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Savannah River Fishing Report: Shad Spawn Sparks Aggressive Bass Bite
Published 3 months, 1 week ago
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# Artificial Lure's Savannah River Fishing Report
Well, folks, welcome back to the show. I'm Artificial Lure, and boy, do we have a solid Sunday ahead of us on the Savannah River.
Let's kick things off with the conditions. We're looking at sunrise this morning around 7:15 AM and sunset won't come until roughly 5:15 PM, giving us a solid eight hours of daylight to work with. The marine forecast shows a small craft advisory in effect for the coastal waters, but here's the good news—the river itself should be manageable for those of us who know these waters.
**Tidal Breakdown**
According to tides4fishing.com, we're in a decent tidal window. The low tides are hitting early morning and mid-afternoon, with high tides sandwiching our peak fishing hours. The tidal coefficient is running moderate, so we're not dealing with extreme movements. Pay attention to those main river channel transitions—that's where the fish stage.
**What's Biting**
Tennessee fishing reports show shad migration patterns are absolutely key right now. Target your depth finder and look for bait balls sitting in the 8 to 15-foot zone. We're talking largemouth running solid weights in the upper range. The fall shad spawn has these bass feeding aggressively, especially around current breaks and channel ledges.
**Gear Up Right**
Throw shad-imitation crankbaits and jerkbaits along those current edges. Swim jigs in white and green pumpkin are producing, especially if you're working shallow cover. A-rigs are money this time of year, and don't sleep on lipless cranks over deeper structure. If you want to mix it up, live shiners and jigging minnows are absolutely crushing it in the river channels.
**Local Hotspots**
Head to the main river channel just south of downtown Savannah near Fort Jackson—that's where bait balls are stacking up. The secondary creeks branching off the Skidaway River are also holding quality fish around flooded timber and overhanging structure.
Thanks for tuning in, folks. Make sure you subscribe for your weekly reports. 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
Well, folks, welcome back to the show. I'm Artificial Lure, and boy, do we have a solid Sunday ahead of us on the Savannah River.
Let's kick things off with the conditions. We're looking at sunrise this morning around 7:15 AM and sunset won't come until roughly 5:15 PM, giving us a solid eight hours of daylight to work with. The marine forecast shows a small craft advisory in effect for the coastal waters, but here's the good news—the river itself should be manageable for those of us who know these waters.
**Tidal Breakdown**
According to tides4fishing.com, we're in a decent tidal window. The low tides are hitting early morning and mid-afternoon, with high tides sandwiching our peak fishing hours. The tidal coefficient is running moderate, so we're not dealing with extreme movements. Pay attention to those main river channel transitions—that's where the fish stage.
**What's Biting**
Tennessee fishing reports show shad migration patterns are absolutely key right now. Target your depth finder and look for bait balls sitting in the 8 to 15-foot zone. We're talking largemouth running solid weights in the upper range. The fall shad spawn has these bass feeding aggressively, especially around current breaks and channel ledges.
**Gear Up Right**
Throw shad-imitation crankbaits and jerkbaits along those current edges. Swim jigs in white and green pumpkin are producing, especially if you're working shallow cover. A-rigs are money this time of year, and don't sleep on lipless cranks over deeper structure. If you want to mix it up, live shiners and jigging minnows are absolutely crushing it in the river channels.
**Local Hotspots**
Head to the main river channel just south of downtown Savannah near Fort Jackson—that's where bait balls are stacking up. The secondary creeks branching off the Skidaway River are also holding quality fish around flooded timber and overhanging structure.
Thanks for tuning in, folks. Make sure you subscribe for your weekly reports. 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