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AGFC Commissioner Meeting Notice 15 Apr 2025, 2:53 pm

April 15, 2025

You are hereby notified that Commissioners of the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission will meet on the following date and times to consider any business that may be brought before the Commission. Unless otherwise stated, meetings will be held at the AGFC offices, 2 Natural Resources Dr. in Little Rock. Click here to view the Thursday commission meeting online.

Tuesday, April 15

4 p.m.

Attending the Arkansas Legislative Sportsmen’s Caucus Capitol Clay Shoot at the Arkansas  Game and Fish Foundation Jacksonville Shooting Sports Complex, 2800 Graham Road in  Jacksonville.

Wednesday, April 16

9 a.m.

Call to order in the AGFC Director’s Conference Room.

Regulations Committee meeting.

 Research Review Committee meeting.

Intergovernmental Relations Committee meeting.

Budget Committee meeting.

Property Management Committee meeting.

Personnel/Governance Committee meeting.

2 p.m.

Director interviews at Kirkpatrick Plaza, 10800 Financial Centre Parkway, Suite 248 in Little Rock.

6 p.m.

Dinner at Topgolf Little Rock, 5 Top Golf Way in Little Rock.

Thursday, April 17

8 a.m.

Call to order in the AGFC Auditorium
Prayer and Pledge of Allegiance
Approval of agenda
Approval of March 20 and 28, 2025 commission meeting notes

AGFC staff presentations.
Lake Ouachita Largemouth Bass Genetics Project – Chris Middaugh

Interim director’s report

Committee meeting reports

Commission items
Federal migratory bird season framework adjustments – Luke Naylor
Budget increase for statewide disaster response – Emily Shumate
Stolen asset – Emily Shumate
Revised AGFC Policy HR-2-04 – Jana Hiland

New business

Old business

Executive session (if necessary)

Adjournment

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If you need assistance to participate in this public meeting due to a disability as defined under the Americans with Disabilities Act, please contact AGFC’s ADA Coordinator in Human Resources at 501-382-3813 prior to the scheduled meeting to request an accommodation. Every reasonable effort will be made to meet your request.

The post AGFC Commissioner Meeting Notice appeared first on Arkansas Game & Fish Commission.

Scars from March tornadoes unattractive, not total loss for wildlife  15 Apr 2025, 2:09 pm

HARDY — The twin EF4 tornadoes that ripped through portions of northeastern Arkansas on March 14 will leave a lasting impression on one of the more popular local hunting destinations. Unlike the devastation inflicted on homes and local businesses, the storm’s result may be a bit of a mixed bag regarding habitat management on the area.

Habitat biologists with the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission estimate roughly 980 forested acres of the 13,939-acre Harold E. Alexander Wildlife Management Area saw damage from winds in excess of 190 miles per hour during the storm. Trees were uprooted and blown over, blocking roads and removing mast-producing oaks and other tree species beneficial to wildlife.

AGFC Habitat Biologist Tucker Collins has spent the last few weeks mapping the damaged area on the ground and using drones.

“The level of damage varies throughout the WMA, but it’s not total devastation,” Collins said. “Even the corner of Rock Creek Road and River Road, where some of the heaviest damage can be seen, was not a total loss as there are still a fair number of trees standing.”

AGFC Habitat Program Coordinator Rob Willey says plans are underway to perform salvage operations to help clear windthrown trees and recover some of the value of the trees lost.

“What little money is generated from the salvage operation is required to go right back into habitat management in the AGFC’s WMA system,” Willey said. “The operation will also increase safety and access on the areas affected, removing damaged trees.”

The damage isn’t all bad news, according to Collins. Many areas damaged by the storm needed thinning to open the forest canopy and let sunlight penetrate to the forest floor, stimulating the growth of grasses and seed-producing plants attractive to wildlife.

“I think overall the storm probably moved most of what it hit into what is considered desired forest conditions for that type,” Collins said. “Some areas that were already at desired conditions regarding forest density may be below ideal conditions, but that isn’t necessarily a bad thing either. You really want some stands below those desired conditions, some at desired conditions and some growing out of those desired conditions to create the best matrix of habitat possible for multiple species.

“The main issue is the additional rush the storm causes to find and work with contractors for the salvage cut before the trees are not worth the contractor’s effort to recover,” Collins said. “Hunters going out for turkey season may also find these areas more difficult to access in the short term as well.”

AGFC Turkey Program Coordinator David Moscicki says storms like this can have some short-term effects on turkey populations in the immediate area.

“I was able to analyze the effects of hurricanes on wild turkey populations during my graduate research for North Carolina State University,” Moscicki said. “We were monitoring turkeys with GPS and radio transmitters in southeast Texas when Hurricane Harvey rolled through the area in 2017. We lost about 8 percent of the tagged birds to weather-related causes. We also analyzed the effects of Hurricane Matthew, a storm in 2016 that coincided with another research project that was monitoring turkeys in South Carolina with GPS transmitters and saw a 5 percent loss in the tagged birds from that storm.

“Tornadoes may be more concentrated, but it’s just one more danger turkeys face in the woods,” Moscicki said. “Between nest predators, larger predators, cold and wet springs, and the constant struggle to find suitable habitat, the life of a turkey is hard, so we must do everything we can to coordinate our hunting seasons and habitat management to give them the best chance to thrive.”

 

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CUTLINES:

STORM DAMAGE
Tornadoes that ripped through Arkansas in mid-March toppled many mature hardwood trees on Harold E. Alexander Spring River Wildlife Management Area in Northeast Arkansas. AGFC photo courtesy Tucker Collins. 

MAP
AGFC Habitat Biologist Tucker Collins has mapped the damage on foot and by using drones to get a better picture of the damage and prepare for salvage operations.

The post Scars from March tornadoes unattractive, not total loss for wildlife  appeared first on Arkansas Game & Fish Commission.

AGFC accepting applications for Teacher Leader Council 15 Apr 2025, 2:04 pm

LITTLE ROCK — The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission is looking for a new group of teachers to shepherd its latest effort to bring the outdoors into classrooms throughout The Natural State.

The Teacher Leader Council was formed last year to provide a better method of two-way communication between the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission and the many teachers who enjoy delivering some of the ready-made education programs and curriculum developed through the AGFC’s Education Division.

Nathan Windel, a science teacher at Deer High School, was one of nine teachers chosen last year to coordinate with the AGFC’s education leadership team, bringing real-world experiences into the planning stages of future school-based outreach efforts.

“The Teacher Leader Council has been one of the most impactful experiences of my professional career,” Windel said. “Learning from and sharing with my colleagues about conservation education has been inspiring, and the hands-on approach allowed me to experience learning from the student perspective. Arkansas outdoors education is the glue we can use to cement learning.”

As this school year comes to a close, the AGFC is looking for a new group of teachers to take the reins and offer additional perspectives on AGFC programs.

“We are being very intentional about the programs and the experiences that we offer to engage with educators as an agency,” AGFC Education Division Chief Mary Beth Hatch said. “Being a part of the Teacher Leader Council will help educators bring a deeper understanding of conservation back to their classrooms and will help us fine-tune our efforts to overcome common roadblocks the teachers face implementing the lessons we are teaching.”

Full-time educators from public, private, and charter schools working with students from early childhood through grade 12 are eligible to become a part of the council. Nominees must be able to attend virtual meetings as well as in-person meetings.

“We do a lot of hands-on workshops with the council, and collaboration is always best in person; having the drive and time to attend these meetings is essential to the success of the program,” Hatch said. “We want people who are willing to speak up and provide their insight and knowledge so all teachers can benefit from improved outreach efforts.”

Jennifer Jackson, a computer science teacher at Bentonville’s Ruth Barker Middle School, was part of last year’s council and has not only gained more enthusiasm to bring the lessons back to her class, she’s gained a group of colleagues to share ideas and communicate successes and solutions to any roadblocks she’s encountered.

“Being part of the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission Teacher Leader Council has enriched my teaching and inspired my students,” Jackson said. “It has provided me with professional growth, innovative teaching strategies, and a strong network of like-minded educators. This experience has fostered a passion for environmental stewardship, empowering the next generation to appreciate and protect Arkansas’s natural resources.”

Applications may be submitted through May 2 at www.agfc.com/teacherleadercouncil.

 

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CUTLINES:

STREAMSIDE TABLE
Participants in last year’s Teacher Leader Council received in-depth training on stream ecology to take back and replicate with their students. AGFC photo. 

GROUP DISCUSSION
A major benefit of the Teacher Leader Council is two-way communication to build support for programs and remove obstacles to incorporating their curricula. AGFC photo.

COOKING CLASS
Cleaning and cooking fish and wild game is a component of the outdoor education teachers in the Leadership Council immerse themselves in. AGFC photo.

The post AGFC accepting applications for Teacher Leader Council appeared first on Arkansas Game & Fish Commission.

Arkansas frog-gigging season adjusted to protect breeding season  11 Apr 2025, 2:01 pm

LITTLE ROCK — Frog-gigging can be one of the most exciting adventures available for outdoors enthusiasts on a late spring night, but froggers will have to wait a little longer as the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission has reset the opening night of the season to June 1, instead of its traditional April 15 opener.

The change was made during last year’s regulations cycle, but this will be the first year it is in place. The Commission had heard many comments and concerns over a perceived decrease in bullfrog populations in some areas of the state. In an abundance of caution to conserve bullfrog populations, the AGFC’s Fisheries Division staff recommended a delayed start to the season to protect the amphibian’s mating season.

According to AGFC Herpetologist Dr. Amanda Bryant, bullfrog reproduction typically begins in mid-April through early May and peaks around June. Protecting frogs for an extra month and a half helps contribute to successful reproduction, which in turn can help stabilize wild populations.

“Surrounding states have similar season start dates,” Bryant said. “Missouri opens on June 30; Tennessee opens on July 1, and Louisiana does not allow take of bullfrogs in April or May to allow them to mate and lay eggs before harvest begins.”

The season still closes at midnight Dec. 31, and all other regulations concerning frogs remain in place.

Only bullfrogs may be harvested, and a valid fishing license is required. The limit is 18 frogs per day, measured from noon one day until noon the next day. Hunters may use bow-and-arrow, hook-and-line, a long multi-tined spear called a gig, or they may simply snatch them up by hand. Bullfrogs may not be sold except by fish farmers with a valid commercial bullfrog permit. Visit https://www.agfc.com/education/alternative-fishing-methods for more information on regulations concerning frog gigging and other alternative methods of fishing.

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CUTLINES:

CLOSEUP
Arkansas’s bullfrog season opens June 1 this year. AGFC photo.

FROG IN DUCKWEED
Bullfrog mating season is April through June. AGFC photo. 

The post Arkansas frog-gigging season adjusted to protect breeding season  appeared first on Arkansas Game & Fish Commission.

Arkansas Wildlife Weekly Fishing Report 10 Apr 2025, 9:10 pm

April 10, 2025

Jim Harris

Managing Editor Arkansas Wildlife Magazine

Brandon (no last name provided) wanted to learn how to fly-fish while stationed in Jacksonville at the Little Rock Air Force Base serving in the U.S. Air Force. Mike Winkler guided Brandon to his first brown trout while fishing the Little Red River recently. Winkler said that Brandon’s dad came down from Wisconsin to visit and took advantage of the nice weather, too, as the caddis hatch is in full swing on the Little Red. Also, despite all the water that Greers Ferry Lake has taken on after last week’s storms, only one unit at the dam is discharging water this week into the Little Red, making for good fishing conditions. Read more from Winkler’s report below.

Reports are updated weekly, although some reports may be published for two weeks if updates are not received promptly or if reporters say conditions haven’t changed. Contact the reporter listed for the lake or stream you plan to fish for current news.

Arkansas River and White River levels are available at: http://water.weather.gov/ahps2/index.php?wfo=lzk

For real-time information on stream flow in Arkansas from the U.S. Geological Survey, visit: http://waterdata.usgs.gov/ar/nwis/rt

For water-quality statistics (including temperature) in many Arkansas streams and lakes, visit: http://waterdata.usgs.gov/ar/nwis/current/?type=quality

Download the Fish Brain app and follow AGFC at: https://join.fishbrain.com/agfc-page


Quick links to regions:


 

Central Arkansas

Craig D. Campbell Lake Conway Reservoir (under renovation)
For the most up-to-date lake level, visit the U.S. Geological Survey’s Lake Conway water level site.

(updated 4-3-2025) Bates Field and Stream (501-470-1846) had no reports.

While Lake Conway is drawn down for renovation, the Lake Conway Nursery Pond is open for fishing in the immediate area, with bream and trout being reported among catches of late. The 70-acre pond has been stocked by the AGFC with mature bass, crappie, catfish and bream as well as rainbow trout for the cold weather months.

(updated 4-3-2025) AGFC staff reported Tuesday that eight people were fishing the Lake Conway Nursery Pond that day and anglers are starting to catch harvestable bream. The overall catch rate appeared high. Anglers were reported to be very positive about having the pond as a fishing option, according to staffers. Also, the Facebook site Crappie Fishing Arkansas featured a photo recently of an angler having caught a nice slab there.

 

Little Red River
For the Army Corps of Engineers’ real-time outflow report from Greers Ferry Dam, visit the Corps’ Little Rock office website or by calling (501) 362-5150). Also check the Southwestern Power Administration website to see forecast generation schedule.

(updated 4-10-2025) Mike Winkler of Little Red River Fly Fishing Trips (501-507-3688) said Wednesday night that the Army Corps of Engineers has been running a consistent generation schedule lately — one unit round-the-clock for several days now. With all the recent rain across Arkansas (some areas got 8 inches or more), the creeks, streams and other rivers are still full, so I expect this one-unit generation to continue for at least another week. Once the water level starts to fall out, don’t be surprised to see them bump it up to two units 24/7 to help bring Greers Ferry Lake back down to normal pool.

