Oklahoma bass fires up for summer as Eufaula and Texoma ledges come alive
Sallisaw's Rodney Copeland claimed his first MLF win this week at the Toyota Series Presented by Phoenix Boats on the Arkansas River near Muskogee, totaling 40 pounds, 13 ounces over three days, per MLF News. Local knowledge of eddies and current breaks was the decisive factor, and the same principle applies on Lake Eufaula and Lake Texoma as the summer structure bite develops. The USGS gauge (site 07331600) logged 6,930 cfs on June 14; no water temperature reading was available. The new moon this weekend is a natural trigger for heightened feeding activity across all species. Tactical Bassin's seasonal coverage highlights crankbaits and swing-head jigs as the go-to summer presentations, noting that bass shift between shallow ambush points at dawn and deep offshore structure through the midday heat. Both Eufaula and Texoma anglers know this pattern well: first light and last light are the windows that matter most in mid-June.
Current Conditions
- Moon
- New Moon
- Tide / flow
- USGS gauge 07331600 at 6,930 cfs on June 14; elevated flow may push color into Texoma upper arms, favor mid-lake clarity.
- 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
Largemouth Bass
swing-head jigs and deep crankbaits on offshore ledges
Striped Bass
topwater at dawn on main-lake points, live shad or jigging spoons mid-morning
White Bass
jigging spoons near shad schools on open water
Catfish
cut bait in deep creek channels through summer heat
What's Next
**The next 48 to 72 hours**
With the new moon this weekend, feeding windows will compress around low-light periods. Target the first hour after sunrise and the last 90 minutes before dark on both lakes. Midday heat will push fish deeper, making offshore ledges, submerged creek channels, and standing timber the places to commit time once the sun is high.
Tactical Bassin's June coverage makes the two-bait case clearly: pair a swing-head wobble jig worked along the bottom for quality bites with a shaky-head worm for reaction strikes when bass are being selective. This combination drew consistent catches on offshore structure in their early summer footage, and it translates well to Eufaula's creek-channel ledges and Texoma's main-lake points. For anglers who want to cover water, Wired 2 Fish's summer bass guide recommends matching crankbait depth to where fish are holding, running shallow squarebills on transitional banks at first light before stepping down to medium and deep-diving cranks as the sun climbs.
**Stripers on Texoma**
Texoma's landlocked striped bass are likely shadowing shad schools on wind-blown main-lake banks and primary points through mid-June. No direct captain or local shop reports are available this cycle, but typical June patterns put stripers on topwater early in low-light conditions before they transition to suspended presentations once the surface warms. Live shad or jigging spoons near schools marked on electronics are the standard approach.
**Weekend planning**
Flow on the gauge feeding the Texoma system was 6,930 cfs as of June 14. Elevated inflow can push color into the upper lake arms, so plan toward mid-lake or main-lake structure where water clarity tends to hold better. Target wind-blown points, which concentrate bait and give bass a current break to ambush from. Check local conditions before committing to a specific area, as visibility can vary significantly between the upper arms and the main pool.
Context
Mid-June is when Oklahoma's major reservoirs complete their seasonal reset from the spawn and lock into summer patterns. Largemouth bass on both Eufaula and Texoma are typically done recovering from the spawn by the second week of June and have shifted to offshore structure, submerged timber, and ledge systems where shad concentrate in warming water. This is the period when daytime bites get tougher and the angler who commits to early mornings and evening sessions catches the most fish.
On Lake Eufaula, one of Oklahoma's largest impoundments, mid-June historically marks the start of the most predictable deep-bite window of the summer, as bass stack on the 15-to-25-foot ledges along the Canadian River channel. On Lake Texoma, the defining mid-June story is usually the striped bass fishery: landlocked stripers school actively in June as shad move in response to warming surface temps, making Texoma one of the few freshwater destinations in the region where reliable topwater striper action is on the menu at first light.
The MLF Toyota Series result this week on the Arkansas River near Muskogee, per MLF News, offers a useful regional calibration point. Copeland's winning 40-pound, 13-ounce total across three days confirms that bass in eastern Oklahoma are feeding actively and that local expertise in reading current and structure is the decisive edge in river and reservoir environments alike. No direct year-over-year comparisons for these two specific lakes are available from citable sources this cycle, but the tournament result and broader summer-pattern indicators suggest 2026 is tracking a normal mid-June cadence for the region. Anglers should consult Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation for any current regulation updates before heading out.
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.