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Oklahoma · Lake Eufaula & Red Riverfreshwater· 20h ago · Updated June 7, 2026

Pro-circuit bass in the money at Lake Eufaula as summer bite opens

The Tackle Warehouse Pro Circuit's Stop 5 is live at Lake Eufaula right now, giving weekend anglers a rare real-time window into what's biting. Per MLF News, Alabama's Cal Lane led after two days with 37 pounds, 12 ounces — a five-fish limit caught fairly quickly each day, including a key 4-pounder late in round two despite persistent downpours. MLF News notes that "Lake Eufaula can fish tough after rainstorms," yet limits are still reaching the scales from top-tier pros, a clear signal that bass are catchable for prepared locals heading into the weekend. Tactical Bassin (blog) confirms the broader June pattern: offshore structure, wobble-head jigs, and shaky head worms are the early-summer two-bait punch anglers should lean on. Over on the Red River, USGS gauge 07247500 recorded 1,720 cfs on June 6 — a moderate, fishable flow that typically concentrates catfish along channel drops and slack-water eddies.

Current Conditions

Moon
Last Quarter
Tide / flow
Red River at 1,720 cfs per USGS gauge 07247500 as of June 6 — moderate flow, fishable conditions throughout.
Weather
Persistent rain and wet conditions soaked anglers on the water through the June 6 tournament day.

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

What's Biting

Hot

Largemouth Bass

wobble-head jig and shaky head worm on offshore structure

Active

Catfish (Flathead/Blue)

live bait on channel bends and current-break timber

Slow

Crappie

slow-rolling deep brush piles as post-spawn recovery sets in

What's Next

With the MLF Tackle Warehouse Pro Circuit championship round underway at Lake Eufaula this weekend, local anglers have a real-time read on where bass are holding. MLF News reports that the field has been finding five-fish limits on offshore structure despite two straight days of rain — a reliable signal that fish are committed to deeper transitions rather than still scattered across post-spawn flats.

The rain that soaked Day 2 (June 6) can work in your favor going forward. Post-frontal conditions often briefly push bass shallower before they settle back into offshore haunts, and the window directly after a storm clears can produce the best topwater action of the day. Flukemaster (YT) spotlights topwater lures and walking frogs as prime June producers, while TacticalBassin (YT) calls the chatterbait the top summer bladed bait for covering water quickly after weather moves through. Plan your first two hours after sunrise for shallow-water reaction presentations, then transition to offshore structure as sun pressure builds.

For committed deep-water fishing, Tactical Bassin (blog) lays out a reliable early-summer two-bait rotation: a wobble-head jig (swinging jighead) paired with a shaky head worm. These presentations excel on isolated offshore structure — main-lake points, creek channel swings, and brush piles in the 12-to-25-foot range. As daytime temperatures climb through June, bass will commit more firmly to those zones through the heat of the day.

The Last Quarter moon phase (June 7) typically correlates with stronger feeding activity in pre-dawn and late-evening windows. Plan to launch early — on the water before 6 a.m. if conditions allow — and stay through last light to capitalize on both feeding periods.

On the Red River, the 1,720 cfs reading at USGS gauge 07247500 puts the river in a moderate, manageable range. Flathead and blue catfish should be active along deeper channel bends and behind submerged timber where current breaks allow fish to hold without fighting the flow. Live bait on a Carolina rig walked along the channel edge is the proven warm-weather approach as flow stabilizes heading into mid-June.

Context

Early June places Lake Eufaula squarely in its post-spawn transition. Most largemouth females have left the beds by now, moving to deeper recovery zones, while males linger briefly near shoreline structure before eventually following them to offshore haunts. The fact that MLF Tackle Warehouse Pro Circuit competitors are posting 15-plus-pound bags through two days of competition here is consistent with — and arguably slightly better than — typical early-June production, when scattered post-spawn fish can make five-fish limits a grind even for elite anglers.

Eufaula is one of Oklahoma's premier bass destinations, historically known for quality largemouth through the full summer once fish complete the transition to main-lake structure. June kicks off that summer pattern in earnest, and the ongoing tournament is a useful real-world benchmark: competitive bag weights through two rainy days confirms that fish have made the offshore move and are holding on deeper structure right now.

The persistent rain during Day 2 (per MLF News) is not unusual for southeastern Oklahoma in early June, when overnight and afternoon thunderstorms cycle through regularly. Rain events at this stage of the season often refresh dissolved oxygen levels, temporarily reinvigorating a sluggish post-spawn bite — likely a factor in the competitive leaderboard that emerged heading into the championship round.

For the Red River, June marks the opening of prime catfishing season on this stretch. Warming water drives flathead and blue catfish into their most aggressive summer feeding windows, typically beginning in late May and peaking through July. The 1,720 cfs reading at USGS gauge 07247500 falls within a workable seasonal range; no historical baseline is available in this data pull to characterize it as above or below the long-term norm, but current flow does not suggest the high water or drought stress that would complicate access or fish location on the river.

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.