As far as the fishing goes, things are looking good! The river has cleared up nicely, even after all that muddy runoff. The caddis hatch was popping before the storms rolled in, and the bugs are still coming off strong, especially once the sun hits midmorning and warms things up. The fish are locked in on them.
“I’ve been running a double nymph rig with double caddis patterns under an indicator. With this one-unit water, I’m fishing anywhere from 3-7 feet deep — sometimes deeper if I’m in a hole. San Juan Worms have also been getting it done under an indicator at various depths.
“The streamer bite? Solid. Really good action lately, so if you like stripping meat, now’s a great time.
“Overall, the bite’s been good across the board: nymphs, streamers, worms. Pick your favorite tactic and get after it!”

(updated 4-10-2025) Fish ’N Stuff (501-834-5733) in Sherwood said that despite all the water the state received last week, fishing on the Little Red has been “pretty good” this week. Anglers are throwing mostly a slightly bigger than usual jerkbait. The best colors have been gold with blackback and Fire Tiger. Those will work for browns and rainbows.

For now, Southwestern Power Administration and the Corps of Engineers have only opened one unit to move water, and that’s led to good fishing conditions, though there is still a lot of moving water in the river.

Make sure to check the links above of the Corps and SWPA for generation schedules and any changes at Greers Ferry Lake with the expected storm fronts passing through the state.

 

Greers Ferry Lake
For the Army Corps of Engineers’ real-time lake level and outflow report from Greers Ferry Dam, visit the Corps’ Little Rock office website

(updated 4-10-2025) Fish ’N Stuff (501-834-5733) in Sherwood said the lake took a big jump with all the rainfall last week and there is a lot of floating debris, so they urge caution for boaters and anglers trying to fish there over the next few days. Only one unit was being used this week at the dam, so the lowering of the lake may take a little while. Check the Corps of Engineers information from the link above for the latest conditions.

Before the big rise in water, a lot of fish looked like they were starting to spawn, and anglers were having success fishing for black bass shallow midway into the backs of creeks where they were finding a lot of fish. A lot depended on the depth of the creek, but they were catching them from 2 feet down to 10 feet of water. Texas-rigged creature baits, Carolina rigs, floating worm and a jig were the main baits working.

There were still some fish out deeper in the main lake toward the middle, those that haven’t headed in to spawn. A 3-inch swimbait was working well out deep; try a natural shad color of white color. Also, anglers were throwing the C-rig out in deeper water.

Crappie were biting anywhere from 5 feet to 15 feet. Anglers were catching them fishing shallow and throwing bait around bushes or wood, with a curly tail 2-inch curly tail grub in pink and chartreuse or purple and chartreuse being favored. Also, a blue and white color worked. Out deeper, more of a natural color to a Bobby Garland Baby Shad was favored in this area — gray and white or blue and white, and expect the crappie to bite in 15 feet of water.


(updated 4-10-2025) Tommy Cauley of Fishfinder Guide Service (501-940-1318) said Thursday that the water level at Greers Ferry Lake is at 472.02 feet msl. That’s 9.98 feet above normal pool for this time of year. It came up about 11 feet because we were 1 foot below normal pool before last week’s rains; they are running one generator at present. Great stain to water remains; pretty much good catching color all over the lake and rivers, but now we’ve seen a big rise.

He says, “Several days ago you probably saw some mid-50 temps with wind really mixing the lake up a lot, and it has cooled back off especially after these cold nights coming, and for sure will cause fish confusion as a lot of them have backed off now!”
For crappie, try super shallow and out to 30 feet and use jigs, minnows or crankbaits. Fishing straight up and down in pole timber or brushpiles is working great. A lot of walleye have moved upriver or close to it after the last big lake rise; there is a lot more staging and some prestaging. They have not even come out of deep water; they are scattered all over the lake and rivers. Look on any corner facing upstream and drag a minnow or crankbaits 45-65 feet. Other walleye are supper shallow; fish a jighead minnow, jerkbait or big minnow-type deep-diving bait. Some are following under big schools of whites and hybrids and some have even spawned up rivers, but lots of males upriver are waiting, and the females are as well; use a spoon for those.

For the walleye just roaming around, a spoon is best for vertical fishing them in 10-50 feet.
Hybrid bass and white bass are set up in the main lake and some are roaming, schooling on top. For the ones set, use spoons, inline spinners, grubs and swimbaits in 25-80 feet. They want to settle in about 43 feet, which is magic water depth where they are comfortable here many months out of the year. It has the right temperature and oxygen. Some are up rivers spawning now; try throwing a grub on a jighead or a Roadrunner. 

Catfish are biting all over the lake on the usual stuff. Try staying around schools of shad. Some bream are shallow but most are still around 8-30 feet. Crickets and crawlers are working fine as well as inline spinners.

You will start running into small groups of five to eight black bass up shallow. Most, though, are out or roaming shallow and schooling. Use Carolina rigs, Wiggle Warts and any flat-sided crankbait, drop-shots, spinner baits and Rat-L-Traps super shallow out to 80 feet. The spinnerbait will shine right now shallow or in the guts. Also be mindful of certain trees they will get on in the pole timber! Be safe and wear your life jacket.

 

Harris Brake Lake
(updated 4-10-2025) Bing Watkins at Harris Brake Lake Resort (501-889-2745) says the lake went down a lot and is back to normal level now. The clarity is muddy.

One angler reported catching six nice-sized crappie on minnows. Another caught catfish using nightcrawlers on the west side of the lake. Another angler caught an 18-pound gar.

Black bass are biting off the shoreline in fair numbers, and better out in the lake from boats. Try by the “big island” or just past it. Crappie jigs and minnows were working for the bass as well, along with crankbaits in various colors (all have gotten some action). A few bream were biting.

Follow more from Harris Brake Lake Resort on its Facebook page.

 

Lake Overcup
(updated 4-10-2025) John “Catfish” Banks at Overcup Landing off Arkansas Highway 9 said the water level is up by 2.5 feet and murky but is going down. Surface temperature is around 63 degrees. 

Bream are starting to bite a little bit on crickets and redworms. Black bass are doing well on crankbaits and soft plastic worms. Catfish are feeding on the worms that washed into the lake. 

Crappie have slowed down, but with warmer temperatures they should crank back up. “Really hasn’t been a lot of people fishing these past few days.
“Come see me at Overcup Bait Shop off Highway 9. We have all your fishing needs.”

 


Brewer Lake
(update 4-3-2025) AGFC staff visited Brewer Lake over the weekend (March 29-30) for this report: Surface water temperature is low- to mid-60s and the water level is at full pool. The pollen has put a green tinge to the surface, but other than that, the water is fairly clear with about 2 feet of visibility. Crappie are beginning to move shallow to the flooded brush and should be spawning now. Focus on coves in the northern portion of the lake. Largemouth bass are biting fairly well on secondary points and isolated brush in 7-11 feet of water. Slow-rolled spinnerbaits, lipless crankbaits and Carolina-rigged lizards are working well. Fishing the brushline with a wacky-rigged Senko or Texas-rigged lizard will also pick up a few smaller bass. Most of the large fish are still a cast-and-a-half offshore waiting to move up. No report on catfish or bream

Brewer Lake has a new regulation for 2025: The 13- to 16-inch black bass slot limit on Brewer (as well as Lake Barnett in White County) has been replaced; now, anglers may keep up to 10 largemouth bass, but only one of those may exceed 16 inches.

 

Lake Maumelle
NOTE: Bryan Rupar, the watershed protection manager for Central Arkansas Water, said March 31 that repairs to the Lake Maumelle Dam, initiated in early March, are progressing steadily. The contractor is now restoring the dam’s outer shell, a major undertaking that could take up to two more months to complete, depending on weather conditions. To facilitate repairs, CAW aims to keep the lake level around 5 feet below normal pool elevation; however, this will depend on rainfall and the progress of the work. 

(updated 4-10-2025) WestRock Landing in Roland (501-658-5598) reports that the lake now is 5 feet low (after being drawn down more than 10 feet, for the repair of the dam by Central Arkansas Water), and water temperature is ranging 65-67 degrees.

Black bass are good. Reports have come in of them being caught in 1-5 feet of water. Try using Senkos, spinnerbaits or square-bill crankbaits. No reports on white bass, bream, crappie or catfish, but with the water level coming up 6 feet, we are expecting more anglers to come out this weekend.

(update 4-10-2025) Crappie guide Eric Watts of Natural State Fishing (501-548-8990) said that with the water low on Lake Maumelle for the repair of the dam, he had not fished there of late, but was fishing other crappie locations in Central Arkansas. Give him a holler for a trip or for updates on his excursions; his information is linked above.

 

Arkansas River at Morrilton
For the real-time water flow at the Ormond Lock and Dam and Morrilton stage level, visit the Corps’ Little Rock office website

 


Little Maumelle River
(update 4-10-2025) Ray Hudson at River Valley Marina (501-517-1250) said the water is normal now, as of Thursday. “It’s not clear-clear, but it’s fishable,” he said. “I haven’t talked to anyone today, but everything is the same with the fishing.”

He said that with water temperature in the low 70s, crappie are still on the bank and biting well. Using minnows or jigs.
Black bass are doing pretty well still. A few anglers were bass fishing on Wednesday and caught quite a few. Spinnerbaits and crankbaits are the best bets. 

Bream are beginning to bite. A bunch of bream were biting for one angler this week using crickets.

The Little Maumelle ran pretty hard during the rains of last week but only came up about a foot to a foot and a half, he said, and now it’s back to good fishing water.

 

Arkansas River (Maumelle Pool)
For the real-time water flow at the Toad Suck Lock and Dam, visit the Corps’ Little Rock office website

 

Arkansas River (Little Rock Area Pools)
For the real-time water flow at the Murray Lock and Dam and David D. Terry Lock and Dam, as well as the Little Rock pool stage level, visit the Corps’ Little Rock office website.

(updated 4-10-2025) Fish ’N Stuff (501-834-5733) said the river this week is running very fast after all of last week’s rainfall, with 130,000 cfs passing through the Little Rock pool as of Thursday, meaning a small craft advisory. “Hopefully the river will get back to good fishing conditions sometime next week,” they said. Of course, much of that depends on how much the Corps of Engineers has to move through the system.

Before last week’s storms, the river’s clarity was stained to muddy in a few places and the water temperature was ranging 58-68 degrees depending on location. Anglers were finding it warmer in the backwaters and cooler in the main part of the river; anglers competing in a Tuesday night bass tournament last week saw about a 10-degree temperature swing depending on location.
Also before all the bad weather, black bass were biting really well on Texas-rigged creature bait fished up shallow around wood or grass. Black and blue had been a great color lately of creature bait. A black and blue jig also worked well, along with a black and blue Senko fished weightless. You could also catch some fish on a chartreuse and black back crankbait as well as a white and chartreuse spinnerbait. “They are biting a little bit of everything but those are the main ones,” they say.

They had not heard any reports from the river on crappie last week. But the full moon may get crappie going by next week when the river conditions improve.

 

Peckerwood Lake
(updated 4-10-2025) Donna Mulherin at Herman’s Landing (501-626-6899) said Peckerwood got quite a bit of water from the rains last week but the lake is back to level full and the clarity is dingy as of Thursday.

Anglers are catching decent amounts of crappie and a few bream and catfish. “I don’t know about the bass. They don’t fish for bass on this (south) end of the lake, but I’m sure they are catching them (in other areas).”

Crappie will bite minnows and jigs, though she didn’t have any hints from anglers on color. The dingy conditions would probably favor a chartreuse in there, though. Catfish are biting “about anything, but definitely hot dogs and minnows.”

The bream are being picked up on yo-yos, but they’ll bite minnows too.


 

North Arkansas

White River Cotter Area
(updated 4-10-2025) Cotter Trout Dock (870-435-6525) said, “Celebrate! The sun is shining, no rain for several days, we’re beginning to dry out and the river is clearing.
“The lakes in the White River watershed have been rising due to recent rains. Water levels have been fairly consistent at between 2,000 and 10,000 cfs, during most of each day over the last week and fishing is good. Water clarity at Cotter and upstream is back to normal (clear to excellent) after a few days of dinginess from creek runoff. It’s taking a little longer to improve downriver due to Crooked Creek and Buffalo River drainage.
The brown bite has switched back and forth between sculpins and minnows — keep both on hand if possible. You’ll still catch some great browns with shad a little further upriver. Our best bait was a 4½-inch Violet Cream Smithwick (white with a soft yellow back), but the spoons were producing really well, too. The Thomas Buoyant red/gold hammered quarter-ounce spoon was a winner. Crawdad season is starting; we’re finding a good supply in ponds and smaller tributaries. Trout love crawdads, but if you can’t get your hands on real ones, shrimp is a close imitator, and the Rebel WeeCrawfish (Stream Crawfish color or the chartreuse/green back) works great, too.
Rainbows have been moving toward sunrise and orange PowerBait, and combining that with shrimp or crawdad tail has been an excellent way to reel in some great-sized fish.
“Expect increased generation from Bull Shoals Dam in the coming weeks. Deeper water means more drift fishing, no wading opportunities — but the trout love lots of fresh, cold water and they are feisty and healthy when they get it. Stop in on your way to the river.”

 

Calico Rock Area
(updated 4-10-2025) Dave McCulley, owner of Jenkins Fishing Service in Calico Rock, said, “The heavy rains last week caused flooding through the weekend. At Calico Rock the White River crested at 28 feet. By Monday afternoon the river was back in the banks. Through Wednesday we have seen very muddy water with signs the water is starting to clear up. Hopefully by the weekend the river will be clear and we can get back to fishing.”

 

Allison/Mountain View Area
(updated 4-3-2025) Jack’s White River Fishing Resort reports they had a great week of fishing with several trips out on the water. The water level fluctuated between 2-5 feet, but despite that, “we were able to hit our limits each time. The guides had success using Sunrise Orange PowerBait, handmade hammered silver spinners, and shrimp as bait. Most of the fishing took place just past the Highway 9 bridge by Hansford Bluff near Round Bottom.

An AGFC staffer took in a guided trip with a friend and a Jack’s guide, Braden, the week before last and had a lot of success with rainbows, mostly catching them up to 6 miles or so north of the resort and drifting downstream rapidly with a pretty strong current. The AGFC had stocked the river with rainbows at Mount Olive and at the Sylamore Access several days earlier, and the stockers were hungry. Best success was by spin-fishing with inline spinners, eggs (like X Factor or something similar) and pieces of shrimp. Make sure to use only about a third of a whole shrimp; anything more is too much for the trout to swallow. We caught some more mature rainbows as well as the stockers, too.

 

Bull Shoals Lake
For the Army Corps of Engineers’ real-time outflow report from Bull Shoals Dam, visit the Corps’ Little Rock office website.

(updated 4-10-2025) Fishing guide Del Colvin at Bull Shoals Lake (815-592-4302) reported Wednesday night that lake level was on the rise at 666 feet msl while last week at this time it was 658 feet msl. Water temps vary anywhere from 54-60 degrees. The bigger creeks have some debris — be careful with floaters as the lake rises. That being said, everything is changing by the minute. Once the lake stabilizes these bass are going to be looking to move up; bucks are already up there. The water toward the main lake is gin clear toward the dam and chocolate milk in the creeks. 

Some fish have moved up with the water. Powerfishing shallow has been favorable with clouds, rain, wind and stained water. Some fish are up there roaming shallow. Try a spinnerbait, Chatterbait or a square bill in bright colors. Target windblown transition banks by steep stuff nearby — yep, not easy with the winds but that’s where they are at. Chunk rock, steeper banks, small ledges close to deep water. A SPRO Crawler, Wiggle Wart and Red Craw are catching them. You can go bright in stained water, natural in the clear. The crank bite will slow without wind. There are always fish to be caught on a jig such as a Jewel half-ounce green pumpkin variant. 

Once again, warm, a little wind, sunny try points, drop-offs or ledges, piles swings — you’re looking anywhere from 1 foot to 20 feet deep. Also a shaky head and a Ned rig are coming into play. 

The offshore videogamers are going to have to work — the shad are still spread out and there are still loons and seagulls. Target larger bait balls or any bait you can find up high near the surface and closer to the shore. Most fish are still looking up. Every day is different and every creek will be a little different. If you are targeting shad eaters, it’s been work as the shad are making their way into the creeks. A smaller 2.8 swimbait or a regular Tater Shad has been working, and also try a jerkbait around those high swimming shad and shad balls in the clear water. They are being finicky if they aren’t actively feeding. 

Just because they are up doesn’t mean much if it’s blue birds, flat, post-front: It’s still going to sting a little. Good luck, have fun, be safe and “Fish the conditions.”

Del regularly posts new YouTube videos. Visit his YouTube site (Bull Shoals Fishing Report) for more information and tips on fishing Bull Shoals Lake.

(updated 4-10-2025) Southernwalleye Guide Service (501-365-1606) says cloudy days prior to the cold front helped the daytime fishing. The change in lake level (up 8 feet) has the fish changing positions. If lake rises up over the buckbrush, fish over it with spinnerbaits or a ⅛-ounce jighead with small swimbaits; a shallow-running jerkbait such as a Suspending Rattlin’ Rogue will get some bites. 

Best fishing this past week has still been late evenings. Walleye seemed to still be in the spawning/post-spawn period. We are still seeing fish coming to the shallows at night. Fish are scattered along chunk rock points with deep water close by and along steeper creek channel swings that have shad. Best to fish low-light periods now. Fishing methods are still the same. Fishing 4-15 feet of water with jerkbaits or fishing 4 feet out to 30 feet of water with jig and minnow, jig and plastics or Ice Jigs — worked slowly back to the boat on points with deep water on at least one side — will produce fish. Fishing same structure right before and after dark with 110-style jerkbaits or 5-inch floating stick baits and retrieved at extremely slow speeds will get some fish.

If trolling, try to fish low-light periods. Trolling 5-inch stick baits at slow speeds as low as .85 mph in 7-14 feet along windblown banks will also work.

(updated 4-10-2025) Crappie 101 Guide Service (870-577-2045) says crappie are definitely scattered at least mid-lake. We have had success covering lots of brush in that 15- to 25-foot range and occasionally starting to catch a few beautiful males that are getting their tuxedo on shallower brush around 10 feet. We are getting closer but these cool nights, rising colored water and debris have them still scattered in a funk. Very soon when it stabilizes it will be time for the coveted spawn! We have had success casting jigs over brush and also with minnows. 

 

Norfork Lake
For the Army Corps of Engineers’ real-time outflow report from Norfork Dam, visit the Corps’ Little Rock office website.

(updated 4-10-2025) Tom Reynolds of STR Outfitters (also Facebook.com/stroutfitters or 870-421-1541) guides out of Tracy Ferry Marina and reports that the lake is at 569 feet msl and stained in the creeks; the main lake from Robinson Point is clean and clear. “We just had a rain event that increased the water level by 15 feet. The good news is that the lake is in good shape and ready for great spring fishing. I was worried the crappie would not have reasonable spawning grounds, but now that the buckbrush is covered, crappie fishing will get better each week.

“The threadfin shad will begin their annual spawning run in the next few weeks, and now that the buckbrush is covered, the stripers will be chasing bait and artificial lures. There will be some great fishing in the remainder of April and May.
“Stripers will continue their feeding as they get ready to spawn. Bait will move farther up the creek to feed, and the crappie will wait until the water calms down and warms back up. Next week, we should see a return to stable conditions.

“The night fishing should start all over the lake as the water warms. The best times have been 8-10 p.m., focusing on the lake’s north and east banks. South and west winds warm these banks during the day, attracting stripers looking for bait. The best lures for night fishing are rogues and swimbaits.
“Target creeks with long, flat areas and slightly stained water. The best locations to find active stripers include Steward Point, Pigeon Creek, Bennetts Bayou, Big Creek and Brushy Creek.”
Visit Tom’s website or his Facebook page linked above for more information.


 

Northwest Arkansas

Beaver Lake
For the Army Corps of Engineers’ real-time outflow report from Beaver Lake Dam, visit the Corps’ Little Rock office website.

(updated 4-10-2025) Jon Conklin with FishOn Guide Service (479-233-3474) said Beaver Lake as predicted skyrocketed to more than 1,127 feet msl with the recent flooding. That level is 3 feet away from the top. “I did go out looking (Tuesday) and the lake from past Hickory heading south is full of debris and is chocolate in color.
“Have really nothing else to report as we all hunkered down during the multiday storms. I would predict the lake next week at this time will start to be fishable. Now, the far north end is fishable at this time; it will be stained in arms that have larger creeks coming in. 

“Hopefully the Corps of Engineers doesn’t drop the lake fast in the coming weeks, as the spawn will be on. Not a good time to drastically draw down the lake, which seems to happen more often than not. I understand this is a flood control lake, but I hope for a good spawn. 

“Lots of hay bales are back out floating in numerous coves that came into the lake on the last big rise we had. Those hay bales are very dangerous as they float right at, and are barely exposed, along the surface. Hard to see and I know you do not want to hit one. It would stop you in your tracks, I’m afraid. 

“No rain and warm temperatures will accelerate the water warmup, so expect fishing to ramp up as the lake shapes back up. Stay safe and observant while out on the lake — as stated above, there are lots of hazards!”

Visit Jon’s Facebook page for the latest updates, FishOn Guide Service Goshen AR.

 

Beaver Tailwater
(updated 4-10-2025) Guide Austin Kennedy (479-244-0039) said fishing has been pretty good this past week. “We have been pulling trout in nice numbers and there are still some walleye to be had (but you’ve got to work for them). Most trout are being caught using Pautzke Fire Bait and Fire Eggs, fished with light terminal tackle. Gold and silver spoons have also done great, especially during generation periods. A quarter-ounce, letting it sink and working it back slowly has been the preferred presentation.
“As far as the walleye, like stated above, you have to work for them and try various methods. Jerkbaits and jigging soft plastics have produced the best numbers. 

“This week’s hot spot has been between Spider Creek and Parker Bottoms, but don’t expect to get up there by boat unless you have a jet or until they kick on the water.
“Water temps have been in the high 40s and low 50s. If you want to get in on some white bass action, try fishing between Beaver and Holiday Island. Remember, for additional updates follow my Facebook page (Busch Mountain Fishing Guide Service); I’m pretty much on the water every week. Feel free to message me if you have any questions. Take care, get out and catch some fish!”

 

Lake Fayetteville
(updated 3-21-2025) Lake Fayetteville Boat Dock (479-444-3476) reports that crappie and bass are both coming up into shallower water to bite now that the water temperature is in the 50s. The clarity is “a little dirty, but we like it a little dirty. With the water temp in the 50s, the fish are ready.”
Crappie are biting in jigs and coming up to about 4 feet depth. Black bass are chasing crankbaits. No reports on catfish.


 

Northeast Arkansas

Lake Charles
(updated 4-3-2025) Shelly Jeffrey at Lake Charles State Park (870-878-6595) said fishing for the major species continued to be good this week. Crappie were fishing well with anglers using jigs in all colors as well as worms and minnows. They’re biting near the shoreline. Look for the best times this month to be around the full moon coming in a couple of weeks.

Black bass are good but anglers aren’t sharing their baits used. It’s a good time for crankbaits and spinnerbaits, though, as well as jigs.

Catfish are good but, like the bass, anglers are not sharing what bait they are using. Worms are typically good now, though, such as nightcrawlers, plus the catfish stink bait. Also try live bait like small bluegill. That was what Cameron Morris was using the Monday before last when he caught a nice 13-pound, 7-pound flathead, in case you missed last week’s report.
Bream also are good on redworms and jigs, and like the crappie they have moved their activity to the shoreline.

No reports on white bass. The water is the usual Lake Charles murky, and the level is high. 

 

Lake Poinsett
(updated 4-10-2025) Lake Poinsett State Park reports, “The weather barely slowed anglers here at Lake Poinsett — even with wind, rain and tornadoes incoming, we had anglers trying their luck this past week. According to regulars, the crappie have moved up from the deep water and have been near the shoreline. Minnows are still the favorite choice for bait, though nightcrawlers, redworms and various jigs are also selling regularly. This month, Lake Poinsett will also start carrying crickets as a bait option. As always, we recommend calling the visitor center at 870-578-2064 to see what live bait we have in stock because you never know when we’ll sell out these days.”

The lake limit on crappie is 15 fish (all sizes encouraged to be harvested to help prevent stunting), and for black bass you can keep 10 fish with one being larger than 16 inches. 

The State Park Visitor Center is now open every day from 8 a.m.-5 p.m.

 

Spring River
(updated 4-10-2025) Mark Crawford with springriverfliesandguides.com (870-955-8300) said water flow at the Spring is at 575 cfs (350 cfs is average), and water clarity is poor. Over the weekend the Spring River was hit by an epic flash flood from heavy rains. There has been extensive damage to the river and surrounding areas from flooding. The river has dropped back down to within its banks at this time. With no rain in forecast, it should recover quickly.
“We will post more info as the full extent of the damage is discovered. AGFC will report on the condition of Jim Hinkle Spring River State Fish Hatchery at Dam 3. Please stay clear of the area as they work on it. The railroad was also heavily damaged. Work crews are in the area working on the railroad and it should be up and going quickly. There are areas blocked off from crossing as they fix the tracks. Be very careful on the roads down to the river. Some of the gravel roads are washed out in places.
“There were no reports of anyone hurt in the area, and we are all very thankful for that. We have plans to float as soon as we can get on the river — within the next few days. Pictures and videos will be posted on our website.”
Visit Mark’s blog (springriverfliesandguides.com) for the latest updates and conditions on the Spring River.

 

White River
For the Army Corps of Engineers’ real-time gauge level and flow from the White River stages at Batesville, Newport and Augusta and all other sites within the White River basin in Arkansas, visit the Corps’ Little Rock office website.


 

Southeast Arkansas

Arkansas River (Pine Bluff Pool)
For the real-time water flow at the Emmett Sanders Lock and Dam and Maynard Lock and Dam, as well as the Pine Bluff pool stage level, visit the Corps’ Little Rock office website.

(updated 3-27-2025) The University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff Bass Fishing Team reported that water temperature is in the upper 50s, some protected backwaters are up to mid-60s. Visibility is around 12 inches in most places, some tributaries are muddier, some backwaters are clearer. Black bass are phasing into the spawn. The best fishing is in protected shallows with woody cover using dark- colored soft-plastic creatures and jigs. Spinnerbaits and bladed jigs are effective on windy days. 

 

Cane Creek Lake
(updated 4-3-2025) Shelley Burr at Cane Creek State Park, (870-628-4714) said customers were buying worms last Thursday at the visitor center to try their luck at whatever they could catch from fishing the pier.
Spring break started a couple of weeks back with several visitors on hand that Saturday to fish for crappie. The following day an angler reported catching two bass but overall thought it was too windy to continue. Crickets were purchased at the visitor center for crappie by boat anglers and shoreline anglers recently. Also, minnows have been fished for crappie as well.

 

Lake Monticello
(updated 4-10-2025) Anglers are reminded that if they venture out for some fishing on Lake Monticello while the lake continues to refill after being renovated, that all fish caught must be released immediately.
The Hunger Run Access is open to boat traffic. Reports are good of anglers catching nice black bass now.


 

Southwest Arkansas

Millwood Lake
For the Army Corps of Engineers’ real-time lake level and outflow report from Millwood Lake Dam, visit the Corps Little Rock office website.

(updated 4-10-2025) Mike Siefert at Millwood Lake Guide Service said Tuesday, “What a difference a week makes! Severe thunderstorms last week have the lake elevation 6 feet above normal conservation pool and rising, and all rivers are at high flow levels. The Army Corps of Engineers is releasing over 45,000 cfs today. Over 8-9 inches of rainfall in as many as four days last week have made the lake a total train wreck.

