
Red River Fishing Report June 2025: Bass, Cats, and More on the Rise
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Sunrise hit at 6:14 this morning, with sunset coming around 8:14 PM—plenty of daylight to chase that early bite and squeeze in a late-evening session. The weather’s shaping up classic North Louisiana: temps climbing to the upper 80s by this afternoon, high humidity, and a light breeze out of the southeast. Skies are mostly clear, though there’s been just enough cloud cover most mornings to get the fish excited before the sun gets high. Forecasts from the Almanac expect conditions to stay hot and mostly dry through the week.
No tides to worry about here on the Red, but water levels are steady, running right around 14 feet. The main river has a bit of a stain, but it’s clean enough for solid presentations. Water temps are rolling in the low 70s, meaning the post-spawn bite is still going and fish are moving into their summer patterns, stacking up on main river ledges, sandbars, and in the shade of overhanging trees.
Largemouth bass remain the main draw, with good numbers and some real quality fish—lots of 3 to 5 pounders and even an 8-pounder landed near the Highway 1 bridge earlier this week. Anglers are reporting the best luck throwing chartreuse or shad-pattern crankbaits along rocky points and around submerged timber. Texas-rigged worms in black and blue or watermelon seed are catching fish when worked slow along the current breaks and deeper holes. For those working the moving water, spinnerbaits in white or chartreuse are getting hammered, especially early and late in the day. Don’t overlook soft jerkbaits around grassy backwaters—these have been deadly on finicky midday bass.
Catfishing is heating up, too. Guides out of Shreveport say the bite’s back on track, with lots of blues and channels being caught on fresh-cut shad and chicken liver, especially early evening. Most successful folks are setting up on sand flats and deep bends just off the main current.
If you’re looking for hot spots, try the backwaters around the Highway 1 bridge for bass, and the main channel ledges near Stoner Avenue for a mix of species. The oxbows off the main river are also producing well—especially for bass and the occasional slab crappie.
So, grab those crankbaits and plastics, pack your live bait if you’re after cats, and get after it. Thanks for tuning in! Don’t forget to subscribe for the latest, and as always, this has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease.ai.