Good morning, y’all. This is Artificial Lure with your Lake Austin fishing report for Wednesday, October 29th, 2025. We’ve got brisk fall air settling in across Central Texas—finally putting a cool edge on those mornings and giving the bass a little jolt.
Sunrise came right at 6:55 AM and we’ll see sunset at 6:30 PM, giving you over eleven and a half hours of daylight to wet a line. Weather-wise, expect a mild start today in the upper 50s climbing into the mid-70s by afternoon. Light winds out of the north-northeast should keep boat and kayak traffic pleasant, and cloud cover will likely linger on and off, making it prime time to sneak up on wary fish.
We’re in the early waxing crescent moon right now, with only 10% illumination, and that’s nudging fish activity windows into those classic dawn and dusk periods. Solunar tables for the Austin area say the major bite is hitting from about 2:57 to 4:57 PM, so be sure to plan your outing to overlap with those hours. Minor bite windows fall around 8:00 to 9:00 AM and again from 9:16 to 10:16 PM—early and late slots worth working if your schedule allows.
Lake Austin’s water is running clear with healthy levels despite some drawdown upstream, and the fall transition is in full swing. Largemouth bass have started to push shallow chasing schools of threadfin shad, which means they’re popping up around docks, riprap, and grass edges. According to local guides and recent angler reports, the top baits right now are chrome or white lipless crankbaits, shad-patterned soft plastic swimbaits, and green pumpkin finesse jigs—especially around deeper dock pilings and along rocky banks.
Some folks fishing before work this week found bass holding on bluff walls on the lower lake, with crankbaits and underspin rigs getting strikes, especially in the 4- to 8-foot depth zones. If you prefer soft plastics, a shaky head with a watermelon red trick worm worked slowly through submerged timber is still drawing bites.
Striped and hybrid bass activity has picked up just uptick below Mansfield Dam, especially during those late evening surges. Topwater walking baits or spoons retrieved quickly through surfacing shad schools are producing some real rod-benders. Catfish remain dependable; most anglers are using cut shad or chicken liver, setting lines around deep holes on the river bends near Emma Long Park.
Recent catches highlight a solid mix of quality—numbers are up with several bass in the 3- to 6-pound range coming boat-side this past weekend, and a couple of local sticks even reported an 8.1-pound largemouth landed near Hula Hut on a swimbait just after first light.
For folks looking for hot spots, check out the mouth of Bull Creek where bait is stacked up and bass are actively feeding on the drop-offs. Further south, the grass beds by Mary Quinlan Park have also been a consistent producer, particularly in the evenings as the sun drops behind those big pecans.
Best advice: Match the hatch—go shad colors, move baits at a quick clip until you find ‘em, then slow down with a jig or stickworm for the bigger girls. Bonus tip: If you get a cloudy afternoon, tie on a black and blue chatterbait and work it along the outside grass lines.
That wraps today’s Lake Austin report. Thanks for tuning in and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss an update.
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