Forced closures due to immediate flooding in southwestern Arkansas:

On Millwood Lake:

* Millwood State Park (Arkansas State Parks)

* White Cliffs USACE Campground (USACE)

* Wilton Landing on Little River (USACE)

* Saratoga Landing (USACE)

* Beard’s Lake (USACE)

* River Run East and River Run West and ramp below Millwood Lake Dam (USACE)

* Beard’s Bluff Campground (USACE)

On De Queen Lake: Oak Grove Landing, Pine Ridge, Story Creek, Rolling Fork and lower loop at Bella Mine (USACE).
On Gillham Lake: Cossatot Point north boat ramp, Little Coon Creek, Big Coon Creek (USACE).
On Dierks Lake: Loop 1 and Loop 2 at Jefferson Ridge, and the group camping area at Blue Ridge (USACE).
For more information and updates call: Millwood, 870-898-3343; De Queen/Gillham, 870-584-4161; Dierks, 870-286-2346.

Millwood Lake Dam is releasing about 46,100 cfs and tailwater is near 254 feet and rising. Incoming water upriver from the Tri-Lakes has not yet fully arrived downstream in the four feeding rivers into Millwood. We would expect that rainfall from the Tri-Lakes to arrive here late this week or midweek next week. Estimated lake pool returning to normal pool will be based on Red River pool elevation, how fast it can recede, and release tailwater from Tri-Lakes and Millwood, could be two weeks of cresting and returning to normal pool of 259.2 feet msl.
Navigation caution is urged. It is extremely hazardous. High flow rates in Little River and Saline and Cossatot are contributing to catastrophic flooding all over southwest Arkansas, and Millwood is right square in the middle of that. Always watch for broken timber. Navigation is discouraged on Millwood Lake under current flood and high discharge volume rate conditions at the dam. A wide debris field of entire broken timber, trees, logs, limbs, broken grass mats and dangerous semi-submerged objects are in extremely high-flow conditions.

Mike says he and the rest of the guide service have not been out this past week due to the extensive flooding and hazardous navigation conditions from the thunderstorms and rapid lake rise from the rainfall. But this was what Mike reported before the storm front settled over Arkansas late last week:

* Millwood is still producing good largemouth bass at tournaments over the past few weeks — consistently week to week there are catches weighing 5-9 pounds. The bass activity has continued to improve over the past few weeks with the warmer conditions, depending on location, but can seem random on high barometric days. 

The largemouth are best during the late morning through midday. Several females have been found roaming flats from 1-5 feet deep and on beds in areas of the oxbow lakes up Little River. A few of those roaming largemouths have been fair to good on red chrome half-ounce Rat-L-Traps. The smaller quarter-ounce Spinner Tail Rat-L-Traps in chrome/blue or red shad will get a random reaction near flats through dead lily pads with deep creek bends. When you need to work shallow, throw brown/orange or red chrome crawfish, red shad/gold back or Toledo Gold colors and you will connect. Spin Traps with a gold tail spinner will also work through the dead lily pad stems flawlessly and will connect with roaming bass. 

Brazalo Strutter Chatterbaits continue working, and best colors over the past two weeks for us have been Millwood Mayhem Bream, black/blue and pumpkin/fire craw. Reactions have been very good — we’ve been catching healthy 3- to 6-pound bass over the last couple weeks — and the best reactions continue to be in 5-9 feet depth near grass lines, stumps, cypress trees and timber. Brazalo Spinnerbaits in Arkansas River Shad, Peachy, Spot Remover and Hot Mouse are all good choices in the stained to clear water in the oxbow lakes up Little River.

The males we found near and on beds this week were around 3-4 pounds, and were in 2-6 feet deep flats with stumps present near cypress trees and knees for wind protection, with close proximity to drops from 4-9 feet deep. The bite has improved on a red or chartreuse/white Chatterbait, a Brazalo Spinnerbait in Spot Remover or chartreuse/white, or a 6- to 8-inch and magnum-sized lizard. Numerous female largemouths are cruising grass lines and dead lily pad stems, when they are not pinned to the beds, in the 4- to 8-pound class.

If you want to fish the 1-3 feet depths, turn off your electronics and raise your trolling motor to keep from spooking the bass. In the cleaner water back in the pockets and oxbows away from current in Little River, throw a 6- to 8-inch lizard in Cotton Candy, Watermelon Magic or June bug/red, and in the heavier stained or dingy and muddy areas throw black/blue, blackberry, pumpkinseed/chartreuse tail or a chartreuse pumpkin color. 

Bass Assassin 5-inch Shad Assassins in Houdini, Salt & Pepper Silver Phantom and Smoke Wagon will draw reactions in the fresh, blooming lily pad stands and behind and in dense grass lines.

* The white bass run IS ON. They have moved further up along Little River and have been heavily schooled up at various creek dumps into Little River for several weeks now. A few nice-sized schools were found up Little River to Patterson Shoals this week. It seems like sunny days have the white bass schooled up tightly feeding on threadfin shad, and on cloudy days they seem to scatter into broken schools with random reactions more common.

We ran up Little River to Cossatot inflow ditch and Patterson Shoals above U.S. Highway 71 at Wilton again several days this week. The water temps we saw there were in the mid-60s and the whites were hitting our crankbaits and spoons with abandon. We have been throwing Bill Lewis Lures Rat-L-Traps in chrome/blue or Millwood Magic colors, Hammered Cordell Chrome Spoons, Little Georges and Cleos, Rooster Tails, Rocket Shads, Tennessee Shad color Bomber Fat Free Fingerlings and the Fat Free Guppy, and our clients also had good luck using Beetle Spins with the black and white twin tail grub. 

We caught around 25-30 some days, and good numbers over 40-50 large white bass other days this week, at several locations, and the hard-charging white bass were eager to bite up to 3 pounds. We also saw four or five other fishermen in the same locations, and they were also catching good numbers of FAT white bass this week between Wilton Landing and Patterson Shoals. We stopped and talked with one group of anglers who had also caught around 50 in the afternoon this week. White bass spawning runs continue to be a great time to take a kid fishing!

* Crappie over the past week have been scattered like crazy, kind of like the white bass were a few days this week. So random, nothing consistent to report, and they have not been stacked up in brush like they typically are this time of year. We do not believe water temperature has gotten to the point where the crappie are pulling up shallow to spawn yet, but it’s coming soon. We expect this will change over the next week.

* No reports on catfish or bream.

 

Lake Greeson Tailwater
For the most updated Narrows Dam generation schedule from SWEPCO, click here.

 

Lake Greeson
For the most updated lake level at Lake Greeson, click here.

No reports.

 

DeGray Lake
For the most updated lake level at DeGray Lake, click here.

(updated 4-10-2025) John Duncan of YoYo Guide Service (870-942-6291 or yoyoguideservice@gmail.com) at Iron Mountain Marina says, “Hey, folks! Anyone dried out yet? Wow. Water level here is at 417.51 feet msl, and it is finally starting to fall. That’s almost 10 feet higher than it was when I was catching them in 18 inches of water. That’s over for now. I do not know the water temperature of the water as of now.

“So, look — this lake is full of debris and floating trash. Staff off the water unless it is necessary. If so, absolute caution must be used.

“I have no reports on crappie or bass as of now. However, my past experience tells me the catfish are going to be feeding in the new territory big time. Small trotlines or limblines will do the trick. Shrimp, wieners, “Catfish Charlie,” bream, trotline minnows and, of course, crawfish are good bait. 

“When the water gets to the correct temperature, the crappie will be in the brush, too. Wading would be the way to go there. Sorry, but I don’t do that. Don’t like those smooth runners around my feet. 

“The best advice I have is to give it a little time. Mother nature is driving this train wreck. 

“See you on the water.”

(updated 3-27-2025) Capt. Darryl Morris of Family Fishing Trips (501-844-5418) continues to do most of his fishing at and reporting from lakes Ouachita and DeGray, and says, “The crappie are in their spawn. We have been catching ample numbers of crappie on staging tops near spawning coves 8-12 feet deep and in the buckbrush fished 3 feet deep.” 

 

De Queen Lake
For the Army Corps of Engineers’ real-time lake level and outflow report from De Queen Lake, visit the Corps’ Little Rock office website.

 

Dierks Lake
For the Army Corps of Engineers’ real-time lake level and outflow report from Dierks Lake, visit the Corps’ Little Rock office website.


 

South-Central Arkansas

White Oak Lake Area
No reports.


 

West-Central Arkansas

Lake Catherine Tailwater (Below Carpenter Dam)
For weekly flow releases from Carpenter Dam, visit www.entergy.com/hydro

(updated 4-10-2025) Shane Goodner, owner of Catch’em All Guide Service, reports that with the terrible flooding of last week, it will be weeks before the tailrace is fit for navigation or fishing. Even before all the rains last week, Entergy had planned for it and scheduled 24/7 generation flows from Carpenter Dam. 

Fast flows will be the norm on Lake Catherine in conjunction with open flood gates to aid in passing these huge amounts of water through the dam system. Treacherous conditions will be present until the flood waters subside. No one should attempt to navigate the Carpenter Dam tailrace until lake conditions return to normal and local weather stabilizes.

 

Lake Dardanelle
For the Army Corps of Engineers’ outflow and gauge level reports from Dardanelle, visit the Corps’ Little Rock office website.

(updated 4-10-2025) Seth Boone, superintendent at Lake Dardanelle State Park (479-890-7474), had no new fishing reports.

 

Lake Hamilton
No reports.

 

Lake Nimrod
For the Army Corps of Engineers’ real-time lake level and outflow reports from Nimrod Lake, visit the Corps’ Little Rock office website.

(updated 4-10-2025) Sheila at Carter Cove Bait-N-More (479-272-4025) had no report this week, but most recently had said that fishing for bass and crappie were good for some, not as good for others with the lake back to a normal level. Black bass were biting spinnerbaits but many were small. Crappie were various sizes and total catches. She reported selling a lot of minnows, but some regulars tend to stick with the jig. 

Carter Cove has a Facebook page, and the email address is cartercovebaitnmore@gmail.com, with updates and photos. 

 

Lake Ouachita
For the current lake level at Blakely Dam, click here.

(updated 4-10-2025) Todd Gadberry at Mountain Harbor Resort and Spa (870-867-2191/800-832-2276 out-of-state) reports that black bass were good. Carolina-rigged lizards, jerkbaits, hover rigs and a floating worm are still all producing quality catches. Walleye are moving back into the main lake from the rivers and major creeks. Try a watermelon-colored soft plastic, jerkbait or small swim jig. Stripers are good and are biting on topwater C-10 Redfins, live bait and small minnow-like jigs on the western end of the lake. Bream are still fair on worms or crickets in 20-30 feet of water, holding near brush. Crappie were good and relating to brush in the 8- to 20-foot range. Catfish should be picking up on trot lines with live and cut bait.
Water temperature is ranging 60-66 degrees. The clarity is muddy. Lake level Tuesday was 584.93 feet msl. Call the Mountain Harbor fishing guides (Mike Wurm, 501-622-7717, or Chris Darby, 870-867-7822) for more information.

(updated 3-27-2025) Capt. Darryl Morris of Family Fishing Trips (501-844-5418) continues to do most of his fishing at and reporting from lakes Ouachita and DeGray, and says, “The crappie are in their spawn. We have been catching ample numbers of crappie on staging tops near spawning coves 8-12 feet deep and in the buckbrush fished 3 feet deep.” 

 

Blue Mountain Lake
For the Army Corps of Engineers’ real-time lake level and outflow reports from Blue Mountain Lake, visit the Corps’ Little Rock office website.

(updated 4-3-2025) Sheila at Carter Cove Bait-N-More (479-272-4025) says bait customers who stop in there before heading to Blue Mountain Lake say the fishing at Blue Mountain is going well for crappie. Minnows are being used. “Almost everyone I talk to is saying, ‘Crappie, crappie, crappie’ … Some customers are wanting to catch bream and are requesting crickets, though it’s not time for the bream to be spawning yet. I still got some crickets in, though.”


 

East Arkansas

White River/Clarendon Area
For the Army Corps of Engineers’ real-time gauge level and flow from Clarendon, visit the Corps’ Little Rock office website.

 

Cook’s Lake
(updated 4-10-2025) The AGFC’s Wil Hafner at Cook’s Lake Nature Center (501-404-2321) said, “With the rain and flooding over this last weekend, the lake will once again be closed until the waters recede and allow the ramp and dock to be accessible.

“If the predictions hold true, this is likely to be the highest or second highest I have seen the lake since I started in 2017. Maybe it will help replenish all of the oxbows in the region.” 

Cook’s Lake is a 2.5-mile-long oxbow off of the White River, nestled in the heart of the Dale Bumpers White River National Wildlife Refuge near Casscoe in Arkansas County, with black bass, crappie, bream and catfish. This fertile oxbow receives very little fishing pressure due to it being used only for education purposes and youth and mobility-impaired fishing. Cook’s Lake is open to fishing for youths under 16 or mobility-impaired anglers who must possess the AGFC mobility impaired access permit, and up to two guests (who may also fish), during the specified fishing season. Fish from the 140-foot mobility-impaired accessible dock or launch a boat. Fishing will be allowed only on Fridays and Saturdays March through August, 8 a.m.-4 p.m., water level pending. Before launching, please check in at the Nature Center classroom and report back before leaving. For information or unscheduled closures, please call the center at 501-404-2321.

 

White River/Arkansas River (Pool 2)
(updated 4-3-2025) Webb’s Sporting Goods (870-946-0347) in DeWitt (1970 S. Whitehead Drive) reports that With the current weather situation, we are looking at all the rivers to be at high flow by the end of the week. This should make the catfishing better from about a week to 10 days from now. Fish have been biting before this front, but we know it will be slow after the front moves through. As always, thanks for supporting Webb’s Sporting Goods!

 

Note: msl is mean sea level; cfs is cubic feet per second.

The post Arkansas Wildlife Weekly Fishing Report appeared first on Arkansas Game & Fish Commission.

