Weekly Fishing Report
Arkansas Game and Fish Commission
Randy Zellers (501)223-6406, e-mail:
rdzellers@agfc.state.ar.us
|
| |
| This is the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission’s fishing report for
February 13, 2008. If there is a body of water you
would like included in this report, please call or e-mail us with
information on possible sources for that lake or river. |
| |
| Fishing Tip: Wind
can make finding fish with slow-moving, winter lures difficult. Here’s
some advice from Kevin Van Dam on tackling the winter wind:
Many times, windy areas hold the warmest available water.
Baitfish will usually be found there, and larger predators are going
to be there, too. Run a windy bank using your graph or depth finder to
see where baitfish are congregated. Try slow trolling a spinnerbait,
or use a crankbait with a tight wobble to locate the fish. After you
catch a few, you can switch to a jig n’ pig and fish more slowly.
For
more great tips, visit the
Bass Pro Shops Outdoor Library. |
| |
Arkansas River Levels: According to the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers, as of Tuesday the Arkansas River stages are:
Trimble Lock and Dam (Lock and Dam 13): Headwater –
391.91 feet, Tailwater – 372.68 feet, Flow – 16,634 cubic feet per
second
Ozark Lock and Dam (Lock and Dam 12): Headwater –
371.59 feet, Tailwater – 340.00 feet
Dardanelle Lock and Dam (Lock and Dam 10): Headwater
– 337.71 feet, Tailwater – 286.78 feet
Ormond Lock and Dam (Lock and Dam 9): Headwater –
285.55 feet, Tailwater – 266.03 feet, Flow – 21,450 cubic feet per
second
Toad Suck Lock and Dam (Lock and Dam 8): Headwater –
265.29 feet, Tailwater – 251.39 feet
Murray Lock and Dam (Lock and Dam 7): Headwater –
249.14 feet, Tailwater – 231.47 feet, Flow – 28,380 cubic feet per
second
Terry Lock and Dam (Lock and Dam 6): Headwater –
231.28 feet, Tailwater – 213.27 feet, Flow – 22,531 cubic feet per
second
Sanders Lock and Dam (Lock and Dam 4): Headwater –
196.15 feet, Tailwater – 183.02 feet
Hardin Lock and Dam (Lock and Dam 3): Headwater –
182.14 feet, Tailwater – 163.24 feet
Mills Dam (Dam 2): Headwater – 162.10 feet, Tailwater
– 122.49 feet, Flow – 11,399 cubic feet per second
White River Levels: According to the U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers, as of Wednesday the White River stages are:
3.3 feet at Calico Rock (flood stage – 19 feet)
6.5 feet at Batesville (flood stage – 15 feet)
1.9 feet at Newport (flood stage – 26 feet)
14.4 feet at Augusta (flood stage – 26 feet)
2.9 feet at Georgetown (flood stage – 21 feet)
13.8 feet at Clarendon (flood stage – 26 feet) |
| |
CENTRAL ARKANSAS
|
|
Lake Conway: Bates Field and Stream (501-470-1846)
said the water is clear and a little high. Crappie are biting well on
minnows and white/chartreuse jigs. A few bass have been caught.
Little Red River:Lindsey's
Resort (501-302-3139) said the water is clear and low with little
generation in the mornings. Trout are still biting well on wax worms
with marshmallows and nightcrawlers.
Jed Hollan at the
Little Red Fly Shop said the Greers Ferry Power House is following
the same protocol as previous weeks. There have been no weekend water
releases for four weeks. Monday through Friday, releases have been
from 7-11 a.m. and 5-8 p.m. Wading possibilities are somewhat limited.
One good plan is to fish at Winkley Shoal from first light until the
high water arrives around 9:30-10 a.m. and drive to Libby Shoal for an
additional hour of fishing until the fast water hits there. After
lunch you can finish the day at JFK Park. The incredible midge hatches
have not diminished. Midges were hatching in the Wal-Mart parking lot
the other day, for Pete's sake. We are also seeing a few caddis flies
and black gnats coming off. Dry flies that are attracting trout
include a midge (size 22, cream or black), Adams (sizes 18-20) and
caddis (sizes 18-20, tan). Below the surface, productive flies
include sow bugs (sizes 14-16, peacock, UV tan or light gray), zebra
midges (sizes 16-22, red, copper or black), red butt (sizes 14-16),
San Juan worms (sizes 16-18) and woolly buggers (sizes 10-12, olive or
black).
