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Savannah River Fall Fishing Report: Ideal Conditions, Diverse Bites, and Top Spots to Explore

Savannah River Fall Fishing Report: Ideal Conditions, Diverse Bites, and Top Spots to Explore

Published 5 months, 4 weeks ago
Description
Morning on the Savannah River has arrived with a touch of autumn, and your local report from Artificial Lure is here to get y’all dialed in for today, November 1st. Weatherwise, it’s a cool but pleasant start—according to the National Weather Service, early temps in the mid-50s are rising into the 70s with minimal wind, mostly sunny skies, and a comfortable day ahead. For those heading out early, sunrise hit at 6:40 AM, and you’ll have light until sunset at 5:33 PM. Perfect conditions to be on the water.

Tides this morning are turning favorable. NOAA tide predictions put low tide near Savannah at 6:40 AM and high tide rolling in just after 12:44 PM. That push of incoming water late morning through early afternoon usually fires up the bite, so plan to work the river’s flats, creek mouths, and deeper channel edges right as the water’s moving.

Fish activity does take a subtle dip today, according to Tides4Fishing, but don’t let “bad solunar” ratings keep you off the water—recent days have proved otherwise. The Georgia Wildlife Resources Division just sampled the river and reported impressive numbers of largemouth bass and shellcrackers. Capt. Bert Deener notes steady action throughout the system for both species this fall, with most bass (both largemouth and spotted) falling for Texas-rigged plastics, crankbaits, and spinnerbaits. Late in the day, look for shad chasing near the surface—3/8-oz. white/chartreuse spinnerbaits and flashy topwaters like a chrome Gunfish or Krej jerkbait are local favorites.

Crappie anglers have been scoring limits lately on brush piles in 15–25 feet of water. The best bite is early and late, with 2” jigs or live minnows doing damage, especially tight to submerged timber and old channel stumps.

Catfish action’s picking up strong as the water cools. According to Carolina Sportsman, November on the Savannah brings channels and flatheads to classic deep holes, submerged timber, and the mouths of feeder creeks. Bluegill, small sunfish, cut shad, and even stink baits will get hit, especially with an evening or pre-dawn soak. Heavier tackle is a must if you’re aiming for bigger flatheads, and anchoring up along those deep edges with a slip-sinker rig is a proven Carolina move.

For the bait crew, you can’t go wrong with small live bream or cut shad for cats. On the lure side, natural greens and pumpkin worm patterns on a dropshot or Ned rig are reliable for bass, especially around docks and deeper cover. Early topwater runs of schooling bass mean you should keep a chrome walking bait rigged and ready at all times.

A couple hotspots worth your time today: hit the Clyo area for diverse action (the gage at Clyo reads 4.4 feet and rising), or focus on the channel dropoffs and timber just upstream of the I-95 bridge—both spots have produced good mixed bags in the last week, including some double-digit cats.

To sum up, it’s a day to embrace cool mornings, work moving water, and swap between plastics, jigs, and live bait as the bite shifts. Bring the kids or your new neighbor—Savannah River in the fall is made for sharing. Thanks for tuning in to the Artificial Lure report. Be sure to hit subscribe, and we’ll keep you ahead of the bite.

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