Hunters, anglers urged to use caution accessing remote areas 9 Apr 2025, 7:39 pm

LITTLE ROCK — The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission is still assessing much of the damage from five days of rain and storms that dumped more than 2 feet of water in some portions of The Natural State. The AGFC asks hunters and anglers to exercise additional caution when driving to their favorite turkey hunting location or boat ramp this spring.

The AGFC’s Special Youth Turkey Hunt is Saturday and Sunday, April 12-13. The regular statewide turkey season begins Monday, April 21.

“We know there are still some roads underwater right now that will block access to some wildlife management areas, and we’re still receiving reports on county roads and roads within WMAs that have been washed out or otherwise compromised to vehicle traffic,” AGFC Operations Division Chief Mike Cantrell said. “All of our areas will remain open for turkey season and other access so that people can enjoy the outdoors and reengage with nature, but please be patient and observant as downed trees, washouts and other dangers may be present until our crews and various partner agencies have a chance to address them.”

Cantrell also warns that water levels still have not crested on some of Arkansas’s major rivers, and additional areas may experience flooding, particularly in the southern half of the state. Visit this link to view the National Water Prediction Service’s map of existing river gauges and flood predictions.

The Jim Hinkle Spring River State Fish Hatchery at Mammoth Spring is one AGFC-owned area that will be temporarily closed as agency staff work to rebuild the road leading to the hatchery and assess the damage caused by the flood.

“The hatchery did flood, and we are still getting a bearing on the extent of the damage,” Cantrell said. “We appreciate everyone’s understanding and patience as we work to make these areas safe again. Please stay safe and stay away from the Spring River State Fish Hatchery and Dam 3 Access to the Spring River area until further notice. We will provide updates on the situation as they become available.”

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CUTLINES:

WASHOUT
This washed-out road at Petit Jean River WMA is indicative of some of the damage seen throughout the state during last week’s epic rain event. AGFC photo.

NARROW CROSSING
The road crossing this set of culverts on H. E. Alexander WMA has narrowed considerably from a washout, and caution is advised when encountering this sort of condition when hunting. AGFC photo.

ROAD DAMAGE
Damage at Jim Hinkle Spring River Hatchery was extensive. AGFC photo.

POWER LINE
Downed power lines, a collapsed railroad bridge and extensive erosion contribute to safety concerns at Spring River facilities following last week’s storms. AGFC photo. 

The post Hunters, anglers urged to use caution accessing remote areas appeared first on Arkansas Game & Fish Commission.

AGFC unveils express check option for Arkansas turkey hunters 9 Apr 2025, 1:50 pm

LITTLE ROCK — Successful hunters will have much less frustration confirming their harvest and getting back to the celebration this turkey season, thanks to a new game checking option the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission is offering through its website.

Kyle Curry, assistant chief of information technology for the AGFC, said Express Check is a simple way to get your bird checked without the trouble of trying to remember passwords to log into your license account.

“If you have the smartphone app, you can use it like always, and you can still check harvested turkeys through the website by logging in, but we know about 30 percent of our hunters still try to use the telephone checking system to bypass all the passwords and login requirements,” Curry said. “On opening morning or other high-traffic hunting times, you may end up on hold for a few minutes before an operator is available. A couple of minutes seems like an eternity when you’re on the side of a mountain with a single bar or two of service, so we’re trying to give people an easier way.”

Verifying your harvest through Express Check is as simple as going to www.agfc.com, clicking on Game Check in the top right corner of the webpage, and entering your turkey tag number, your last name and your date of birth. If your turkey tag is valid, you’ll get a confirmation number and your checking process will be complete.

“We’re planning to use the Customer Identification Number in the future, but for now, we’re using the eight-digit tag number issued to each turkey tag,” Curry said. “This number is available only on the turkey tags issued through the license system, so people who purchase through a vendor need to make sure they get the turkey tags from the vendor in addition to their hunting license.”

Curry says checking your turkey through the smartphone app will be identical to last year’s process. Phone checking will have one fairly major difference with the implementation of automated checking using computerized voice prompts and keypad entry with your phone.

“You can still get to a human operator if you need assistance with your checking process, but your first option will be to use the computerized system over the phone,” Curry said. “That will help reduce waiting on phone lines and remove some of the confusion with misspoken words or bad connections, making conversations difficult.”

Arkansas’s turkey season opens April 21 statewide. In Turkey Zone 1, it closes April 29; it continues through May 11 in Turkey Zone 2. The Special Youth Turkey Hunt for hunters younger than 16 is April 12-13. A full list of turkey regulations is available in the 2024-25 Arkansas Hunting Guidebook.

All turkeys harvested in Arkansas must be checked via agfc.com, the AGFC mobile app or by phone within 12 hours of harvest. If they are checked immediately upon harvest, the turkey does not need a physical tag attached to it. If the hunter is unable to check the bird immediately, then they must affix a possession tag indicating the hunter’s name, CID number and the date and time of harvest that must remain with the bird until it is checked.

Click here to use Express Check after you’ve bagged your bird.

 

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CUTLINES:

WOMAN WITH TURKEY
AGFC Boating Law Administrator Cpl. Sydney Grant with an excellent Arkansas gobbler taken in 2020. AGFC photo courtesy Sydney Grant.

TURKEY TAG
Hunters need only their last name, date of birth and the unique eight-digit number on their turkey tag to check their turkey harvest through the AGFC’s new Express Check option online.

The post AGFC unveils express check option for Arkansas turkey hunters appeared first on Arkansas Game & Fish Commission.

AGFC Commissioner Meeting Notice 7 Apr 2025, 6:55 pm

April 7, 2025

You are hereby notified that Commissioners of the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission will meet on the following date and times to consider any business that may be brought before the Commission. Unless otherwise stated, meetings will be held at the AGFC offices, 2 Natural Resources Dr. in Little Rock.

Monday, April 7

6:30 p.m.

Attending the Arkansas Legislative Sportsmen’s Caucus Banquet at the Association of Arkansas  Counties building, 1415 W. 3rd St. in Little Rock.

Tuesday, April 8

4 p.m.

Attending the Arkansas Legislative Sportsmen’s Caucus Capitol Clay Shoot at the Arkansas  Game and Fish Foundation Jacksonville Shooting Sports Complex, 2800 Graham Rd. in Jacksonville.

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The post AGFC Commissioner Meeting Notice appeared first on Arkansas Game & Fish Commission.

Arkansas Wildlife Weekly Fishing Report 3 Apr 2025, 6:38 pm

April 3, 2025

Jim Harris

Managing Editor Arkansas Wildlife Magazine

Westyn Peek, a 10-year-old angler (left) who was with his family from North Carolina fishing the White River out of Cotter Trout Dock earlier this week, happily enjoyed catching another brown trout, something he’s been doing for several years. He pulled in at least 10 on Tuesday, according to the folks at Cotter Trout Dock. Shad and sculpin were the baits of choice. Read more about the fishing on the White River from three busy trout locations under “North Arkansas” below.

Reports are updated weekly, although some reports may be published for two weeks if updates are not received promptly or if reporters say conditions haven’t changed. Contact the reporter listed for the lake or stream you plan to fish for current news.

Arkansas River and White River levels are available at: http://water.weather.gov/ahps2/index.php?wfo=lzk

For real-time information on stream flow in Arkansas from the U.S. Geological Survey, visit: http://waterdata.usgs.gov/ar/nwis/rt

For water-quality statistics (including temperature) in many Arkansas streams and lakes, visit: http://waterdata.usgs.gov/ar/nwis/current/?type=quality

Download the Fish Brain app and follow AGFC at: https://join.fishbrain.com/agfc-page


Quick links to regions:


 

Central Arkansas

Craig D. Campbell Lake Conway Reservoir (under renovation)

For the most up-to-date lake level, visit the U.S. Geological Survey’s Lake Conway water level site.

(updated 4-3-2025) Bates Field and Stream (501-470-1846) had no reports.

While Lake Conway is drawn down for renovation, the Lake Conway Nursery Pond is open for fishing in the immediate area, with bream and trout being reported among catches of late. The 70-acre pond has been stocked by the AGFC with mature bass, crappie, catfish and bream as well as rainbow trout for the cold weather months.

(updated 4-3-2025) AGFC staff reported Tuesday that eight people were fishing the Lake Conway Nursery Pond that day and anglers are starting to catch harvestable bream. The overall catch rate appeared high. Anglers were reported to be very positive about having the pond as a fishing option, according to staffers. Also, the Facebook site Crappie Fishing Arkansas featured a photo recently of an angler having caught a nice slab there.

 

Little Red River

For the Army Corps of Engineers’ real-time outflow report from Greers Ferry Dam, visit the Corps’ Little Rock office website or by calling (501) 362-5150). Also check the Southwestern Power Administration website to see forecast generation schedule.

(updated 4-3-2025) Fish ’N Stuff (501-834-5733) in Sherwood said the short time that anglers have been able to fish the Little Red after the major water releases of late winter and early spring, when the SWPA and Corps have stopped running lots of water, anglers have been able to fish and catch good numbers of brown trout and rainbow trout using gold jerkbaits as well as No. 7 and No. 5 size Rapala Countdowns in brown trout, gold and rainbow trout colors. Those can be used from a boat or from the bank but most anglers they’ve talked with are drifting more than anything now. If you want to try some wading, definitely pay attention to the water flow, particularly if this week’s forecast rainfall puts another big rise in Greers Ferry lake. Bank anglers have been catching trout (both brown and rainbows) of late with a Rooster tail or a Little Cleo Spoon.
Make sure to check the links above of the Corps and SWPA for generation schedules and any changes at Greers Ferry Lake with the expected storm fronts passing through the state.

(updated 3-27-2025) Mike Winkler of Little Red River Fly Fishing Trips (501-507-3688) said the Little Red “has springtime caddis action!”

He said, “We’ve been dealing with a bit of an unpredictable generation schedule from (the Southwestern Power Administration) this week. They’ve been running water in the mornings from around 6 a.m. to noon, then again in the evenings from 6-9 p.m. It’s not been super consistent, so we’re still waiting for a solid pattern to settle in. As for the weekend, if last week was any indication, we might see little to no generation — though with SWPA, you never know for sure!
“Greers Ferry Lake is at power pool, and with the nice spring weather, power demand is down. This has opened up a lot of opportunities on the river, letting anglers switch up their tactics throughout the day.
“If you’re into streamer fishing and chasing brown trout, the higher water in the mornings is a great time to throw big streamers toward the banks and look for an aggressive take. As the water starts to drop, switching to a nymph rig will keep you in the action. You can also start your day farther downstream and get right into nymphing.
“The caddis hatch is in full swing, and the fish are locked in on them! The bite has been fantastic, so if you’re heading out, I’d highly recommend running Guide’s Choice Hare’s Ears, Pheasant Tail Soft Hackles, Sunday Specials or any buggy caddis pattern under an indicator. As soon as the temps warm up, you’ll see the bugs flying all over the river, and the trout are loving them.
“It’s a great time to be on the water—get out there and enjoy it!”

 

Greers Ferry Lake
For the Army Corps of Engineers’ real-time lake level and outflow report from Greers Ferry Dam, visit the Corps’ Little Rock office website.

(updated 4-3-2025) Fish ’N Stuff (501-834-5733) in Sherwood said a lot of fish appear starting to spawn, and anglers are having success fishing for black bass shallow midway into the backs of creeks where they are finding a lot of fish. A lot depends on the depth of the creek, but they have been catching them from 2 feet down to 10 feet of water. Texas-rigged creature baits, Carolina rigs, floating worm and a jig are the main baits working.

There are still some fish out deeper in the main lake toward the middle, those that haven’t headed in to spawn. A 3-inch swimbait is working well out deep; go with a natural shad color of white color. Also, anglers are throwing the C-rig out in deeper water.

Crappie are biting anywhere from 5 feet to 15 feet. Anglers are catching them fishing shallow and throwing bait around bushes or wood, with a curly tail 2-inch curly tail grub in pink and chartreuse or purple and chartreuse being favored. Also, a blue and white color has worked. Out deeper, you’re going to want more of a natural color to a Bobby Garland Baby Shad for this area, such as gray and white or blue and white, and expect crappie bites at 15 feet of water.

The water level is normal, but that’s likely going to change with the rain in the forecast. Water as of Wednesday was stained to clear, depending on location (the lake tends to be clearer the closer to the dam).

(updated 4-3-2025) Tommy Cauley of Fishfinder Guide Service (501-940-1318) said Thursday morning the water level at Greers Ferry Lake was at 461.92 feet msl, or 0.12 feet below the normal pool of 462.04. The water, before the last massive rainfall to hit the state Wednesday, has been rising and falling one way or the other each day.

He says there is great stain to water — pretty much good catching color all over the lake and rivers — but we’re fixing to see a big rise. “Several days ago you probably saw some mid-50 temps with wind really mixing the lake up a lot, and it has cooled back off especially after these cold nights coming, and for sure will cause fish confusion as a lot of them have backed off now!”
For crappie, try super shallow and out to 30 feet and use jigs, minnows or crankbaits. Fishing straight up and down in pole timber or brushpiles is working great. A lot of walleye have moved upriver or close to it after the last big lake rise; there is a lot more staging and some prestaging. They have not even come out of deep water; they are scattered all over the lake and rivers. Look on any corner facing upstream and drag a minnow or crankbaits 45-65 feet. Other walleye are supper shallow; fish a jighead minnow, jerkbait or big minnow-type deep-diving bait. Some are following under big schools of whites and hybrids and some have even spawned up rivers, but lots of males upriver are waiting, and the females are as well; use a spoon for those.

For the walleye just roaming around, a spoon is best for vertical fishing them in 10-50 feet.
Hybrid bass and white bass are set up in the main lake and some are roaming, schooling on top. For the ones set, use spoons, inline spinners, grubs and swimbaits in 25-80 feet. They want to settle in about 43 feet, which is magic water depth where they are comfortable here many months out of the year. It has the right temperature and oxygen. Some are up rivers spawning now; try throwing a grub on a jighead or a Roadrunner.

Catfish are biting all over the lake on the usual stuff. Try staying around schools of shad. Some bream are shallow but most are still around 8-30 feet. Crickets and crawlers are working fine as well as inline spinners.

You will start running into small groups of five to eight black bass up shallow. Most, though, are out or roaming shallow and schooling. Use Carolina rigs, Wiggle Warts and any flat-sided crankbait, drop-shots, spinner baits and Rat-L-Traps super shallow out to 80 feet. The spinnerbait will shine right now shallow or in the guts. Also be mindful of certain trees they will get on in the pole timber! Be safe and wear your life jacket.

Harris Brake Lake

(updated 4-3-2025) Bing Watkins at Harris Brake Lake Resort (501-889-2745) says some crappie were caught on minnows, but not very many. She termed the bite OK. “They are moving around, you’ve got to go find them.” Some people caught catfish on trotlines baited with chicken liver or shad.

The big news was the largemouth bass, though. She said bass are doing “really good.” One angler caught a large one that he didn’t measure, but the photo was posted on the Harris Brake Facebook page. The angler was using a 10-inch Zoom worm. Another angler caught a 4-pound largemouth earlier this week. Last Saturday, the lake hosted the Harris Brake Lake Bass Cup, where 22 boats were entered. The winning two-person team caught 15.30 pounds with a 5-bass stringer, while 13.70 pounds was runner-up. The Big Bass was 4.65 pounds.

The water is on the rise with this week’s storms, and there is a lot of pollen on top. The water temperature Thursday was ranging 60-62 degrees.

Follow more from Harris Brake Lake Resort on its Facebook page.

 

Lake Overcup
(updated 3-27-2025)
John “Catfish” Banks at Overcup Landing off Arkansas Highway 9 said water level is about 1 foot high and clarity is good. Water temperature is around 67 degrees.
Black bass are doing well on crankbaits and spinnerbaits. Catfish are going crazy all over. Bream haven’t started yet but should pick up. Crappie are doing well on yo-yos and jugs. Anglers report starting to catch some males that are turning black from the warm shallow water.

“Come see us for all your fishing adventures at Overcup Bait Shop off Highway 9.”

Brewer Lake

(update 4-3-2025) AGFC staff visited Brewer Lake over the weekend (March 29-30) for this report: Surface water temperature is low- to mid-60s and the water level is at full pool. The pollen has put a green tinge to the surface, but other than that, the water is fairly clear with about 2 feet of visibility. Crappie are beginning to move shallow to the flooded brush and should be spawning now. Focus on coves in the northern portion of the lake. Largemouth bass are biting fairly well on secondary points and isolated brush in 7-11 feet of water. Slow-rolled spinnerbaits, lipless crankbaits and Carolina-rigged lizards are working well. Fishing the brushline with a wacky-rigged Senko or Texas-rigged lizard will also pick up a few smaller bass. Most of the large fish are still a cast-and-a-half offshore waiting to move up. No report on catfish or bream.

Brewer Lake has a new regulation for 2025: The 13- to 16-inch black bass slot limit on Brewer (as well as Lake Barnett in White County) has been replaced; now, anglers may keep up to 10 largemouth bass, but only one of those may exceed 16 inches.

 

Lake Maumelle
NOTE: Bryan Rupar, the watershed protection manager for Central Arkansas Water, said Monday (March 31) that repairs to the Lake Maumelle Dam, initiated in early March, are progressing steadily. The contractor is actively restoring the dam’s outer shell, a major undertaking that could take up to two more months to complete, depending on weather conditions. To facilitate the repairs, CAW aims to keep the lake level around 5 feet below normal pool elevation; however, this will depend on rainfall and the progress of the project.

 

(update 3-20-2025) Crappie guide Eric Watts of Natural State Fishing (501-548-8990) said, “We had a phenomenal week of fishing last week through the weekend! Unfortunately, high winds have made it tough to get out this week.
“Lake Maumelle water level has reached the “critical” point in my opinion. I do not plan to launch my boat there again until the lake refills.” Lake Maumelle is nearly 10 feet below full pool because Central Arkansas Water has targeted a 10-foot drawdown to allow for repair of the dam.
“That said, I’ll be exploring some of our other awesome crappie fishing locations across Central Arkansas over the next few weeks. I’ll let you know how that goes!”

Schedule your next fishing adventure at www.nsfguide.com

(updated 3-20-2025) WestRock Landing in Roland (501-658-5598) had no report this week, noting that they had not had anyone fishing because of the wind. The lake is 9.5 feet low (Central Arkansas Water has lowered the lake to as much as 10 feet for work on the dam).
The front ramps are not accessible but WestRock’s back launch ramp is available. “We recommend having 4-wheel drive because it is steep and has a drop-off.”

 

Arkansas River at Morrilton

For the real-time water flow at the Ormond Lock and Dam and Morrilton stage level, visit the Corps’ Little Rock office website.

Little Maumelle River

(update 3-27-2025) Ray Hudson at River Valley Marina (501-517-1250) said the water is clear and normal level and great for fishing, with excellent reports on crappie and bass and some activity seen out of the bream.

Crappie are biting anywhere from a depth of 6 feet all the way up to 2 feet. They are biting minnows and jigs — best colors of jigs would be anything with chartreuse in it. There is no spawning activity being noticed yet, but Ray says the water is warm enough for it. “I figure maybe 2 or 3 more days. They are catching a lot of male crappie, little bucks have come up first. The bigger ones, the females, are a little deeper.”

The bass are doing really well, he said. Try crankbaits and spinnerbaits. The best bet on spinners was mainly a white one. Or use a crankbait that looks similar to a bream: chartreuse and black, chartreuse with orange belly, etc.

Bream are biting on crickets and worms now. He’s heard nothing on the catfish.

 

Arkansas River (Maumelle Pool)
For the real-time water flow at the Toad Suck Lock and Dam, visit the Corps’ Little Rock office website.

 

Arkansas River (Little Rock Area Pools)

For the real-time water flow at the Murray Lock and Dam and David D. Terry Lock and Dam, as well as the Little Rock pool stage level, visit the Corps’ Little Rock office website.

(updated 4-3-2025) Fish ’N Stuff (501-834-5733) said this week’s report is subject to change river flow with rain that is forecast, but at midweek the water clarity was stained to muddy in a few places and the water temperature was ranging 58-68 degrees depending on location. Anglers will find it warmer in the backwaters and cooler in the main part of the river; anglers competing in Tuesday night’s bass tournament saw about a 10-degree temperature swing depending on location.
Black bass are biting really well on Texas-rigged creature bait fished up shallow around wood or grass. Black and blue has been a great color lately of creature bait. A black and blue jig has also worked well, along with a black and blue Senko fished weightless. You can also catch some fish on a chartreuse and black back crankbait as well as a white and chartreuse spinnerbait. “They are biting a little bit of everything but those are the main ones,” they say.

They have not heard any reports from the river on crappie lately.

Water is normal level but, again, that may all change drastically before this weekend with the wet weather forecast.

 

Peckerwood Lake

(updated 4-3-2025) Donna Mulherin at Herman’s Landing (501-626-6899) said anglers have been visiting regularly the past few weeks. She says they’ve been catching quite a few catfish, with minnows and hot dogs the primary baits. Crappie, she added, are still “all over the place with this crazy weather.” Use minnows or jigs for crappie. She had not heard anything on the bass. The lake water level is at normal pool.

North Arkansas

White River

Cotter Area
(updated 4-3 -2025) Cotter Trout Dock (870-435-6525) said March ended on a high note for trout anglers in Cotter. The catch has been especially good this past week for browns. While most may not have been official “trophies,” there were many that fell just an inch or two short of the 24 inches required to earn a catch-and-release pin. The bait of choice was, again, sculpins, but sometimes a few shad were added to the mix and helped bring a brown to the boat.

The water level has been pretty steady over the past few days at just about one unit (3,300 cfs) to three units (9,000 cfs), so anglers were able to drift for trout or find their favorite fishing hole and drop a line there. The lake level is slowly dropping – 658.69 feet msl as of this writing.

You can hook your share of rainbows with a pink worm, sometimes tipped with white PowerBait. A rise in the water level due to increases in generation washes worms (red wigglers mostly) into the river, so baiting your hook with a real worm will add to your creel, too. Tie on something with lots of gold flash if using spoons; spinners with blue and silver blades have also proven successful. The low-water times have also been great for our fly-fishers with many wading opportunities opening up.

Can’t miss with a silver/red midge. The river level can change fast, so keep an eye on the water level if wade fishing.

“We’ve been battling some strong winds, but don’t give in. Nature is working to push winter out of the way. Be prepared for rain this weekend in the Arkansas Ozarks, but daytime temperatures will be mostly moderate. Whatever the weather, we’ll get you catching trout. See you there.”

 

Calico Rock Area

(updated 4-3-2025) Dave McCulley, owner of Jenkins Fishing Service in Calico Rock, said, “Fishing this last week has been amazing. We have seen reduced generation from the dams (Bull Shoals and Norfork), creating low and clear water in the Calico Rock area.
“With the reduced flow, drift-fishing has been less effective. We have seen a lot of fish caught using artificial lures such as Little Cleo and Thompson Colorado Spoons. Additionally, Rapala Countdowns in CD5 or CD7 in rainbow trout or black/silver have worked well.

“The prediction is these next rounds of storms are going to cause flooding on the Buffalo River and White River, which will last through at least Sunday. Depending on how muddy the lakes get and the water released from dams, it may take several days or more before the river clears up enough to be fishable.”

 

Allison/Mountain View Area

(updated 4-3-2025) Jack’s White River Fishing Resort reports they had a great week of fishing with several trips out on the water. The water level fluctuated between 2-5 feet, but despite that, “we were able to hit our limits each time. The guides had success using Sunrise Orange PowerBait, handmade hammered silver spinners, and shrimp as bait. Most of the fishing took place just past the Highway 9 bridge by Hansford Bluff near Round Bottom.

An AGFC staffer took in a guided trip with a friend and a Jack’s guide, Braden, the week before last and had a lot of success with rainbows, mostly catching them up to 6 miles or so north of the resort and drifting downstream rapidly with a pretty strong current. The AGFC had stocked the river with rainbows at Mount Olive and at the Sylamore Access several days earlier, and the stockers were hungry. Best success was by spin-fishing with inline spinners, eggs (like X Factor or something similar) and pieces of shrimp. Make sure to use only about a third of a whole shrimp; anything more is too much for the trout to swallow. We caught some more mature rainbows as well as the stockers, too.

 

Bull Shoals Lake

For the Army Corps of Engineers’ real-time outflow report from Bull Shoals Dam, visit the Corps’ Little Rock office website.

(updated 4-3-2025) Fishing guide Del Colvin at Bull Shoals Lake (815-592-4302) reported Tuesday night that lake level was at 658 feet. Water temperature is ranging anywhere from 56 degrees into the 60s depending on location. “It’s that time of year where most anglers have been able to catch some beating the bank. With the incoming weather and a probable rise in water level, everything that’s been happening is about to change, with more fish moving up into pre-spawn areas.
“Power fishing shallow has been favorable with clouds, rain and high winds blowing square on the bank. Some fish are up there roaming shallow in 5-15 feet of water. A spinnerbait, Chatterbait, Alabama rig and a jerkbait will catch a few in natural shad patterns. Target windblown transition banks by steep stuff nearby — yep, not easy with the winds but that’s where they are at. Fish chunk rock, steeper banks and small ledges close to deep water. A SPRO Crawler, Wiggle Wart and Red Craw, or green variations, are catching them. You can go bright in stained water. Natural in the clear.
“The crank bite will slow without wind. There are always fish to be caught on a jig, and a Jewel Peewee seems to be getting a little more action. Try areas near shad. Once again, a warm day with little wind and sunny fish points, drop-offs or ledges, piles, swings — you’re looking anywhere from 20-30 feet, and way shallower (5-10 feet) in stain or clouds.
“The offshore videogamers are going to have to work. The shad are still spread out and throughout the water column and spread through the creeks. Target larger bait balls or any bait you can find up high near the surface and closer to the shore. Most fish are still looking up. Every day is different and every creek will be a little different. If you are targeting shad eaters, it’s been work! A smaller 2.8 swimbait or a regular Tater Shad has been working, and use a jerkbait around those high swimming shad and the shad balls early or late in the day when shad are up in the water column. They are being finicky if they aren’t actively feeding. Good luck, have fun, be safe and ‘Fish the Conditions.’”

Del regularly posts new YouTube videos. Visit his YouTube site (Bull Shoals Fishing Report) for more information and tips on fishing Bull Shoals Lake.

 

(updated 4-3-2025) Southernwalleye Guide Service (501-365-1606) says walleye fishing in the daytime on the lower end of the lake has been a little better this week. Windy, cloudy days have helped the daytime fishing a lot. Weather this week calls for lots of rain and this will most certainly change lake levels and fish positions. If the lake rises up over the buckbrush, fish over it with spinnerbaits or a ⅛-ounce jighead with small swimbaits. Also, a shallow-running jerkbait such as a Smithwick Suspending Rattlin’ Rogue will get some bites.

Best fishing this past week has still been late evenings. Walleye seemed to still be in the spawning/post-spawn period. We are still seeing fish coming to the shallows at night. Fish are scattered along chunk rock points with deep water close by and along steeper creek channel swings that have shad. Best to fish lowlight periods at this time. Fishing methods still the same: fishing 4-15 feet of water with jerkbaits or fishing 4 feet out to 30 feet of water with jig and minnow, jig and plastics or Ice jigs worked slowly back to the boat on points with deep water on at least one side will produce fish.
Fishing the same structure right before and after dark with 110-style jerkbaits or 5-inch floating stick baits and retrieved back at extremely slow speeds will get some fish.

If trolling, try to fish lowlight periods. Trolling 5-inch stick baits at slow speeds as low as .85 mph in 7-14 feet along windblown banks will also work.