Greers Ferry: As of Tuesday, the U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers reports the lake’s elevation at 459.74 feet MSL.
Tommy Cauley of Fish Finder Guide Service said the surface
temperature is 38-45 degrees. The fishing is tough to say the least.
Walleye are poor from all the stained water coming into the creeks.
The only success has been on a jighead tipped with a minnow. Hybrids
and whites are biting some, but they are slow. Spoons, in-line
spinners and swim baits may catch a few. The bass fishing is slow. A
few have been caught on jighead worms, live minnows and on jerk baits
worked with 15- to 20-second pauses between jerks.
Shiloh Marina said water conditions are normal. Walleye are fair on
minnows.
Harris Brake Lake:Coffee
Creek Landing (501-889-2745) said water conditions are normal and
all species have been slow.
Lake Overcup: Lakeview Landing (501-354-1470) said
water conditions are normal. A few crappie have been caught on white
stingers.
Overcup Landing (501-354-9007) said water conditions are normal.
All fishing is fair.
Brewer Lake:Overcup
Landing (501-354-9007) said water conditions are normal. All
fishing is fair.
Lake Maumelle: Hatchet Jack’s Sport Shop said
crappie are biting well in 18 to 20 feet of water on minnows. All
other species are slow.
Lake Valencia: Hatchet Jack’s Sport Shop said
trout are being caught on nightcrawlers.
Sunset Lake: Turbyfill’s Outdoor Sports
(501-315-3061) said water conditions are normal. Crappie fishing is
fair on Tennessee shad grubs. Bass are fair on crawdad crank baits.
Saline River Access in Benton: Turbyfill’s Outdoor
Sports (501-315-3061) said the water is high and all species are slow.
Arkansas River at Morrilton: Charley’s Hidden
Harbor in Oppelo said water temperature is in the low 50s. Drum
fishing is excellent on black/blue jigs at the base of jetties.
Kentucky bass are doing well on jigs in 15 to 20 feet of water.
Catfish are biting well in deep holes on whole shad.
Arkansas River in Little Rock: Vince Miller from
Fish ‘N Stuff said fishing has been on the slow side lately.
Little Maumelle River: River Valley Bait
(501-868-3279) said water conditions are normal. Crappie are biting
well in 3-10 feet of water on minnows and assorted jigs. Catfish are
biting well on live and prepared bait.
Hatchet Jack’s Sport Shop said crappie are fair on yo-yos baited
with minnows. Catfish are fair on live sunfish and cut bait.
Murray Lock and Dam: Hatchet Jack’s Sport Shop
said catfish are the best thing going on sunfish and shad fillets.
Palarm Creek: Hatchet Jack’s Sport Shop said
crappie fishing is fair on live pink minnows. Catfish are fair on
trotlines baited with cut bait.
Terry Lock and Dam: McSwain Sports Center
(501-945-2471) said fishing is slow for all species.
Clear Lake: McSwain Sports Center (501-945-2471)
said the water is clear and a little low. Crappie are being caught
around brush in 6 feet of water on pink minnows and red/chartreuse
jigs. |
| |
NORTH ARKANSAS
|
|
White River:
Mountain River Fly Shop said the cold weather should mean plenty
of water coming through the dam, which means the Upper End of the
river will be host to a fair number of boats. Try to run up behind
other fly fishers, don’t drive over their drift, get in line for a
drift and don’t cut in. Then everyone can have some fun. Fishing has
been very good on the White. The trout are definitely hungry. Red
White Tails have been very popular, egg patterns continue to do well,
particularly the Flashtail Mini Eggs and Unreal Eggs. Red Head Olive
Woolly Buggers are working extremely well also.
