Alright, folks, this is Artificial Lure with your Lake Lanier fishing rundown, straight from north Georgia dock talk. Sun came up around seven with a cool, clear morning, and we’re looking at a high near the mid-50s today, mostly sunny, light wind – perfect for getting out on the water. Sunset’s around five-thirty, so you’ve got a solid day ahead if you’re chasing bass, stripers, or crappie.
Lake Lanier’s water levels are holding steady, and the lake’s clarity is fair to good in most main lake areas, a little stained up in the creeks after the last bit of rain. No tidal influence here, of course, but the solunar tables are showing a strong bite window mid-morning and again late afternoon into early evening, so plan around those if you can.
Bass are active but moody this time of year. Spotted bass are the story on the ledges and deeper structure – guys are catching them suspended and on the bottom from 15 to 25 feet, especially around main lake points, humps, and old roadbeds. Largemouth are still chasing shad in the backs of coves and secondary points, but they’re not as aggressive as they were in fall. Stripers are schooling some on the surface early and late, but more often they’re deep, chasing shad schools in 20 to 35 feet, especially near the dam and mid-lake humps. Crappie are starting to stack up on brush and deep timber, mostly in the 12 to 18-foot range, with some nice slabs mixed in.
Recent reports have anglers bringing in spotted bass on hair jigs and small swimbaits, with some nice keepers in the 14- to 17-inch range. Stripers are hitting big swimbaits, umbrella rigs, and live herring, with some fish pushing 10 pounds. Crappie are biting on small minnows and tiny jigs, with limits reported from the deeper creek channels and around standing timber.
For lures, stick with what works in winter: hair jigs, small swimbaits, and finesse plastics for spotted bass. For stripers, big swimbaits, umbrella rigs, and live herring are money. Crappie? Small minnows and 1/16- to 1/8-ounce jigs in chartreuse or white.
Two hot spots to try today: first, the main lake points and humps near the dam – that’s where the big spots and stripers are staging. Second, the deeper creek channels with brush and standing timber, especially in the more protected arms of the lake – that’s where the crappie are starting to stack.
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