(updated 4-3-2025) Crappie 101 Guide Service (870-577-2045) says crappie are definitely more scattered than usual after these fronts and an extremely windy March. We had to search a lot of water lately for brush or feeding crappie. Jigs have been working best for me using a ⅛-ounce with a Tater Baits Small Fry in Arctic Blast or Aurora Blue. The minnow bite has been a little slower as of late.

 

Norfork Lake

For the Army Corps of Engineers’ real-time outflow report from Norfork Dam, visit the Corps’ Little Rock office website.

(updated 4-3-2025) Tom Reynolds of STR Outfitters (also Facebook.com/stroutfitters or 870-421-1541) guides out of Tracy Ferry Marina and reports that the lake’s water level is at 573 feet msl, it is clear, and the water temperature is close to 60 degrees. However, if the predicted rains happen this week, the lake will have a big shock. We may see a rise of 6-8 feet with very stained water and lots of debris.
Stripers will continue their feeding as they get ready to spawn. Bait will move farther up the creek to feed, and the crappie will wait until the water calms down and warms back up. Next Tuesday we should see a return to stable conditions.
This past week saw lots of stripers being caught both during the day and night. The bite has been starting at first light and continues during the morning. As the wind picks up, the fish move the flats and will have feeding cycles during the morning. The best is large gizzard shad on free lines and planer boards.

The night fishing continues to be excellent this past week. The best times have been 8-10 p.m. Focus on the lake’s north and east banks. South and west winds warm these banks during the day, attracting stripers looking for bait. The best lures for night fishing are rogues and swimbaits.

Target creeks with long, flat areas and slightly stained water. The best locations to find active stripers include Steward Point, Pigeon Creek, Bennetts Bayou, Big Creek and Brushy Creek.

Crappie fishing is picking up. Crappie are being caught around the brushpiles using 1/16- and 1/32-ounce jigs or minnows. They have moved up to shallower water but will move as the water rises later this week.


 

Northwest Arkansas

Beaver Lake

For the Army Corps of Engineers’ real-time outflow report from Beaver Lake Dam, visit the Corps’ Little Rock office website.

(updated 4-3-2025) Jon Conklin with FishOn Guide Service (479-233-3474) said Beaver Lake is holding at 1,120.36 feet msl. That looks to change soon with 4-8 inches of rain predicted this week.

“If we get that rain, it will set up some good spawning conditions as long as the Corps of Engineers doesn’t let the lake come up and then drop it fast come mid-April.”

Stripers have been very good from Prairie Creek islands up to and past the Arkansas Highway 45 bridge.

On that note, the white bass are loading into the Twin Bridges area. With an almost certain river rise, the white bass run may get really good in the next few weeks.\

Walleye have spawned and are still located up in the White and War Eagle areas. If we get a big rise, the walleye will ride the rise back out to mid-lake.

Crappie are moving up and are either on banks or close in 5-15 feet of water. This should remain and get better each week throughout April. Go to your favorite spawning areas and it should be on.

Black bass are also moving shallow and this will continue to get better.

“There are a couple of issues, though. It is supposed to get down to freezing a few days next week; that could have fish back out a bit, and we could have a major and fast water rise that could scatter fish for a bit.

“Be safe and good luck!”

Visit Jon’s Facebook page for the latest updates, FishOn Guide Service Goshen AR.

 

Beaver Tailwater

(updated 4-3-2025) Guide Austin Kennedy (479-244-0039) said the water temperature is rising and the fish are moving in. The week was a mixed bag. Trout have been really responsive to Pautzke Fire Worms and Fire Baits fished with light terminal tackle. The Fire Worms have been best with drifting. The walleye bite has been up and down as well, but it is improving. Trolling has produced nice numbers downstream from Houseman Access. Pulling mid-diving crankbaits coated in Pautzke Fire Gel has been the preferred method.

The above-mentioned methods have also produced some white bass as well. The white bass have started to come up, and we have been definitely waiting on them. We got another shot of cold air coming in around April 1; hopefully this will be the last of it.

Remember to follow my fishing Facebook page (Busch Mountain Fishing Guide Service) for day-to-day updates between reports. Have fun, stay safe and catch some fish!

 

Lake Fayetteville

(updated 3-21-2025)
Lake Fayetteville Boat Dock (479-444-3476) reports that crappie and bass are both coming up into shallower water to bite now that the water temperature is in the 50s. The clarity is “a little dirty, but we like it a little dirty. With the water temp in the 50s, the fish are ready.”
Crappie are biting in jigs and coming up to about 4 feet depth. Black bass are chasing crankbaits. No reports on catfish.


 

Northeast Arkansas

Lake Charles

(updated 4-3-2025) Shelly Jeffrey at Lake Charles State Park (870-878-6595) said fishing for the major species continued to be good this week. Crappie were fishing well with anglers using jigs in all colors as well as worms and minnows. They’re biting near the shoreline. Look for the best times this month to be around the full moon coming in a couple of weeks.

Black bass are good but anglers aren’t sharing their baits used. It’s a good time for crankbaits and spinnerbaits, though, as well as jigs.

Catfish are good but, like the bass, anglers are not sharing what bait they are using. Worms are typically good now, though, such as nightcrawlers, plus the catfish stink bait. Also try live bait like small bluegill. That was what Cameron Morris was using the Monday before last when he caught a nice 13-pound, 7-pound flathead, in case you missed last week’s report.
Bream also are good on redworms and jigs, and like the crappie they have moved their activity to the shoreline.

No reports on white bass. The water is the usual Lake Charles murky, and the level is high.

 

Lake Poinsett

(updated 3-21-2025) Lake Poinsett State Park reports that anglers are still catching limits of crappie. Also, they are buying lots of minnows as well as worms, but the crappie appear best on minnows. On a nice day, you can see 15-30 boats on the lake.

Most anglers are targeting crappie, but a couple of anglers reported that they caught black bass on minnows as well as jigs.

The lake limit on crappie is 15 fish (all sizes encouraged to be harvested to help prevent stunting), and for black bass you can keep 10 fish with one being larger than 16 inches.

As always, the State Park Visitor Center sells live bait (currently nightcrawlers, redworms and minnows) and is now open every day from 8 a.m.-5 p.m.

 

Spring River

(updated 4-3-2025) Mark Crawford with springriverfliesandguides.com (870-955-8300) had no new report, but on his blog late last week he said he’d had a great day on the water that particular day with olive. He saw lots of really heavy rainbows, a few smallies and “crazy savage strikes from river monsters! At the end, I caught some big ’bows on El Diablo.” He added that the river looked great, they had one brief storm move through at 3 p.m. and passed quickly. “Storms can change conditions. Looks great at this time.”

In his most recent report here three weeks ago, Mark noted the water levels were staying around 400-450 cfs, as they had all winter, with 350 average flow, and likely after this week’s rains they will be fast again this week, making for a little tougher wading conditions. Wading staffs are very helpful with current flow. Water clarity is clear with storms moving through, murking up the water at times.

Mark also reported in mid-March, “Catching plenty of really nice rainbows thanks to Jim Hinkle Spring River State Fish Hatchery,” he said. “Stocking should increase over the next few months, getting ready for summertime fishing pressure. Big Woollies, with extra weight to get down, have been excellent — olive is the hot color, as always. On the high-pressure days, we have done well with Hopper droppers, with Y2Ks and nymphs as droppers.

“The smallies have been biting great on good days. Using sculpin and baitfish patterns on long leaders or sink tips. Got to get down to them! The best fighting fish we have, except maybe a carp. One of the great things about fishing for smallies is that the brown trout like the same baits. Work the banks more for the browns.
“Tis the time to chase walleye on the nasty, overcast days. There are a lot of walleye in the Spring River. Big crankbaits work; my fav is Trout Magnets, Trout Crank, in rainbow and brown trout colors.

“April and May are great months to fish the Spring River with lower fishing pressure and perfect weather. The canoe hatch kicks off at the end of May. Then look out.”

Visit Mark’s blog (springriverfliesandguides.com) for the latest conditions on the Spring River.

 

White River

For the Army Corps of Engineers’ real-time gauge level and flow from the White River stages at Batesville, Newport and Augusta and all other sites within the White River basin in Arkansas, visit the Corps’ Little Rock office website.


 

Southeast Arkansas

Arkansas River (Pine Bluff Pool)

For the real-time water flow at the Emmett Sanders Lock and Dam and Maynard Lock and Dam, as well as the Pine Bluff pool stage level, visit the Corps’ Little Rock office website.

(updated 3-27-2025) The University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff Bass Fishing Team reported that water temperature is in the upper 50s, some protected backwaters are up to mid-60s. Visibility is around 12 inches in most places, some tributaries are muddier, some backwaters are clearer. Black bass are phasing into the spawn. The best fishing is in protected shallows with woody cover using dark- colored soft-plastic creatures and jigs. Spinnerbaits and bladed jigs are effective on windy days.

 

Cane Creek Lake

(updated 4-3-2025) Shelley Burr at Cane Creek State Park, (870-628-4714) said customers were buying worms last Thursday at the visitor center to try their luck at whatever they could catch from fishing the pier.
Spring break started a couple of weeks back with several visitors on hand that Saturday to fish for crappie. The following day an angler reported catching two bass but overall thought it was too windy to continue. Crickets were purchased at the visitor center for crappie by boat anglers and shoreline anglers recently. Also, minnows have been fished for crappie as well.

Lake Monticello

(updated 4-3-2025)
Anglers are reminded that if they venture out for some fishing on Lake Monticello while the lake continues to refill after being renovated, that all fish caught must be released immediately.
The Hunger Run Access is open to boat traffic. Reports are good of anglers catching nice black bass now.


 

Southwest Arkansas

Millwood Lake
For the Army Corps of Engineers’ real-time lake level and outflow report from Millwood Lake Dam, visit the Corps Little Rock office website.

(updated 4-3-2025) Mike Siefert at Millwood Lake Guide Service said that two brothers, Griffin and Grant Shuff from Texas, took their maiden voyage with Millwood Lake Guide Service recently for the annual white bass spawning run up Little River. The Shuffs enjoyed doubling down with double catches, and sometimes two at a time on upper Little River this week, with an overall catch rate between 30-40 white bass in a 2- to 4-hour afternoon run. Siefert says the majority of the white bass that have been the most aggressive as of late are ranging in size from 1.5 to 3 pounds each. It seems like sunny days have the white bass schooled up tightly feeding on threadfin shad, and on cloudy days they seem to scatter into broken schools with random reactions more common — that is, one here and one there and another 3 miles away up river.
Millwood’s annual white bass run typically forecasts the run that will happen in Central Arkansas and especially the Maumelle River (watch for the run out at the AGFC’s Sleepy Hollow Access) in the next week or so.
Millwood Lake elevation as of Wednesday was 6 inches above normal pool and rising, at 259.7 feet msl; Millwood Lake Dam was releasing about 4,100 cfs and tailwater was near 231 feet and rising. Incoming threatening storms this week will most likely have those numbers drastically higher by this weekend if the 7- to 9-inch rainfall the National Weather Service is predicting transpires in the next couple days here.

Surface temps continue fluctuating, ranging 64 degrees early to 68 later in the day along Little River this week. Clarity along Little River, for the past week improved from reduced discharge at Millwood Dam. Moderate stain is seen in most locations, muddy in some areas further up Little River, with river clarity ranging 12-18 inches visibility depending on location.

Siefert urges anglers to always watch for broken timber and use caution during navigation. He says that many Little River buoys are missing from Yarborough Access to Bee Lake to Big Bayou Boat Lane to Paraloma Trail and all the way up to mile marker 1 and the open water. The missing buoys are a safety hazard, and the Army Corps of Engineers is aware of the situation and is attempting to replace them ASAP.

Check the most recent lake level of Millwood Lake on the guide service’s website linked above, or the Army Corps of Engineers website, for updated gate release changes and inflow rates with rising and falling lake levels.

Siefert had these fishing specifics from this past week:

* Millwood is still producing good largemouth bass at tournaments over the past few weeks — consistently week to week there are catches weighing 5-9 pounds. The bass activity has continued to improve over the past few weeks with the warmer conditions, depending on location, but can seem random on high barometric days.

The largemouth are best during the late morning through midday. Several females have been found roaming flats from 1-5 feet deep and on beds in areas of the oxbow lakes up Little River. A few of those roaming largemouths have been fair to good on red chrome half-ounce Rat-L-Traps. The smaller quarter-ounce Spinner Tail Rat-L-Traps in chrome/blue or red shad will get a random reaction near flats through dead lily pads with deep creek bends. When you need to work shallow, throw brown/orange or red chrome crawfish, red shad/gold back or Toledo Gold colors and you will connect. Spin Traps with a gold tail spinner will also work through the dead lily pad stems flawlessly and will connect with roaming bass.

Brazalo Strutter Chatterbaits continue working, and best colors over the past two weeks for us have been Millwood Mayhem Bream, black/blue and pumpkin/fire craw. Reactions have been very good — we’ve been catching healthy 3- to 6-pound bass over the last couple weeks — and the best reactions continue to be in 5-9 feet depths near grass lines, stumps, cypress trees and timber. Brazalo Spinnerbaits in Arkansas River Shad, Peachy, Spot Remover and Hot Mouse are all good choices in the stained to clear water in the oxbow lakes up Little River.

The males we found near and on beds this week were around 3-4 pounds, and were in 2-6 feet deep flats with stumps present near cypress trees and knees for wind protection, with close proximity to drops from 4-9 feet deep. The bite has improved on a red or chartreuse/white Chatterbait, a Brazalo Spinnerbait in Spot Remover or chartreuse/white, or a 6- to 8-inch and magnum-sized lizard. Numerous female largemouths are cruising grass lines and dead lily pad stems, when they are not pinned to the beds, in the 4- to 8-pound class.

If you want to fish the 1-3 feet depths, turn off your electronics and raise your trolling motor to keep from spooking the bass. In the cleaner water back in the pockets and oxbows away from current in Little River, throw a 6- to 8-inch lizard in Cotton Candy, Watermelon Magic or June bug/red, and in the heavier stained or dingy and muddy areas throw black/blue, blackberry, pumpkinseed/chartreuse tail or a chartreuse pumpkin color.

