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Savannah River Fishing Report: Bass Bonanza on Bluebacks
Published 4 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
Good morning, folks! This is Artificial Lure coming to you with your Savannah River fishing report.
Let's kick things off with the tides. We're looking at a low tide of 0.4 feet hitting around 6:41 AM, with our next high tide at 1:08 PM sitting at 8.2 feet. That afternoon tide is gonna be prime time for moving around and finding active fish. Sun came up at 7:14 this morning and we're looking at sunset around 5:20 PM, so you've got a solid eight-hour window if you head out now.
Weather-wise, we're in decent shape. High of 82 degrees today with manageable conditions. Not too cold, not too warm.
Now here's what's been happening on the water. The Savannah River system has been producing some solid action lately. Tyler Finch's been absolutely tearing it up in the wintertime, and that tells us the bite is active if you know what you're doing. We're in blueback herring country, and let me tell you—if you understand how herring lakes fish, you've got a major advantage over other anglers.
Bass in these waters absolutely prefer bluebacks over shad or bluegill when they've got the choice. These fish are moving fast and aggressive, which means you need to match that energy. Forget slow presentations. You want bigger baits like Zoom Super Flukes and walking topwaters—think Heddon Super Spook or Lucky Craft Gunfish. Work them fast, real fast. Don't worry if they're not doing exactly what they're supposed to do. Sometimes it's just about making a big, skipping bait that triggers a strike.
For bait anglers, live herring when you can get 'em is outstanding. If conditions turn cold and fish go shallow or deep, a weighted Fluke on a Fish Head Spin combo is your ticket, just like it was during that cold Bassmaster Classic on Lake Hartwell.
For hot spots, hit the deeper ditches and drop-offs around 30 to 35 feet where bass suspend, especially if it stays chilly. Also scout any offshore humps or brushpiles—bass love stacking on those structures when herring are in the system.
Thanks for tuning in! Make sure to subscribe for your daily fishing reports and tight lines out there.
This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease.ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Let's kick things off with the tides. We're looking at a low tide of 0.4 feet hitting around 6:41 AM, with our next high tide at 1:08 PM sitting at 8.2 feet. That afternoon tide is gonna be prime time for moving around and finding active fish. Sun came up at 7:14 this morning and we're looking at sunset around 5:20 PM, so you've got a solid eight-hour window if you head out now.
Weather-wise, we're in decent shape. High of 82 degrees today with manageable conditions. Not too cold, not too warm.
Now here's what's been happening on the water. The Savannah River system has been producing some solid action lately. Tyler Finch's been absolutely tearing it up in the wintertime, and that tells us the bite is active if you know what you're doing. We're in blueback herring country, and let me tell you—if you understand how herring lakes fish, you've got a major advantage over other anglers.
Bass in these waters absolutely prefer bluebacks over shad or bluegill when they've got the choice. These fish are moving fast and aggressive, which means you need to match that energy. Forget slow presentations. You want bigger baits like Zoom Super Flukes and walking topwaters—think Heddon Super Spook or Lucky Craft Gunfish. Work them fast, real fast. Don't worry if they're not doing exactly what they're supposed to do. Sometimes it's just about making a big, skipping bait that triggers a strike.
For bait anglers, live herring when you can get 'em is outstanding. If conditions turn cold and fish go shallow or deep, a weighted Fluke on a Fish Head Spin combo is your ticket, just like it was during that cold Bassmaster Classic on Lake Hartwell.
For hot spots, hit the deeper ditches and drop-offs around 30 to 35 feet where bass suspend, especially if it stays chilly. Also scout any offshore humps or brushpiles—bass love stacking on those structures when herring are in the system.
Thanks for tuning in! Make sure to subscribe for your daily fishing reports and tight lines out there.
This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease.ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI