years with normal snowpack and spring rainfall, the Kansas River typically runs moderately elevated through late April and May, and 8,780 cfs at gauge 06892350 is consistent with that pattern — elevated, but not unusual, and far below the 20,000–25,000 cfs thresholds associated with flood conditions at most Kansas River access points.

Historically, elevated spring flows push bass and catfish away from the main channel and into backwater sloughs, oxbow lakes, and tributary confluences. Anglers who shift from mid-channel presentations to slack-water structure tend to find far more consistent action during these moderate-flow periods — a pattern that holds year after year on both rivers.

Wired 2 Fish confirms that bass spawning activity is well underway across the broader Midwest this week, consistent with what we'd expect locally at 67°F. That said, the angler-intel feeds available for this report are weighted heavily toward coastal and Great Lakes fisheries — no sources in the current dataset provide direct on-the-water reports from the Kansas or Arkansas rivers specifically. This report therefore leans on gauge data and regional seasonal norms for its core assessments rather than firsthand local testimony.

The Arkansas River, flowing through southeastern Kansas before entering Arkansas, generally warms slightly faster than the Kansas mainstem due to lower elevation and reduced snowmelt influence from the Rockies. Local tackle shops along the Arkansas corridor will have the most current species-specific timing, particularly for flathead catfish and sauger — two regionally important targets not well-represented in this week's national fishing feeds.

This report is synthesized by Hooked Fisherman from real-time NOAA buoy data, USGS stream gauges, and current reports across regional fishing blogs, captain updates, and angler forums. Source names are cited inline where they appear. Check local regulations before keeping fish. Never trust a single source for a trip decision.