Eufaula largemouth spread across multiple patterns as summer bite locks in
Lake Eufaula produced solid largemouth bass fishing across the board during the recent Tackle Warehouse Pro Circuit stop, with MLF News reporting that 'a lot of different strategies worked' — pros found fish on dock edges, shallow banks, deep creek arms, and offshore structure alike. Banks Shaw took the win running offshore targets, with wobble head jigs and shaky head worms central to the productive pattern. Tactical Bassin's June bass coverage identifies that same wobble head and shaky head combo as the go-to early-summer pairing for fish holding on deeper structure. USGS gauge 07247500 shows regional tributary flow at 60.8 cfs as of June 10, indicating low, clear water in area feeder creeks — conditions that favor finesse approaches and careful boat positioning. With the waning crescent moon in play, early-morning and late-evening windows will be the strongest bite periods. Crappie, catfish, and hybrid striped bass round out the seasonal picture, though specific catch reports for those species are unavailable this cycle.
Current Conditions
- Moon
- Waning Crescent
- Tide / flow
- Regional tributary flow at 60.8 cfs (USGS gauge 07247500) — low and clear, favorable for finesse presentations in feeder creeks.
- Weather
- Recent tournament conditions at the lake brought steady rain; 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
Largemouth Bass
wobble head jig and shaky head worm on offshore structure per MLF News
Crappie
vertical jigging deeper dock and brush-pile structure during post-spawn transition
Catfish
cut bait on current edges and gravel transitions after dark
Hybrid Striped Bass
topwater at first light near open-water main-lake points
What's Next
The largemouth bite at Lake Eufaula looks positioned to carry through the June 13–15 weekend, with post-spawn fish continuing to spread across multiple depth ranges. The scatter of viable techniques documented by MLF News at the Pro Circuit stop — shallow banks, docks, creek arms, and offshore structure all delivering — suggests this is not a single-pattern lake right now. Keep a versatile rod selection rigged rather than committing to one depth zone.
Tactically, the wobble head jig and shaky head worm combination highlighted by both MLF News tournament coverage and Tactical Bassin's June bass guide is the primary tool for bass relating to offshore structure in the 8–14 foot range on main-lake points and channel swings. As daytime temperatures push toward their June ceiling, bass will migrate incrementally deeper during the brightest midday hours and pull back toward shallower dock complexes and wood cover at first light and the final hour of daylight. Field & Stream's summer bass guide reinforces this thermal migration rhythm, pointing to medium-depth crankbaits running rocky transitions as an effective way to intercept fish moving between those sessions.
The low flow reading of 60.8 cfs at USGS gauge 07247500 points to clear water in the feeder creeks draining into Eufaula's upper arms. Clear, low-flow conditions reward downsizing: go lighter on line, longer on leader, and give yourself extra casting distance from target structure — fish in clear, pressured water spook easily with a boat overhead.
For Red River catfishing, the waning crescent moon creates dark overnight windows through the weekend. Channel cats and blue cats tend to feed most aggressively on still, dark nights along current seams and gravel transitions, making this moon phase worth planning an overnight session around. Keep an eye on the local forecast; the Pro Circuit tournament at Eufaula ran largely in rain per MLF News, and a fresh June storm front moving through could suppress the bass bite for 12–24 hours post-passage — a pre-front session Friday could outperform the weekend if a cell arrives.
Context
Lake Eufaula — Oklahoma's largest impoundment at roughly 102,500 acres — is one of the state's most consistently productive largemouth bass fisheries. In a typical June, bass have completed spawning on the lake's broad, shallow flats and are transitioning toward a summer distribution: dock complexes, offshore humps, channel ledges, and creek arms all holding fish at varying depths. The scattered bite documented by MLF News during the Pro Circuit stop fits that post-spawn dispersal pattern precisely — no single depth or cover type monopolizes the action when the fish are mid-transition.
B.A.S.S. News notes the fishery has produced multiple Elite Series victories, including a rookie-year win, confirming its reputation as a high-output tournament lake capable of performing across seasons. That depth of tournament history reflects a fishery that reliably holds quality fish and responds well to multiple presentations.
The Red River drainage to the south follows a complementary June arc: blue and channel catfish are typically most active through summer as water temperatures climb and baitfish concentrate in channel structure. Combined, the two systems give southeastern Oklahoma anglers a well-rounded freshwater calendar.
The 60.8 cfs recorded at USGS gauge 07247500 falls on the low side for mid-June in the region, consistent with a relatively dry late-spring period across southeastern Oklahoma. Low tributary flows are not unusual at this point in the season, though extended low water can concentrate fish in main-channel holes and reduce navigable access to the upper lake arms. No comparative data from state agency reports or local charter sources is available in this update; the seasonal characterization above reflects general regional norms and the direct tournament intelligence from MLF News.
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.