Lake Lewisville
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Lake Lewisville Fishing Reports
Stay up to date with the latest fishing reports from Lake Lewisville. Reports are submitted by local anglers, fishing guides, and our team of fishing experts.
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- Omnia Community MemberBronze AmbassadorSpecies
Largemouth Bass
TechniqueWacky RigsSeasonSummerStructureBrush PilesThe Roboworm has been catching fish like crazy around brush and submerged timber on a 1/16 wacky head. The Aaron's Magic color has been the most effective.
- Species
Largemouth Bass
TechniqueMedium Diving Crankbaits (7'-12')SeasonSpring (Post-Spawn)StructureRock PileI fished the lake on 05/22/22 for the final Team Trail Outdoors TX Kings of Cowtown Qualifying Event. It was overcast all day with a very strong northwest wind and temperatures in the mid 60's all day, as a big cold front had come through the night before the event and dropped the temperature about 30 degrees. The lake had between 4 to 12 inches of visibility and was between 75 and 78 degrees all day. After catching a few smaller fish cranking shallow rock banks early, we were able to catch some really good fish offshore throughout the rest of the day on underwater road beds and rock points in 6-15 feet of water, focusing on stretches with the wind blowing into them and just cranking them as hard as we could. This pattern was good enough to produce a 5 fish limit weighing 23.45 pounds for us, including a 7.5 pound big bass, which ended up winning us the tournament. I have included a photo of our winning bag below. It has been very windy across Texas lately but the bite has been hot, so get out there and get on them, but be careful! The fish are starting to move out from the spawn and will be setting up good for mid-depth and deep cranking, as well as dragging things like big worms and carolina rigs or drop shots. Thank you all for reading, tight lines!
- Species
Largemouth Bass
TechniqueTexas Rigs (Pitch/Flip)SeasonSummerStructureFlooded BrushLewisville was 3’ high and a lot of flooded bushes. We keyed in on flooded bushes near rock and was able to out a 3rd place bag together at 15.05. Most everyone else had done the same thing that caught fish. Biggest fish went 6.53
- JosephBronze AmbassadorSpecies
Largemouth Bass
TechniqueTexas Rigs (Pitch/Flip)SeasonSummerStructurePilingsSlick calm super hot Texas summer day mid afternoon. Went to hide under a bridge to get out of the sun, regroup, and retie my rigs. Muddy sandy bottom there but noticed on the shallow pilings 100 yds from the bank there were thousands of various size bluegill. Went finesse with a zman drop shot minnow on a 1/16 oz ewg ballhead Texas rigged weedless on 6lb flouro spinning gear (make shift Biwa rig) and caught a few nice bass 1 and 2 lbers. Nothing big, but the bites were very aggressive for this time of year. Fished every shady pocket and shade line under that bridge and had a blast. Couldn't get the fish to bite anything else.
- Omnia Community MemberBronze AmbassadorSpecies
Largemouth Bass
TechniqueTexas Rigs (Pitch/Flip)SeasonSummerStructureSubmerged VegetationI have been having lots of success fishing this along grass lines, flipping around laydowns, and shade/color line. Normally I am fishing it fairly shallow on a Owner 4-0 Beast screw lock hook. The tickle tail will attract lots of attention, make sure you wait until the fish has got it before you set the hook, or you may end up with half a bait on your hook. This is definitely a confidence bait for me, and Muddy Gill is the go to color.
- Species
White Bass
TechniqueDrop ShotSeasonSpring (Spawn)StructureOpen Water/BasinCaught this 16 1/5 inch bass on a nice warm day on Lewisville lake The weight of it was around 3lbs estimate.
- Species
Largemouth Bass
TechniqueDrop ShotSeasonSummerStructureBouldersThe lake got got cooled off with the recent storms that blew through the area. The water temperature was in the mid 80’s and the bait fish are finally schooling up. I noticed some surface activity and threw my drop shot up shallow and immediately got bit. I focused on shallow cover and there would almost always be a fish on it.
- Species
Largemouth Bass
TechniqueHard JerkbaitsSeasonSpring (Post-Spawn)StructureRip RapThis is one of my biggest secrets on this lake. Post spawn fish can be very tricky however don’t make it hard on yourself. You can cover large portions of water with a jerkbait. Even if you don’t have forward facing sonar find some main lake points or secondary points and just keep casting. Most of the time fish are very hungry and will eat you bait at any opportunity. Make sure you find the cadence that’s right for the fish. Sometimes they want a longer pause. Sometimes they want to chase it forever. Good luck. I highly recommend Seaguar 12lb InvisX.