Bass Assassin 5-inch Shad Assassins in Houdini, Salt & Pepper Silver Phantom and Smoke Wagon will draw reactions in the fresh, blooming lily pad stands and behind and in dense grass lines.

* The white bass run IS ON. They have moved further up along Little River and have been heavily schooled up at various creek dumps into Little River for several weeks now. A few nice-sized schools were found up Little River to Patterson Shoals this week. It seems like sunny days have the white bass schooled up tightly feeding on threadfin shad, and on cloudy days they seem to scatter into broken schools with random reactions more common.

We ran up Little River to Cossatot inflow ditch and Patterson Shoals above U.S. Highway 71 at Wilton again several days this week. The water temps we saw there were in the mid-60s and the whites were hitting our crankbaits and spoons with abandon. We have been throwing Bill Lewis Lures Rat-L-Traps in chrome/blue or Millwood Magic colors, Hammered Cordell Chrome Spoons, Little Georges and Cleos, Rooster Tails, Rocket Shads, Tennessee Shad color Bomber Fat Free Fingerlings and the Fat Free Guppy, and our clients also had good luck using Beetle Spins with the black and white twin tail grub.

We caught around 25-30 some days, and good numbers over 40-50 large white bass other days this week, at several locations, and the hard-charging white bass were eager to bite up to 3 pounds. We also saw four or five other fishermen in the same locations, and they were also catching good numbers of FAT white bass this week between Wilton Landing and Patterson Shoals. We stopped and talked with one group of anglers who had also caught around 50 in the afternoon this week. White bass spawning runs continue to be a great time to take a kid fishing!

* Crappie over the past week have been scattered like crazy, kind of like the white bass were a few days this week. So random, nothing consistent to report, and they have not been stacked up in brush like they typically are this time of year. We do not believe water temperature has gotten to the point where the crappie are pulling up shallow to spawn yet, but it’s coming soon. We expect this will change over the next week.

* No reports on catfish or bream.

 

Lake Greeson Tailwater

For the most updated Narrows Dam generation schedule from SWEPCO, click here.

 

Lake Greeson

For the most updated lake level at Lake Greeson, click here.

No reports.

 

DeGray Lake

For the most updated lake level at DeGray Lake, click here.

(updated 4-3-2025) John Duncan of YoYo Guide Service (870-942-6291 or yoyoguideservice@gmail.com) at Iron Mountain Marina says, “Hey everyone, it’s storm time in Arkansas. Water level on DeGray is 407.31 feet msl with a slight rise so far (as of Thursday midmorning).

“Little to say that is not already history with these storms here. Water temperature on the surface was in the 60s prior to the rain. The good news for the crappie guys is that the fish were in the shallows prior to this weather. Jigs, slip bobber, casting, tight-lining all were getting it done. Some of these were in a depth of 18 inches.

White bass have been plentiful and doing some surfacing around the Yancy Cove area.

“Wow, there is little to say with this weather other than ‘Be patient.’ High water will be coming and things are going to change.

“Brian Bean won the BFL Tournament this weekend on DeGray with 18.6 pounds. His big fish was on a Berkley Lizard.

“Spring is here. Stay safe and be courteous.”

 

(updated 3-27-2025) Capt. Darryl Morris of Family Fishing Trips (501-844-5418) continues to do most of his fishing at and reporting from lakes Ouachita and DeGray, and says, “The crappie are in their spawn. We have been catching ample numbers of crappie on staging tops near spawning coves 8-12 feet deep and in the buckbrush fished 3 feet deep.”

 

De Queen Lake

For the Army Corps of Engineers’ real-time lake level and outflow report from De Queen Lake, visit the Corps’ Little Rock office website.

 

Dierks Lake

For the Army Corps of Engineers’ real-time lake level and outflow report from Dierks Lake, visit the Corps’ Little Rock office website.


 

South-Central Arkansas

White Oak Lake Area

No reports.


 

West-Central Arkansas

Lake Catherine Tailwater (Below Carpenter Dam)

For weekly flow releases from Carpenter Dam, visit www.entergy.com/hydro

(updated 4-3-2025) Shane Goodner, owner of Catch’em All Guide Service, reports that due to an outbreak of severe weather on Wednesday that is forecasted to continue until Saturday, Entergy has scheduled 24/7 generation flows from Carpenter Dam. Rainfall amounts as high as 15 inches are expected over our area during this time along with possible tornado and large hail events. Fast flows will be the norm on Lake Catherine in conjunction with open flood gates to aid in passing these huge amounts of water through the dam system. Treacherous conditions will be present until the flood waters subside, which could be weeks depending on rainfall amounts. No one should attempt to navigate the Carpenter Dam tailrace until lake conditions return to normal and local weather stabilizes.

 

Lake Dardanelle

For the Army Corps of Engineers’ outflow and gauge level reports from Dardanelle, visit the Corps’ Little Rock office website.

(updated 4-3-2025) Seth Boone, superintendent at Lake Dardanelle State Park (479-890-7474), had no new fishing reports.

 

Lake Hamilton

No reports.

 

Lake Nimrod

For the Army Corps of Engineers’ real-time lake level and outflow reports from Nimrod Lake, visit the Corps’ Little Rock office website.

(updated 4-3-2025) Sheila at Carter Cove Bait-N-More (479-272-4025) had no report this week, but most recently had reported that fishing for bass and crappie were good for some, not as good for others with the lake back to a normal level. Black bass were biting spinnerbaits but many were small. Crappie were various sizes and total catches. She reported selling a lot of minnows, but some regulars tend to stick with the jig.

Carter Cove has a Facebook page, and the email address is cartercovebaitnmore@gmail.com, with updates and photos.

 

Lake Ouachita

For the current lake level at Blakely Dam, click here.

(updated 3-27-2025) Todd Gadberry at Mountain Harbor Resort and Spa (870-867-2191/800-832-2276 out-of-state) reports that black bass are still excellent. Carolina-rigged lizards, jerkbaits, hover rigs and a floating worm are all producing quality catches. Walleye are moving back into the main lake from the rivers and major creeks. Try a watermelon-colored soft plastic or small swim jig. Stripers are still very good and biting on topwater C-10 Redfins, live bait and small minnow-like jigs on the western end of the lake. Bream are fair on worms or crickets in 20-30 feet of water, holding near brush. Crappie are good and relating to brush in the 8- to 20-foot range. Catfish should be picking up on trot lines with live and cut bait.
Water temperature is ranging 58-63 degrees, about a 3-degree rise over last week. Water clarity is clearing. Lake level is steady at 577.89 feet msl. Call the Mountain Harbor fishing guides (Mike Wurm, 501-622-7717, or Chris Darby, 870-867-7822) for more information.

(updated 3-27-2025) Capt. Darryl Morris of Family Fishing Trips (501-844-5418) continues to do most of his fishing at and reporting from lakes Ouachita and DeGray, and says, “The crappie are in their spawn. We have been catching ample numbers of crappie on staging tops near spawning coves 8-12 feet deep and in the buckbrush fished 3 feet deep.”

 

Blue Mountain Lake

For the Army Corps of Engineers’ real-time lake level and outflow reports from Blue Mountain Lake, visit the Corps’ Little Rock office website.

(updated 4-3-2025) Sheila at Carter Cove Bait-N-More (479-272-4025) says bait customers who stop in there before heading to Blue Mountain Lake say the fishing at Blue Mountain is going well for crappie. Minnows are being used. “Almost everyone I talk to is saying, ‘Crappie, crappie, crappie’ … Some customers are wanting to catch bream and are requesting crickets, though it’s not time for the bream to be spawning yet. I still got some crickets in, though.”


 

East Arkansas

White River/Clarendon Area
For the Army Corps of Engineers’ real-time gauge level and flow from Clarendon, visit the Corps’ Little Rock office website.

(updated 3-27-2025) The AGFC’s Wil Hafner at Cook’s Lake Nature Center (501-404-2321) said, “The lake has fallen over 5 feet since this time last week, causing the water to mostly be out of the woods. I do not have anything to report other than the lake is starting to look good. We will be open for youth and mobility-impaired angling and their guests this Friday and Saturday from 8 a.m. until 4 p.m.”

Cook’s Lake is a 2.5-mile-long oxbow off of the White River, nestled in the heart of the Dale Bumpers White River National Wildlife Refuge near Casscoe in Arkansas County, with black bass, crappie, bream and catfish. This fertile oxbow receives very little fishing pressure due to it being used only for education purposes and youth and mobility-impaired fishing. Cook’s Lake is open to fishing for youths under 16 or mobility-impaired anglers who must possess the AGFC mobility impaired access permit, and up to two guests (who may also fish), during the specified fishing season. Fish from the 140-foot mobility-impaired accessible dock or launch a boat. Fishing will be allowed only on Fridays and Saturdays March through August, 8 a.m.-4 p.m., water level pending. Before launching, please check in at the Nature Center classroom and report back before leaving. For information or unscheduled closures, please call the center at 501-404-2321.

 

White River/Arkansas River (Pool 2)

(updated 4-3-2025)
Webb’s Sporting Goods (870-946-0347) in DeWitt (1970 S. Whitehead Drive) reports that With the current weather situation, we are looking at all the rivers to be at high flow by the end of the week. This should make the catfishing better from about a week to 10 days from now. Fish have been biting before this front, but we know it will be slow after the front moves through. “As always, thanks for supporting Webb’s Sporting Goods!”

 

Note: msl is mean sea level; cfs is cubic feet per second.

The post Arkansas Wildlife Weekly Fishing Report appeared first on Arkansas Game & Fish Commission.

Tags needed to bag a turkey this spring; nonresidents limited to single gobbler  31 Mar 2025, 6:06 pm

LITTLE ROCK — Arkansas turkey hunters will need to add one more item to their hunting vest this season: an Arkansas Turkey Hunting Tag. The tags and a valid hunting license are required to enable the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission to more accurately judge the number of hunters taking to the field in the search of a gobbler.

The resident versions of the turkey tags, labelled RTT for adults and YTT for youth hunters, are free but must be acquired through the AGFC’s licensing system before the hunter takes to the woods. Even residents who hold lifetime licenses and disability licenses are required to add this free permit to their licensing account before hunting. Checking out the tags will enable all resident hunters a total of two legal gobblers.

Nonresidents have a few more hoops than resident hunters to jump through if they wish to chase an Arkansas turkey. For nonresident hunters under 16, the Nonresident Youth Turkey Tag remains free and will be the only license they need. Adult hunters, on the other hand, will need to either purchase a Nonresident Turkey Tag (NRTT) for $100 in addition to their Nonresident Annual Hunting License (NBG), which costs $410, or they may opt for the newly created Nonresident Annual Turkey Hunting License (NRTL), which includes a tag, for $325.

“Many hunters who chase turkeys in Arkansas may not have an annual license from last deer season, so we wanted to offer this $325 license as a more affordable option for nonresidents wanting to pursue turkeys in Arkansas,” Brad Carner, deputy director of the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission, said. “If you already hunt deer here, you can just buy the $100 tag to add to your annual license as well. Whichever way is more economical will work.”

Nonresidents who hold a Non-expiring Lifetime Hunting and Fishing Permit from their time as residents in Arkansas will still need to get the Nonresident Turkey Tag in the license system, but will not be charged the $100 fee when they check out of the system.

Regardless of the license, all nonresidents will need to choose wisely this spring, as all nonresident options are limited to a single legal turkey per year.

“The Commission has heard from many hunters through the regulations public comment process as well as during informal conversations about the idea of reducing bag limits for turkeys to one per year in order to preserve hunt quality and protect Arkansas’s turkey flock,” Carner said. “Although very few hunters actually harvest two birds, the Commission did decide to opt for a more conservative limit on nonresidents after many discussions.”

According to Susan Porter, AGFC licensing manager, one additional turkey tag option may appear in Arkansas’s license system for some hunters. The code NBLTP represents another free turkey tag, this one specifically for Mississippi residents who are hunting land that falls under the Arkansas/Mississippi reciprocal agreement.

“They will need to have all licenses required to hunt in Mississippi, but some of these lands are on the Arkansas side of the Mississippi River, so they will need to get this free turkey tag to transport their bird back across state lines to check it with Mississippi’s license system,” Porter said. “That is the only scenario where a hunter in Arkansas would need this particular tag on their license profile.”

Arkansas’s turkey season opens April 21 statewide. In Turkey Zone 1, it closes April 29; it continues through May 11 in Turkey Zone 2. The Special Youth Turkey Hunt for hunters younger than 16 is April 12-13. A full list of turkey regulations is available in the 2024-25 Arkansas Hunting Guidebook.

All turkeys harvested in Arkansas must be checked via agfc.com, the AGFC mobile app or by phone within 12 hours of harvest. If they are checked immediately upon harvest, the turkey does not need a physical tag attached to it. If the hunter is unable to immediately check the bird, then they must affix a possession tag indicating the hunter’s name, CID number and the date and time of harvest that must remain with the bird until it is checked. Checking should also be more convenient this season, as the AGFC plans to roll out a new “express check” option on its website beginning with the Special Youth Turkey Hunt. Visit www.agfc.com/licenses to procure your turkey tag.

 

####

CUTLINES:

TURKEYS
Arkansas hunters will need to obtain turkey tags in addition to their hunting license before heading afield this year. AGFC photo by Mike Wintroath.

SUCCESSFUL YOUTH HUNTER
Lance Kemper with his daughter showing off a nice Arkansas turkey taken during a previous Special Youth Turkey Hunt. Photo Courtesy Ricky Cash.

SAMPLE LICENSE
Turkey tags will be displayed on the hunter’s digital and printed licenses once obtained. AGFC photo.

The post Tags needed to bag a turkey this spring; nonresidents limited to single gobbler  appeared first on Arkansas Game & Fish Commission.

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