How to Find Fish on Lake Tawakoni (Electronics, Birds, and Bait)

Author: Cliff Thornton
Role: Cliff’s Guide Service
Last Updated: March 24, 2026
Phone: 214-240-7344

Quick Answer: How to Find Fish Lake Tawakoni

Finding fish on Lake Tawakoni comes down to three key factors: following bird activity, reading your electronics, and locating baitfish. Stripers, hybrid stripers, and white bass stay close to schools of threadfin shad, and birds often reveal their position. Use sonar to confirm depth and structure, then position your boat based on wind and seasonal patterns.

Understanding Fish Behavior on Lake Tawakoni

If you want to consistently find fish, you have to think like the fish.

On Lake Tawakoni, the primary game is:

  • Striped bass

  • Hybrid stripers

  • White bass (sand bass)

All three species are schooling predators, and they move based on one thing—baitfish.

Baitfish Drives Everything

Threadfin shad are the main forage. Wherever you find shad:

  • Fish will be nearby

  • Often below or pushing them to the surface

  • Moving with wind and seasonal patterns

In colder months, bait tends to group tighter and hold deeper. In warmer months, bait spreads out and moves more.

How to Use Birds to Find Fish (The Tawakoni Advantage)

Birds are one of the biggest advantages on Lake Tawakoni. If you ignore birds, you’re missing fish.

What to Look For

Not all birds mean fish. You want:

  • Diving birds (actively hitting the water)

  • Circling low and tight

  • Groups that stay in one area

Avoid:

  • Birds just sitting on the water

  • High flyers not focused on feeding

What It Means

When birds are diving:

  • Fish are pushing bait to the surface

  • Usually white bass or hybrids

  • Sometimes stripers mixed in

This is your run-and-gun opportunity.

Get there fast, but don’t run directly through the school.

Reading Electronics to Find Fish

Electronics separate average anglers from consistent ones.

What You’re Looking For

On your sonar:

  • Bait balls = clouds or clusters

  • Predator fish = arches or streaks under bait

  • Structure = humps, points, creek channels

If you don’t see bait, keep moving.

Key Depth Ranges

Typical patterns on Tawakoni:

  • Winter: 20–40 feet

  • Spring: 10–25 feet

  • Summer: 15–30 feet (thermocline matters)

  • Fall: roaming schools, often mid-depth

Side Imaging Advantage

Side imaging lets you:

  • Cover water faster

  • Find schools off to the side

  • Locate structure before driving over fish

That keeps fish from spooking.

Wind Positioning: The Hidden Key

Most anglers underestimate wind. Big mistake.

Wind does two things:

  1. Pushes plankton

  2. Moves baitfish

And where bait goes… fish follow.

How to Use Wind

  • Fish wind-blown banks and points

  • Focus on areas where wind funnels bait

  • Drift with the wind for natural presentation

Boat Positioning

  • Stay upwind of fish

  • Drift into them naturally

  • Avoid running directly over schools

On windy days, fishing often improves—not gets worse.

Seasonal Depth and Movement Patterns

Understanding seasonal movement is what turns luck into consistency.

Winter

  • Fish group tight

  • Deeper water

  • Slow presentations win

Spring

  • Fish move shallower

  • Follow bait into creeks

  • More aggressive feeding

Summer

  • Thermocline becomes important

  • Fish suspend

  • Early morning topwater bite

Fall

  • Fish chase bait aggressively

  • Schools move fast

  • Birds become extremely important again

Best Baits for Finding Active Fish

Matching bait is critical.

Live Bait

  • Threadfin shad (top choice)

  • Best when fish are pressured or inactive

  • Works year-round

Artificial Lures

  • Slab spoons (vertical fishing)

  • 3” swimbaits / flukes

  • Tail spinners

  • Topwater plugs (summer/fall)

Why It Matters

Fish are feeding on small bait. If your lure:

  • Is too big

  • Moves wrong

  • Doesn’t match bait

You’ll get ignored.

Rigging and Gear That Helps You Find Fish

  • Medium spinning rods (7’ range)

  • 10–15 lb braided line

  • Fluorocarbon leader (for clarity)

Jigheads

  • 1/2 oz to 1 oz standard

  • Heavier in wind or deep water

Hooks

  • Sharp hooks matter

  • Strong hooks prevent bending on hybrids and stripers

Fishing Techniques After You Find Them

Finding fish is step one. Catching them is step two.

Vertical Fishing

  • Drop bait or lure directly under the boat

  • Watch sonar while fishing

  • Adjust depth constantly

Drifting

  • Use wind to your advantage

  • Cover water

  • Keep bait in strike zone

Casting to Surface Schools

  • Approach slowly

  • Cast beyond the school

  • Retrieve through feeding fish

Weather and Water Conditions

Fishing changes daily based on conditions.

Wind

  • More wind = better bait movement

  • Often better fishing

Sunlight

  • Low light = more surface activity

  • Bright sun pushes fish deeper

Water Clarity

  • Clear water = lighter line, natural colors

  • Dirty water = brighter or louder lures

Why Hiring a Fishing Guide Helps

Lake Tawakoni looks simple—but it’s not.

A guide like Cliff Thornton:

  • Knows daily fish movement

  • Understands seasonal patterns

  • Reads electronics efficiently

  • Saves you hours of searching

Instead of guessing, you’re fishing productive water immediately.

That’s the biggest difference.

Frequently Asked Questions

 

How do you find fish fast on Lake Tawakoni?

Start by looking for birds, then confirm fish with electronics. Focus on areas with baitfish and adjust based on wind direction.

What depth are fish usually at on Lake Tawakoni?

It depends on the season, but most fish are found between 10 and 40 feet. Always check your sonar before fishing.

Do birds always mean fish?

Most of the time, yes—especially diving birds. But you still want to confirm with electronics.

What is the best bait for finding fish?

Threadfin shad is the best live bait. For artificials, slab spoons and swimbaits work extremely well.

Is wind good or bad for fishing?

Wind is usually good. It pushes baitfish and helps position predator fish.

What time of day is best to find fish?

Early morning and late evening are best for surface activity, but fish can be found all day with electronics.

Service Areas

Cliff’s Guide Service offers trips on Lake Tawakoni for anglers visiting:

  • Wills Point, TX

  • Emory, TX

  • Canton, TX

  • Edgewood, TX

  • Dallas, TX

  • Fort Worth, TX

Trips are adjusted daily based on fish movement, weather conditions, and seasonal patterns to give you the best chance at success.

Lake Tawakoni Fishing Resources

Plan Your Fishing Trip

Related Fishing Resources

Book a Trip with Cliff’s Guide Service

If you want to skip the learning curve and get straight to catching fish, a guided trip is the fastest way to do it.

Cliff Thornton runs trips on Lake Tawakoni targeting:

  • Striped bass

  • Hybrid stripers

  • White bass

Trips are adjusted daily based on:

  • Fish movement

  • Weather conditions

  • Seasonal patterns

Call 214-240-7344 to schedule your fishing trip.