Spinnerbait Fishing on Cross Lake
Cross Lake · Louisiana · South Central
Cross Lake sits on the western edge of Shreveport in Caddo Parish, a shallow, timber-laced impoundment averaging 6–8 feet in depth with scattered cuts and channel edges dipping to 12–14 feet. Water clarity ranges from stained to moderately turbid depending on season and wind, with aquatic vegetation — primarily coontail moss and hydrilla — playing an increasingly significant role in fish location. Largemouth bass are the primary sportfish draw, though the lake's crappie fishery draws nearly as many rods throughout spring and fall.
A wire-arm lure with one or two rotating blades and a skirted jig head. The blades produce flash and vibration that triggers reaction strikes from bass that may not be actively feeding. Exceptional in low-visibility water, around grass edges, over submerged structure, and during cloudy or windy conditions.
Spinnerbait Setup for Cross Lake
| Rod | 7'–7'3" medium-heavy casting rod, moderate-fast action |
| Reel | 6.4:1–7.1:1 baitcaster |
| Line | 15–17 lb fluorocarbon or 30 lb braid |
| Weight | 3/8–3/4 oz (lighter in shallow, heavier for deeper retrieves) |
Seasonal Tactics on Cross Lake
Lake: Pre-spawn largemouth push into shallow timber and emergent grass flats in February and March as water temps climb through the mid-50s into the low 60s. The northwest coves warm fastest thanks to afternoon sun exposure, and shallow spinnerbaits and swimjigs fished tight to standing timber consistently produce fish staging before the full spawn.
Spinnerbait: Best season for spinnerbaits. Slow-roll a 1/2 oz through shallow grass and over submerged timber in pre-spawn.
Lake: Heat pushes baitfish and feeding bass toward deeper timber edges and submerged grass lines by late June; the 10–14 ft channel breaks become primary feeding zones during low-light windows. Topwater activity can flare early morning over grass flats in July and August, but midday fishing shifts to slow-rolled swimbaits or drop shots worked along the deeper timber skeletons.
Spinnerbait: Slow-roll deep along grass edges and main lake points at first light. Night fishing with black spinnerbait is excellent.
Lake: Shad migrations pull bass back onto shallow flats and into the upper creek arms through October and November; walking baits and lipless crankbaits worked over grass edges produce some of the best reaction strikes of the year. Water temps cooling through the 60s signal a window of aggressive feeding before winter turnover.
Spinnerbait: Match shad patterns — white/chartreuse with willow blades. Cover water fast along shoreline transitions.
Lake: Winter fishing on Cross Lake rewards patience — bass concentrate on the deepest available timber in 10–14 ft, and a slow-dragged 3/8 oz football jig or a suspending jerkbait with extended pauses outproduces faster presentations. The fishery doesn't completely shut down in winter due to the mild northwest Louisiana climate, but a cold front dropping water temps below 48°F will kill topwater and shallow-cover bite almost entirely.
Spinnerbait: Slow-roll a heavy (3/4 oz) spinnerbait along steep banks and points at the slowest possible retrieve.
Best Conditions
Stained to muddy water, wind, overcast skies, grass edges, spring pre-spawn, post-cold-front recovery, shallow flats
Trailer hook is not optional in open water — bass swipe at spinnerbaits and miss the main hook constantly. Add a #4 trailer hook always.
More Techniques for Cross Lake
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