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Lake Lanier’s serving up a true classic late summer pattern today, y’all—water’s warm, skies mostly sunny after those early morning clouds, and a touch of humidity sticking around. Sunrise came at 7:04 AM and sunset’s clocking in tonight at 8:04 PM, so there’s a good, long window to sneak in a solid session on the water, especially early or right before dusk. No tides to contend with, but watch for boat traffic to pick up as the day goes on, especially near the bigger ramps and marinas.
Bass action has been right on point. According to The Bass Cast, Alex Prince just put up six solid bass for 26 pounds in the latest Phoenix Super Tournament, taking home the top spot with fish mostly hitting topwater and moving baits early, then shifting to drop shot rigs and shaky heads once the sun got up. If you want to match what’s working for these tournament hammers, start out throwing a SPRO Bronzeye Frog or similar topwater frog around grass and duckweed just after sunrise—Pat Schlapper vouches for that thick braid to muscle ‘em out of cover when they blow up on your lure. Once the sun pushes the fish deeper, ditch the frog and pick up a shaky head rigged with a green pumpkin worm, or grab a drop shot and target brush piles in 22-28 feet.
Striper reports have been strong in the deep channels and off the river arm humps. Over on Instagram, Mack Farr showed off a nice striper slammed on a blue/chartreuse Chipmunk Jig—always a deep-water staple here in August. Let that jig sink near the thermocline and work it slowly; live blueback herring on downlines after sunup are also pulling in double-digit fish. A couple of guides reported limits by midmorning using this approach, finding big schools suspended on their electronics.
Other catches are mixed, but folks are filling coolers with large schools of spotted bass around main lake points, with soft-swimbaits and underspins doing damage. Catfish bite’s steady using chunky cut bait or chicken livers in the coves, especially overnight. Crappie are still hit or miss, but a small minnow under a slip float in brushy pockets is your best bet for a fish fry.
Hot spots lighting up right now include:
- **Brown’s Bridge**: Work the bridge pilings and nearby humps for a mix of bass and stripers, especially early or at dusk.
- **Young Deer Creek**: Toss topwaters in the mornings for spots, then hunt brush in deeper bends as the day heats up.
Make sure you’re up to date on state regulations—Georgia Wildlife Resources Division has the current 2025-26 regs posted, and you’ll need a fishing license before you launch anywhere on the lake.
Whether you’re working a frog in the lily pads or chasing humps with that trusty Chipmunk Jig, today’s a prime day to wet a line. Thanks for tuning in to your go-to Lake Lanier fishing report—don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss the latest bite.
This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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Bass action has been right on point. According to The Bass Cast, Alex Prince just put up six solid bass for 26 pounds in the latest Phoenix Super Tournament, taking home the top spot with fish mostly hitting topwater and moving baits early, then shifting to drop shot rigs and shaky heads once the sun got up. If you want to match what’s working for these tournament hammers, start out throwing a SPRO Bronzeye Frog or similar topwater frog around grass and duckweed just after sunrise—Pat Schlapper vouches for that thick braid to muscle ‘em out of cover when they blow up on your lure. Once the sun pushes the fish deeper, ditch the frog and pick up a shaky head rigged with a green pumpkin worm, or grab a drop shot and target brush piles in 22-28 feet.
Striper reports have been strong in the deep channels and off the river arm humps. Over on Instagram, Mack Farr showed off a nice striper slammed on a blue/chartreuse Chipmunk Jig—always a deep-water staple here in August. Let that jig sink near the thermocline and work it slowly; live blueback herring on downlines after sunup are also pulling in double-digit fish. A couple of guides reported limits by midmorning using this approach, finding big schools suspended on their electronics.
Other catches are mixed, but folks are filling coolers with large schools of spotted bass around main lake points, with soft-swimbaits and underspins doing damage. Catfish bite’s steady using chunky cut bait or chicken livers in the coves, especially overnight. Crappie are still hit or miss, but a small minnow under a slip float in brushy pockets is your best bet for a fish fry.
Hot spots lighting up right now include:
- **Brown’s Bridge**: Work the bridge pilings and nearby humps for a mix of bass and stripers, especially early or at dusk.
- **Young Deer Creek**: Toss topwaters in the mornings for spots, then hunt brush in deeper bends as the day heats up.
Make sure you’re up to date on state regulations—Georgia Wildlife Resources Division has the current 2025-26 regs posted, and you’ll need a fishing license before you launch anywhere on the lake.
Whether you’re working a frog in the lily pads or chasing humps with that trusty Chipmunk Jig, today’s a prime day to wet a line. Thanks for tuning in to your go-to Lake Lanier fishing report—don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss the latest bite.
This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn