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Savannah River Fishing Report: Redfish, Trout, and Bass Biting Hot This Fall
Published 6 months, 1 week ago
Description
Artificial Lure here, dropping your fresh Savannah River fishing report for Wednesday, October 22, 2025. Local lines are singing and I’ve got the scoop to help you load your cooler, whether you’re casting from the Georgia banks or floating those South Carolina creeks.
**Tides and Weather for Today**
We’re working with a nice big swing: low tide hits about 3:38 a.m. and again at 4:17 p.m., with high tides peaking near 9:59 a.m. and 10:10 p.m., based on the Savannah River Entrance tables. Tidal coefficient is pushing 82, meaning running currents and plenty of bait moving—ideal for predatory action. Sunrise is at 7:33 a.m., sunset 6:44 p.m. Weather looks steady: air temps in the upper 70s, mostly sunny, light south winds at 5–10 knots, and the river’s still holding around 80°F, so fish are active. According to the National Weather Service, seas are calm around 2 feet, which should make for a smooth run if you’re heading to the jetties.
**Fish Activity and Recent Catches**
It’s classic fall bite right now. Local guides and anglers (per Savannah River Daily Fishing Report from October 20) are stacking up reds, trout, and largemouth bass all along the edges and deeper holes. Reds are posting up around marsh points and creek mouths, with a mix of slots and some over-slot fish flashing tails at low tide. Trout are schooling on the ledges and oyster bars—limit catches reported on breaking tides, especially with a little color in the water.
Bass action upriver is hot—bigger largemouth are biting around timber, docks, and creek bends, especially early and late. Even a handful of feisty stripers have been caught chasing mullet schools towards downtown Savannah.
Most folks are reporting solid numbers: trout limits in an hour, half a dozen keeper reds, and mixed bags of bass and the odd flounder. Catfish and bluegill numbers are stable as always, especially deeper or in slower current.
**Best Lures and Baits**
You can’t beat a popping cork rigged with live shrimp or mud minnows for trout and reds right now. Soft plastics in bright chartreuse or white—think paddletails and curly tails—are deadly when bounced along the rocks and shell rakes. Topwater plugs are producing spectacular blowups from both redfish and largemouth before the sun gets high. For the bass, look for finesse worms in green pumpkin or black, or toss a spinnerbait along the shady banks. If bait’s your game, cut mullet and fresh shrimp are snatching those whisker catfish all day.
**Hot Spots to Hit**
- **Hutchinson Island Backchannels:** Great at lower tides for reds cruising the flats.
- **Old Fort Jackson area:** Reliable trout bite near the pilings and drop-offs.
- **Abercorn Creek confluence:** Lots of bass and panfish around fallen structure.
- **Jetties at the river mouth:** Go for the bull reds and late-season flounder—bring stout tackle.
**A Quick Note:**
The river’s running good and clean—just remember most local advisories recommend limiting weekly consumption of resident catfish and bass due to mercury, especially if you’re fishing for the fry pan.
Thanks for tuning in to your local Savannah River fishing report from Artificial Lure. If you want to keep putting yourself on the bite, make sure to subscribe and catch us next time—don’t forget, 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
**Tides and Weather for Today**
We’re working with a nice big swing: low tide hits about 3:38 a.m. and again at 4:17 p.m., with high tides peaking near 9:59 a.m. and 10:10 p.m., based on the Savannah River Entrance tables. Tidal coefficient is pushing 82, meaning running currents and plenty of bait moving—ideal for predatory action. Sunrise is at 7:33 a.m., sunset 6:44 p.m. Weather looks steady: air temps in the upper 70s, mostly sunny, light south winds at 5–10 knots, and the river’s still holding around 80°F, so fish are active. According to the National Weather Service, seas are calm around 2 feet, which should make for a smooth run if you’re heading to the jetties.
**Fish Activity and Recent Catches**
It’s classic fall bite right now. Local guides and anglers (per Savannah River Daily Fishing Report from October 20) are stacking up reds, trout, and largemouth bass all along the edges and deeper holes. Reds are posting up around marsh points and creek mouths, with a mix of slots and some over-slot fish flashing tails at low tide. Trout are schooling on the ledges and oyster bars—limit catches reported on breaking tides, especially with a little color in the water.
Bass action upriver is hot—bigger largemouth are biting around timber, docks, and creek bends, especially early and late. Even a handful of feisty stripers have been caught chasing mullet schools towards downtown Savannah.
Most folks are reporting solid numbers: trout limits in an hour, half a dozen keeper reds, and mixed bags of bass and the odd flounder. Catfish and bluegill numbers are stable as always, especially deeper or in slower current.
**Best Lures and Baits**
You can’t beat a popping cork rigged with live shrimp or mud minnows for trout and reds right now. Soft plastics in bright chartreuse or white—think paddletails and curly tails—are deadly when bounced along the rocks and shell rakes. Topwater plugs are producing spectacular blowups from both redfish and largemouth before the sun gets high. For the bass, look for finesse worms in green pumpkin or black, or toss a spinnerbait along the shady banks. If bait’s your game, cut mullet and fresh shrimp are snatching those whisker catfish all day.
**Hot Spots to Hit**
- **Hutchinson Island Backchannels:** Great at lower tides for reds cruising the flats.
- **Old Fort Jackson area:** Reliable trout bite near the pilings and drop-offs.
- **Abercorn Creek confluence:** Lots of bass and panfish around fallen structure.
- **Jetties at the river mouth:** Go for the bull reds and late-season flounder—bring stout tackle.
**A Quick Note:**
The river’s running good and clean—just remember most local advisories recommend limiting weekly consumption of resident catfish and bass due to mercury, especially if you’re fishing for the fry pan.
Thanks for tuning in to your local Savannah River fishing report from Artificial Lure. If you want to keep putting yourself on the bite, make sure to subscribe and catch us next time—don’t forget, 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