Gaston’s White River Resort said trout anglers have seen many
water conditions lately. Anytime between 5 a.m. and 6 a.m., two to
four units are generating. Around 9 a.m. until noon, the dam will shut
down and the water level drops. However, the trout are still feeding
during low water periods. The bulbous bivisible is working well for
fly-fishermen where creeks run into the river. We also recommend the
partridge and orange soft hackle, gold ribbed hare’s ear, copper john,
copper zebra midge, Y2K bug, the sow bug and the draggin’ egg. During
high water, try peach or white egg patterns, white and pink micro jigs
and San Juan worms. Nightcrawlers are doing well for the bait anglers
when the water is low. Yellow Power Bait has also been effective. Some
other lures being used are No. 5 silver or gold floating Rapalas and
Smithwick blue-backed Rogues. Any minnow-shaped lure has potential.
Sportsman’s White River Resort said water conditions are normal
with heavy generation daily. Trout are biting very well on Power Bait
and brown or white jigs.
McLellan’s
Fly Shop said water levels have been squirrelly lately, but most
days you can find low water if you know when they've open and shut the
gates, and you know your river mileages. Best flies have been tan or
copper scuds, sow bugs, golden unreal eggs, fluorescent orange
flash-tail mini-eggs, micro mayflies, triple-B flashbacks, and various
zebra midges.
Bull Shoals Lake: As of Tuesday, the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers reports the lake’s elevation at 652.13 feet MSL.
Lake Norfork: As of Tuesday, the U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers reports the lake’s elevation at 548.71 feet MSL.
Cranfield Junction Bait and Tackle (870-492-5141) had no report.
101 Grocery and Bait said the surface water temperature is in the
low 40s. Live bait trolled slowly under planer boards has worked well
on stripers, but the bite is over by 8 a.m. The fish are holding in
less than 50 feet of water. Walleye fishing has been slow, but jigging
spoons and ice fishing jigs are doing a good job for some. Just
remember do it slow. Crappie fishing has been fair using small minnows
and jigs. White bass have been fair using jigs. Largemouth and
smallmouth bass have been fair on deep-diving crankbaits and jigs.
Norfork Tailwater: Gene’s Trout Dock
(870-499-5381) said the water is clear and low with generation in the
mornings. Trout fishing has been good on Power Bait and corn.
Mountain River Fly Shop said most reports off Norfork continue to
be fair at best, with many smaller fish being caught. Wading was wide
open this week with the warmer weather, but generation started
yesterday with the cold front pushing through.
Small scuds (olive, gray and tan), McLellan’s hunchback, Davys sow
bug (gray) and small Kaufmann’s (brown or olive) have been doing well.
Zebras and super midges have been productive, as well as WD40s.
John Berry of Berry Brothers Guides said the generation pattern on
the Norfork has been a mixed bag. We had a few days with no generation
and some days with a brief period of heavy generation. This has
created excellent wading conditions every day.
The Norfork has fished a bit better this week. There have been some
reliable midge hatches in the afternoon. Anglers have done the best
with Norfork beadheads in olive (size 18), and zebra midges in black
with silver wire and silver beads and brown with copper wire and
copper beads. When the fish are keying in on the midge emergers in the
film, Dan’s turkey tail emerger (size 22) have been killer. To change
things up, try large San Juan worms in red and worm brown and Y2Ks.
They frequently tempt large trout. Dry Run Creek, as always, has been
the place to take the kids fishing. The warm weekend drew out a few
youngsters. Those few that showed up did exceptionally well. The hot
fly was a size 14 sow bug. Other effective flies were olive woolly
buggers and San Juan worms. Be sure and use at least 4X tippet and
carefully pinch down those barbs.
McLellan’s Fly Shop said Norfork has run water for a couple hours
per day. Try eggs and small olive scuds, and be sure to bring
different midge pupae and emergers. Definitely bring BWO dries and
emergers (spundun baetis, bat-wing emerger, and jujubaetis). |
| |
NORTHWEST ARKANSAS
|
|
Beaver Lake: As of Tuesday, the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers reports the lake’s elevation at 1,114.19 feet MSL.
JT’s Crappie Guide Service (479-640-3980) said bass can be caught
by using suspending jerk baits in bone or clown colors fished off
points in the Clifty area. The river arms have produced a few bass on
crawdad-colored jigs fished slowly along steep chunk rock banks.
Crappie have been biting well up either river arm. Sidewalk hole, Blue
Springs and Friendship Creek are all hot spots. Warm sunny days have
been the best. Southern Pro tubes in red/chartreuse or
black/chartreuse and minnows have been working best fished along
timber or brush. White bass remain slow, but are biting along the deep
side of main-lake points. Small jigging spoons should do the trick.
Reports of striper action have been coming from Prairie Creek all the
way to Point 12. Umbrella rigs with white grubs should do the trick
trolled slowly behind the boat. Catfish are still biting along bluff
lines. Cut shad and liver have worked well.
Southtown Sporting Goods (479-443-7148) reported that water
conditions are normal. Crappie are biting well around brush on minnows
and jigs. Bass are fair on large spinnerbaits and crankbaits. Stripers
are being caught on large minnows.
Beaver Tailwater:
McLellan’s Fly Shop said Beaver Tailwater remains low most days
despite the cold weather. As always this time of year, carry midge
pupae in various colors and also tiny cream adults. There has been
some fantastic BWO action lately, so be sure to have some spundun
baetis or bat-wing emergers with you. Some big brown trout have been
landed recently on streamers; throw as big a fly as your rod will
allow – Sheila sculpins, ziwis or sculpzillas.
Ken Richards at Justfishinguides said trout are biting on midges.
Black and silver zebra midges working best. Olive/gold and gray/blue
midge pupae are working also. Suspend your fly just above the bottom.
A slight breeze enhances the action of these flies and the bite seems
to be better.
Lake SWEPCO:JT’s
Crappie Guide Service (479-640-3980) said bass are biting well all
over the lake on live minnows. A crawdad-pattern jig has also been
working. On calm mornings try fishing top-water with a pearl-colored
soft jerk bait.
Lake Fayetteville: Lake Fayetteville Boat Dock
(479-444-3476) said not many anglers are available for a report.
Lake Sequoyah: Lake Sequoyah Boat Dock
(479-444-3475) had no report.
Sugarloaf Lake: Midland Minimart (479-639-9467)
said few anglers have been on the water. No report. |
| |
NORTHEAST ARKANSAS
|
|
CrownLake:Boxhound
Marina (870-670-4496) said water conditions are normal. Crappie
fishing is fair on minnows. Bass are biting well on jigs and
Texas-rigged lizards.
Lake Frierson:Lake
Frierson State Park said few anglers are on the water. No report.
Eleven-PointRiver:
Woody’s Canoe Rental and Campground (870-892-9732) had no report.
SpringRiver:
www.marksflyshop.com
said mayfly and caddis hatches continue to grow. Stable weather will
move in soon along with consistent fishing results. |
| |
SOUTHEAST ARKANSAS
|
|
Lake Chicot: Bass Tracker Marine (870-265-5374)
reported that water conditions are normal. Bream are excellent on wax
worms. Crappie are biting well around the docks on minnows and jigs. A
few bass are being caught on spinnerbaits. Catfishing is successful on
about any kind of bait.
Grand Lake: Koenig Bass Tracker Marine
(870-265-5374) said water conditions are normal. Crappie are biting
well on minnows and jigs. All other species are fair. |
| |
SOUTHWEST ARKANSAS
|
|
Millwood Lake: As of Tuesday, the U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers reports the lake’s elevation at 256.87 feet MSL.
Millwood Lake Guide Service said main lake and Little River
surface temperature is 45 to 50 degrees, depending on location and
time of day. Main lake clarity and visibility is at 3-5 inches with
2-5 inch visibility in Little River. Current is 3,404 cubic feet per
second. Both ramps at Paraloma, both ramps at Cotton Shed, the
Saratoga ramp closest to the dike, and both ramps at Beards Bluff are
unusable because of the drawdown. Winter drawdown has revealed many
submerged objects at or just within inches of pool surface in boat
lanes and Little River. Use extreme caution in navigation, many of
the boat lanes during winter pool drawdown are now only 3-10 inches in
overall depth in various places. Largemouth bass are biting well
along Little River and her oxbows, with the best bites still during
the heat of the day. Bass are relating to structure in Little
River's deeper water, and are consistent over the past few
weeks. There is not much reason to leave the river in search of
bass. Pitching Texas-rigged Lil’ Critter Craws, 4" Southern Pro
Flipping Tubes, Hog Assassins and Yum Wooly Bugs in Green Pumpkin,
Watermelon/Red and Blackberry, or scumpernong-colored lizards to
stumps close to deep water are drawing some strong largemouths up to 6
pounds each. Wacky-rigged Twitch Assassins and Charm Assassins, Senkos
and Salty Rat Tails are taking some decent keeper
bass. Rat-L-Traps, in the ¾-oz. or 1-oz. size, fished slower
and deflecting on stumps along Little River are still taking keeper
bass in 8-9 feet of water. The most productive colors are Red Shad,
Red Chrome and Honey Bee. Stumps, cypress knees, and laydowns are the
key during the day. Any points with stumps along Little River,
between 10-15 feet deep seem to be the most consistent for crankbait
bites. Bomber model As and Rebel Deep Wee R crankbaits in Bayou
Bengal, Firetiger, or Secret Weapon colors are finding a few keepers.
Schools of white bass are holding in very deep water off the river
(18-28 feet), and hitting jigging spoons up Little River between
Horseshoe Lake and White Cliff. Crappie almost completely shut down
this week with the influx of fresh, muddy water. Channel catfish
from 3-8 pounds are good on Catfish Charlie, cut baits or cut
shad on trotlines and yo-yo's along the river and in oxbows hung from
cypress trees in 10-15 feet water.
Local angler Dane Goodwin said the whites are beginning to get
good. The water is extremely low and launching a boat in Little River
at the Hwy. 59 landing is treacherous.
Lake Columbia: Steve's Marine (870-234-2222) said
water conditions are normal. Bream are fair on wax worms. Crappie are
biting well on jigs and shiners.
Lake Erling: Steve's Marine (870-234-2222) said
water conditions are normal. Crappie are biting well on minnows and
jigs. Catfish are fair on cut bait.
White Oak Lake:White
Oak Lake State Park said fishing has been slow for catfish and
bass. Crappie are biting both live and artificial baits. The lake is
extremely clear but lake levels are stable.
Lake Greeson: As of Tuesday, the U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers reports the lake’s elevation at 542.25 feet MSL.
Lakeside Grocery reported bass are biting well in 8 to 10 feet of
water on crankbaits.
Little Missouri River:Jeff
Guerin of Little Missouri Fly Fishing said
DeGray Lake: As of Tuesday, the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers reports the lake’s elevation at 401.26 feet MSL.
DeGray One Stop (501-865-3511) reported that water conditions are
about normal. Bream are being caught in 20 to 30 feet of water around
points on red wigglers and nightcrawlers. Crappie fishing is good in
15 to 25 feet of water around brush and grassy points on jigs and live
bait. Black and Kentucky bass are being caught on crankbaits and jigs
with pork trailers. Catfish are slow, but can be caught in deeper
water on live bait. |
| |
WEST-CENTRAL ARKANSAS
|
|
Lake Dardanelle: Bill’s Bait and Tackle
(479-754-6354) reported that the water is a little muddy and at normal
level. Bream are fair on worms. Crappie are biting well on minnows and
jigs. Bass are fair around shorelines on top-water lures. Black bass
are being caught on spoons and jigs. Catfish are fair on punch bait
and shad.
Blue Mountain Lake: As of Tuesday, the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers reports the lake’s elevation at 387.38 feet MSL.
CNC’s End of the Line (479-947-2398) said water conditions are
normal. Bream are fair on crickets. Crappie are biting well on minnows
and jigs. A few catfish are being caught on liver.
Ozark Pool: Lakeside Food Mart (479-667-5155) said
the water is a little dingy and at a normal level. Crappie can be
caught deep on minnows and jigs. White bass are fair on minnows.
Catfish are fair on cut bait.
Lake Ouachita: As of Tuesday, the U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers reports the lake’s elevation was 573.13 feet MSL.
Lake Ouachita State Park reports that fishing has picked up. Water
temperature is in the high 40s. Stripers are being caught on top-water
lures such as Spook Jrs., spooning with CC spoons and trolling with
crankbaits. Bass fishing is fair on finesse worms and spinnerbaits
near structure. A few bream and crappie can be found in various areas.
