Fishing report

Body

BROWNWOOD

Water lightly stained; 55 degrees; 1.08 feet low. Largemouth bass are good with perch like crankbaits, brown or green Texas-rigged plastic worms, chartreuse bladed spinners, and shaky head jigs near timber, rocky shorelines, and docks. Crappie are good on minnows and jigs in brush piles and near bridge pilings. White bass and hybrids are good on slabs, swimbaits, and live bait along the main lake channels, humps, and ridges. Look for birds diving over feeding schools of white bass. Catfish are good on shrimp, chicken liver, and live bait.

GRANBURY

Water lightly stained; 62 degrees; 0.43 feet low. Granbury water temperatures are around the middle 60’s. Striped bass and sand bass are fair to good under the birds from Decordova to near downtown. Black bass action is good on top water early and soft plastics later in the day. Black bass up to six-pounds are possible near main lake points and near creek channel entrances. Black bass in the river near Tin-Top continue to be fair to good near laydowns on small crankbaits. Crappies are excellent near submerged structure on the upper ends on small minnows and small jigs. Catfish of all species are also excellent on cut shad fished on feeding flats from Indian harbor to the Peninsula. Report by Michael Acosta, Unfair Advantage Charters.

PROCTOR

Water clear; 53 degrees; 1.42 feet low. Fishing continues to be slow on the lake as we head into the holiday weekend. White bass and hybrid stripers are slow on slabs. Black bass are slow. Crappie are slow at Copperas Creek and the dam. Catfish are slow drifting in 15-20 feet of water.

WEATHERFORD

Water lightly stained; 50 degrees; 2.56 feet low. Largemouth bass are fair on swimbaits, flukes, drop shots, shaky head jigs, and diving crankbaits near fallen timber and rocky shorelines. White bass are good on slabs, swimbaits, and live bait. Crappie are fair on minnows around docks, creeks, and submerged cover. Catfish are good on chicken liver, live, and cut bait.

Lake Proctor

Elevation Level 1160.52 ft

Conservation Level 1162.0 ft