Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake Austin fishing report. We’ll start with conditions. Overnight we had light winds and a mild cooldown, and this morning kicks off warm and humid with air temps running in the low 70s climbing into the upper 80s to near 90 by late afternoon. Skies are mostly clear with some passing clouds and only a slight chance of a pop‑up shower late day. Winds are light out of the south, generally 5–10 mph, which will ruffle the main lake but leave coves pretty manageable. Sunrise comes early, with first good light hitting the water not long after 6, and you’ve got solid low‑light conditions in the first two hours after that. Sunset gives you another prime window in the last couple hours of daylight. That early-and-late pattern is key right now, since the midday sun is pushing fish tighter to shade, docks, grass edges, and the deeper channel swings. Lake Austin is a river‑style reservoir, so we don’t deal with coastal tides, but water movement still matters. When they’re pulling water down the Colorado, you’ll notice a little more current through the main channel and around the bridges. That subtle flow is your friend: it stacks bass on current breaks, dock pilings, and the upstream sides of points. If the lake feels “flat,” slow down and fish more methodically. Bass activity has been good in those dawn and dusk windows and tougher in the middle of the day. Recent reports from local anglers on social media and area forums say numbers of smaller largemouth with a few better fish in the 4–6 pound class mixed in, especially at night on the lower half of the lake. Folks are also picking up occasional stripers and bigger white bass near deeper bends and around lights after dark. For lures, think classic Hill Country summer patterns. At first light, a **walking topwater** or popping bait around seawalls, docks, and grass lines has been producing explosive strikes. White or bone has been reliable in the clearer stretches, with black or darker shad patterns working where there’s more shade. Once the sun gets up, **Texas‑rigged and Carolina‑rigged soft plastics** shine: green pumpkin, watermelon red, and junebug creature baits and worms dragged slowly along rock, channel edges, and deeper dock posts. Swimbaits and chatterbaits in shad colors are a good choice when you see bait flickering or feel a little current. Run them parallel to the bank or down the sides of docks. For those fishing live bait, **live shad** free‑lined or on a light Carolina rig around drop‑offs and bridge pilings are still hard to beat for larger bass and the occasional striper. A couple of hot spots to keep in mind: – The stretch around **Pennybacker Bridge (360 bridge)**: Work the bluff walls, rocky points, and deeper water near the bridge pilings with jigs, shaky heads, and medium‑diving crankbaits. Early in the morning, throw topwater along the shade lines cast tight to the rocks. – The lower‑lake **dock lines and grass edges near Emma Long (City Park)**: Target isolated docks, ladders, and any remaining grass with weightless flukes, wacky‑rigged senkos, and light Texas rigs. When the sun gets high, skip those plastics way back under the shade; that’s where the better fish have been holed up. Night fishing continues to be underrated out here. If you can get out after dark, slow roll dark‑colored spinnerbaits and big worms around lighted docks and shallow points. Black, black/blue, or plum worms in the 10–11 inch range have been producing some quality bites. That’s the latest from in and around Lake Austin. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn