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Savannah River Bite Strong as Fall Approaches - Riverfront Fishing Report for September 3, 2025
Published 7 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
Artificial Lure reporting straight from the banks of the Savannah River on this September 3rd, 2025, where the bite is matching the late-summer sizzle but with that subtle switch hinting fall is stirring. The sunrise painted the water at 6:57 AM and we’ll see daylight holding until sunset at 7:46 PM, plenty of time to work a few honey holes before dusk settles in.
Weather-wise, we had mild northeast winds around 10 knots, with the forecast calling for seas just 2 feet and a touch of cloud to add that little glare on an otherwise fine afternoon—the kind of weather where a ballcap and polarized shades are a must. High pressure is in control but keep one eye to the sky for a pop-up shower late today or tomorrow, especially as the weekend nears, according to the National Weather Service.
Now, the river’s heart beats with the tide, and today’s tides at the Bull Street gauge started low at 6:47 AM, climbing to a 7.03-foot high just past noon, then easing out to another low at 7:13 PM, as per NOAA. Those moving-water windows are prime time for that classic Savannah River ambush from both predators and angler alike.
Fish activity's been strong, with late summer patterns still holding. Folks are pulling in solid catches—schoolie stripers popping early on the outgoing tide and a mess of chunky largemouth still holding to the deeper eddies and laydowns when the sun gets high. Blue catfish have been especially cooperative; cut shad or chicken livers drifted along the channel edges near the Port Wentworth boat ramp have yielded blues up to the teens in pounds. Redbreast and bream are still hitting live worms, especially near structure.
The real talk of the town lately is the red drum and flounder bite down closer to where salt meets fresh at Fort Pulaski and Cockspur Island. Reports coming in from locals and guides say live mud minnows under popping corks are outfishing artificial for flounder, but reds are pouncing on Gulp! Shrimp and gold spoons drifted along flooded grass edges—especially around the high tide mark.
For those targeting bass, buzzing a chatterbait or a white spinnerbait tight to wood mid-morning got results. As things heat up, shift to soft plastics—junebug or watermelon red worms Texas-rigged are tempting those finicky lurkers from the deep brush piles. Catfish anglers should stick with fresh cut bait or that old standby, stinkbait, with best numbers coming in after dark.
Hot spots worth your time today:
- **Abercorn Creek confluence:** Always good for mixed bag action, especially on the outgoing tide.
- **McQueen’s Island Trail (near old railroad causeway):** Flounder and red drum are staging; ideal if you’re walking with light tackle or popping corks.
Local chatter on Georgia Outdoor News and fresh guide reports say fishing pressure remains light midweek, so you’ll have your choice of real estate along the banks and backwaters. If you spot schooling baitfish flipping on the surface, throw a small paddle-tail swimbait that matches the hatch—you might luck into a surprise hybrid or even a striper.
Before I sign off, a word to the wise: Match your lures to the bite and watch that tide chart. Best window is as the water moves, so hit your favorite hump or creek mouth around the turn.
Thanks for tuning in to your local river report—be sure to subscribe for more updates and fishing insight. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
This episode includes AI-generated content.
Weather-wise, we had mild northeast winds around 10 knots, with the forecast calling for seas just 2 feet and a touch of cloud to add that little glare on an otherwise fine afternoon—the kind of weather where a ballcap and polarized shades are a must. High pressure is in control but keep one eye to the sky for a pop-up shower late today or tomorrow, especially as the weekend nears, according to the National Weather Service.
Now, the river’s heart beats with the tide, and today’s tides at the Bull Street gauge started low at 6:47 AM, climbing to a 7.03-foot high just past noon, then easing out to another low at 7:13 PM, as per NOAA. Those moving-water windows are prime time for that classic Savannah River ambush from both predators and angler alike.
Fish activity's been strong, with late summer patterns still holding. Folks are pulling in solid catches—schoolie stripers popping early on the outgoing tide and a mess of chunky largemouth still holding to the deeper eddies and laydowns when the sun gets high. Blue catfish have been especially cooperative; cut shad or chicken livers drifted along the channel edges near the Port Wentworth boat ramp have yielded blues up to the teens in pounds. Redbreast and bream are still hitting live worms, especially near structure.
The real talk of the town lately is the red drum and flounder bite down closer to where salt meets fresh at Fort Pulaski and Cockspur Island. Reports coming in from locals and guides say live mud minnows under popping corks are outfishing artificial for flounder, but reds are pouncing on Gulp! Shrimp and gold spoons drifted along flooded grass edges—especially around the high tide mark.
For those targeting bass, buzzing a chatterbait or a white spinnerbait tight to wood mid-morning got results. As things heat up, shift to soft plastics—junebug or watermelon red worms Texas-rigged are tempting those finicky lurkers from the deep brush piles. Catfish anglers should stick with fresh cut bait or that old standby, stinkbait, with best numbers coming in after dark.
Hot spots worth your time today:
- **Abercorn Creek confluence:** Always good for mixed bag action, especially on the outgoing tide.
- **McQueen’s Island Trail (near old railroad causeway):** Flounder and red drum are staging; ideal if you’re walking with light tackle or popping corks.
Local chatter on Georgia Outdoor News and fresh guide reports say fishing pressure remains light midweek, so you’ll have your choice of real estate along the banks and backwaters. If you spot schooling baitfish flipping on the surface, throw a small paddle-tail swimbait that matches the hatch—you might luck into a surprise hybrid or even a striper.
Before I sign off, a word to the wise: Match your lures to the bite and watch that tide chart. Best window is as the water moves, so hit your favorite hump or creek mouth around the turn.
Thanks for tuning in to your local river report—be sure to subscribe for more updates and fishing insight. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
This episode includes AI-generated content.