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Oklahoma · Lake Texoma & Lake Eufaulafreshwater· 1h ago · Updated June 14, 2026

Bass Bite Locked In Across Oklahoma as Summer Patterns Take Hold

Rodney Copeland of Sallisaw, Oklahoma claimed the Toyota Series Presented by Phoenix Boats Southwestern Division title on the Arkansas River near Muskogee with a three-day total of 40 pounds, 13 ounces, per MLF News — a result that underscores how actively bass are feeding across eastern Oklahoma right now. USGS gauge 07331600 showed 114 cfs as of Sunday morning, reflecting light, stable late-spring flows typical for southeastern Oklahoma entering summer. Water temperature readings were not available from that gauge, though mid-June on Texoma and Eufaula typically puts surface temps in the upper 70s to low 80s°F. With the new moon arriving this weekend, low-light feeding windows at dawn and dusk should be the priority. Per Tactical Bassin (blog), bass have shifted firmly into their post-spawn summer rhythm — shallow ambush at first light, offshore structure by mid-morning. Striped bass on Texoma and largemouth across Eufaula both reward anglers willing to launch early.

Current Conditions

Moon
New Moon
Tide / flow
USGS gauge 07331600 at 114 cfs — light, stable inflow; expect clear to lightly stained conditions on both reservoirs.
Weather
Check local forecast before heading out; afternoon storms possible across Oklahoma.

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

What's Biting

Active

Striped Bass

dawn topwater near shad schools, Texoma-specific

Hot

Largemouth Bass

swing-head jig on offshore timber and structure

Active

Catfish

bottom rigs with cut shad, 10-20 feet overnight

Slow

Crappie

suspended near brush in 15-25 feet

What's Next

The new moon phase arriving overnight sets up favorable low-light feeding windows for the next two to three days. On Lake Texoma, landlocked striped bass are the species most likely to respond — they typically stack in deeper, cooler water along submerged creek channels and open-water ledges during the heat of the day, then push to the surface at dawn and dusk to chase threadfin and gizzard shad. Plan your launches accordingly: the productive topwater window on both Texoma and Eufaula generally closes by 9 a.m. as surface temps climb through June mornings.

Wired 2 Fish's summer bass breakdown is a useful framework for the days ahead: topwater walking baits and frog presentations on shallow flats and points at first light, then a deliberate shift to offshore structure once the sun climbs. Per Tactical Bassin (blog), the swing-head jig paired with a soft-plastic shad is a proven June producer — work it along the transition between submerged timber and open-water ledges to find bass that have pulled off the banks post-spawn. Crankbaits covering the 8-to-15-foot range are another reliable option for targeting fish holding on offshore humps through the summer heat.

USGS gauge 07331600 showed 114 cfs as of Sunday morning, indicating light, stable inflow. Conditions like these typically translate to clear to lightly stained water in protected coves — favorable for sight-fishing shallow targets early on Eufaula's flats, but a signal to downsize line and lean toward natural-color finesse plastics if visibility is high. Any brief afternoon thunderstorms that develop (always possible across Oklahoma in mid-June) can trigger a reactive bite along riprap banks and current seams once the rain passes — check your local forecast before launching.

Father's Day weekend will bring elevated boat traffic to both reservoirs. Anglers chasing the new-moon dawn bite should be on the water before first light to claim productive water ahead of weekend crowds. Catfish fishing will only improve as we move deeper into summer — blue and channel cats on both Eufaula and Texoma become increasingly active on warm summer nights, and bottom rigs with cut shad fished in 10 to 20 feet are the standard setup for the weeks ahead.

Context

Mid-June marks the close of the post-spawn transition and the start of the true summer pattern on both Lake Texoma and Lake Eufaula. Fish that were staged shallow through May have largely pulled off the banks, and the offshore structure bite that will define fishing through August is locking in.

Lake Texoma's landlocked striped bass fishery is the most regionally distinctive element of the mid-June picture here. Texoma sits on the Red River along the Oklahoma-Texas border and is one of the premier interior striper lakes in the country. By this point in June, striper schools typically follow the thermocline — living deep during the day and surfacing aggressively in low-light windows when shad push to the top. The new moon phase this week aligns with historically favorable conditions for those surface schooling events on Texoma; anglers who can locate and reach breaking fish quickly are often rewarded with fast action.

At Lake Eufaula — Oklahoma's largest reservoir — largemouth bass and catfish dominate the June calendar. Largemouth are catchable on deep structure through summer, and crappie, while typically past their peak spawn bite, can be found suspended near brush piles and submerged timber in 15 to 25 feet of water. Catfish fishing enters one of its stronger seasonal windows in mid-June as warming water pushes blue and channel cats into active night-feeding patterns.

The clearest regional signal this week comes from MLF News: Rodney Copeland, a local angler from Sallisaw, Oklahoma, won an Arkansas River bass tournament near Muskogee with more than 40 pounds across three days. Coverage noted that local knowledge of the river's structure was the deciding factor — a pattern that translates directly to the more complex reservoir geometry of Texoma and Eufaula, where knowing specific points, creek channels, and timber holds is the difference-maker in summer.

No direct charter, tackle-shop, or state agency reports for Texoma or Eufaula were available in this week's intel feeds. This report draws on regional signals and established Oklahoma mid-June seasonal norms rather than specific on-water testimony from these two lakes.

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.

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