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Savannah River Fishing Report: Braving the Blustery Bite for Bass, Cats, and Reds

Savannah River Fishing Report: Braving the Blustery Bite for Bass, Cats, and Reds

Published 7 months ago
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Artificial Lure here, bringing you the October 1st, 2025, Savannah River fishing report for Georgia and South Carolina.

We woke up to crisp early-autumn air. Sunrise came in just after 7:20am and sunset’s set for around 7:09pm. Weather is on the blustery side: the National Weather Service has issued a Small Craft Advisory with northeast winds steady at 25–30 knots, gusting up to 30, and seas offshore ranging 7 to 9 feet. Nearshore swells at Grays Reef have been topping out at about 7 feet with a steady ENE push, so take care and stick to sheltered or inshore spots if you’re heading out in a small rig today.

Tidal swings are solid—if you’re timing the bite, the major solunar period lines up midday, but the pre-dawn and just-before-dusk windows will be your golden hour. It’s an average day for fishing, so patience and adaptability will pay off, especially with current weather making conditions challenging, particularly on the main channel and open flats.

Here’s what’s biting:

The bass bite has been steady upstream. Recent reports out of Clyo on the upper Savannah put the river height near 5.7 feet and rising, making backwater eddies and creek mouths prime territory. Anglers have been pulling 1- to 3-pound largemouth and spotted bass on spinnerbaits and Texas-rigged worms, particularly anything in shad or darker “copperfield” colorways—try a vibrating jig blade for an early morning reaction bite. Folks tossing curly-tail plastics in deeper pools have been rewarded, with nine to twenty-plus fish days not uncommon in the last week according to the Waycross Journal-Herald.

Catfish remain reliable—channel cats and the occasional blue are biting best on cut shad and nightcrawlers, especially at deeper outside bends and below creek confluences. Look for them to amp up as the water cools off mid-morning.

Saltwater action near the river mouth and Tybee Island has been lively, but a word of caution: those high winds mean most action is dock and jetty-bound. South Jetty and Beach Hammock are prime spots for reds and trout, with recent catches reported on both live shrimp and copperfield spinnerbaits. The outgoing tide just before dusk has been particularly productive for redfish in the slot and a handful of upper-slot bruisers this week. Flounder have shown up as well by the pilings and rocky points, whacking live minnows and soft plastics fished slow on the bottom.

If you’re after numbers, follow the lead of local guides who have found success mixing it up—River Rat spinnerbaits, beetlespins, and bladed jigs are landing not just bass but also bowfin, warmouth, and occasional pickerel in the slower swamps and oxbows off the main river. For saltwater, nothing has outfished lively live shrimp on a 3/16-ounce jighead lately, but if you’re throwing artificial, fire tiger and electric chicken patterns are hard to beat when the water’s a bit stained.

Hot spots this week:
- Abercorn Creek mouth for bass, cats, and the occasional striper on the Georgia side.
- South Jetty at Tybee for reds, trout, and flounder during tide swing, especially near dawn and dusk when winds mellow.
- Upstream near Clyo and over at Beach Hammock for a mix of panfish and backup bass action.

Remember, with these elevated winds, safety is key—hug the sheltered banks, fish the breaks, and watch your footing if wading.

That’s your Savannah River rundown this week. Tight lines and high hopes to all the anglers braving the fall bite! Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure. Don’t forget to subscribe for your weekly fix.

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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI

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