Vince Miller from
Fish ‘N Stuff said last weekend’s tournament at Lake Ouachita was
very successful. Anglers did well on jigs, Rat-L-Traps and crankbaits
around main-lake points.
Mountain Harbor Resort said the water is clear and at 42-48
degrees. Largemouth bass are good and can be caught with Deep Little
N’s and lipless crankbaits on main-lake points and secondary points.
Walleye are slow on spoons over humps and main-lake points with brush.
Stripers are very good on live brood minnows and gizzard shad. Smoke
or pearl-colored grubs are working as well. Crappie are good and being
caught over grass and brush. Try large moss flats and brush in water
15 to 25 feet deep.
Larry Hurley from
Poorman’s Guide Service said bass fishing has been good on deep
trees near the edges of drop-offs. Working a black/blue or green
pumpkin ½ to 3/4-oz. jig through treetops has produced well. Large
Rat-L-Traps and ¾-oz. shad-colored spinnerbaits worked slowly around
the timber are also picking up some fish.
Lake Catherine: Shane Goodner, owner of
Catch’em All Guide Service, reports that rainbow trout fishing
below Carpenter Dam remains excellent. Water temperature is holding at
45 degrees in the tailrace, but drops as much as 5 degrees as you
approach the dam. Guided trips are the safest way to navigate the area
and are still catching more than 50 fish an outing with numbers over
100 not unusual. Bank fishermen are quickly recording limits of trout
on corn and redworms floated under a bobber. Also these baits can be
fished on the bottom with marshmallows to float them toward the
surface. Spin fishermen are catching larger trout by casting Rooster
Tails and Super Dupers during generation. Artificial baits are highly
effective when the turbines are turning as the trout are feeding
heavily on threadfin shad. When generation stops fishermen should
concentrate on areas with some visible current. Fly fishermen always
stick to this technique and consistently catch fish. Woolly buggers,
micro-jigs and San Juan worms fished in current will all draw strikes
regardless of weather conditions. Striper and hybrid activity has been
adversely effected by the on and off winter conditions but some fish
have been caught on 1"4-oz. jigs in the main river channel below the
bridge. The walleye run has begun as numbers of male walleye arrive to
prepare for females.
Lake Hamilton: Larry Hurley from
Poorman’s Guide Service said fishing good with some decent fish
being caught on crayfish-colored crankbaits in 10-15 feet of water
around brush piles. Vertically jigging a ½-oz. spoon will catch a
variety of fish in 20-30 feet of water. Crappie, walleye, Kentucky
bass, white bass and yellow bass are all gathered up together on
mid-lake humps and ridges.
Lake Hinkle: Bill's Bait Shop (479-637-4719) said
the water is murky and a little high. Crappie fishing is good in 12 to
14 feet of water on minnows. Bass are biting well on crankbaits.
Lake Atkins: Lucky Landing (479-641-7615) said the
water is very muddy since the tornado hit, and fishing has been slow. |
| |
SOUTH-CENTRAL ARKANSAS
|
| Moro Bay: Moro
Bay State Park said the water is clear and dropping. Crappie can
be caught around docks in the bay on minnows and jigs. |
| |
EAST ARKANSAS
|
| Arkansas River (Pine Bluff): River City Sporting
Goods (870-534-8303) said water conditions are normal. Bream are
biting well on wax worms and crickets. Crappie fishing is good on
minnows and jigs. Bass are fair on crankbaits and top-water lures.
Catfish can be caught on worms, nightcrawlers and cut shad.
White River: Triangle Sports (870-793-7122) had no
report.
Maddox Bay: Maddox Bay Landing (870-462-8317) had
no report.
Bear Creek Lake: Arkansas Outdoors (870-295-4240)
reported that water conditions are normal. No fishing report.
Horseshoe Lake: Local angler Clyde Gregory said
water conditions are excellent. Bream fishing is good in shallow water
on worms and crickets. Crappie are being caught around piers on
minnows and jigs. Catfish are good on cut bait and stink bait. |
Click Here To Return To The
Previous Page |