This is Artificial Lure with your Lake Lanier fishing report.
Lanier’s sitting under a classic early‑winter pattern today: cold morning, light north to northwest breeze, highs topping out in the upper 50s to near 60 with mostly clear skies, according to the National Weather Service out of Peachtree City. That bluebird sky and post‑front feel mean you’ll want to slow down. Sunrise is right around 7:30 a.m. with sunset close to 5:30 p.m., so the prime window will be late morning through mid‑afternoon once the sun warms the first 10–15 feet.
Lanier’s a reservoir, so no true tide to worry about, but the Corps of Engineers has been holding levels fairly stable for winter pool. Slight generation on the south end will nudge bait and spots onto the first breaklines and timber edges.
Recent dock talk from Lanier guides and local bait shops has spotted bass chewing well on the lower lake, with a mix of 1½–3‑pound fish and a few 4‑plus showing up off brush piles in 25–40 feet and on steep rock. Striper reports are picking up: scattered fish pulled up with birds in the pockets off the main river arms, mostly 8–15 pounds with an occasional 20‑pound class fish when the gulls get bunched up.
For spots, think winter staples:
- **Best lures:**
- A green pumpkin or brown finesse jig or football jig with a small craw trailer worked slowly through brush and rock.
- Drop shot with a 4‑inch minnow or worm in natural shad colors, nose‑hooked over timber in 30–40 feet.
- Under bright skies, a silver‑white flutter spoon yo‑yoed over bait balls can still trigger bigger fish.
For stripers:
- **Best bait:**
- Medium shiners or blueback herring on downlines around 25–35 feet over 50–80 feet.
- A single freelined herring or small trout slow‑trolled in the backs of creeks.
- **Best artificials:**
- 1‑ounce white bucktails tipped with a fluke.
- 5‑inch paddle‑tail swimbaits on ½‑ to ¾‑ounce heads, white or albino, slow‑rolled under the birds.
Crappie are tight to docks and brush in 15–25 feet. Small minnows on light line, or 1/16‑ounce soft‑plastic jigs in monkey milk or chartreuse, are putting a nice mess of 10‑ to 12‑inch slabs in the cooler if you move until you find a loaded pile.
Couple of local hot spots to keep in mind:
- **Young Deer and Six Mile areas:** good for winter spots on brush and points, plus roaming stripers in the creek channels when birds are working.
- **Flat Creek and Big Creek:** classic winter striper lanes; look for loons and gulls, then fish the edges of the bait clouds.
- On the north end, pockets off the Chattahoochee channel around Gainesville Marina and the mouth of Wahoo are producing mixed bags of spots and stripers when the bait stacks up.
Downsize, slow your presentation, and let that sun work for you. Watch your electronics more than your watch, and don’t be afraid to fish vertically all day if you’re over bait.
Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe.
This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear
https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI