Guntersville Sizzles with Classic Alabama Bass Action Podcast Por  arte de portada

Guntersville Sizzles with Classic Alabama Bass Action

Guntersville Sizzles with Classic Alabama Bass Action

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Lake Guntersville is coming alive this fine June Sunday, serving up some classic Alabama bass action and enough heat to remind you summer’s fully here. This morning kicked off with a muggy low near 70°F, and we’ll be pushing upper 80s by midday. The skies are sitting heavy with cloud cover, and winds have been light out of the northeast—about 1 mile per hour, so the water’s staying slick and calm. Sunrise was at 5:33 AM, with sunset hitting just after 8:01 PM, giving you plenty of daylight to chase bites across the lake.

Bass fishing has been lights out for numbers, with boats stacking up 40-50 fish days if you’re dialed in. Most are running between one to two-and-a-half pounds, but there’s always a chance at a kicker if you stick with it. The big girls are showing transitional patterns: they’re not fully locked on the ledges yet, but you’ll find them splitting between shallow grass flats and those classic offshore humps. Some days, it’s a grind to fire up a deep school, but that’s part of June in Guntersville—timing is everything. [Guntersville Bass Guides](www.guntersvillebassguides.com) reports that it’s mostly about covering water, checking spots until you find a school ready to eat.

Grass lines and floating mats are still loaded with bait, so don’t be afraid to start shallow—even late in the morning. The best action early has come on weightless trick worms, wacky rigs, and frogs pulled through thin grass and over shallow eelgrass patches. A few locals are still getting reaction strikes with spinnerbaits or swim jigs, especially where brim beds are stacked up along the grass. When the sun climbs and the bite slows up top, switch gears and hit those mid-depths or main river ledges with crankbaits or big football jigs.

There’s consistent crappie action too, with the slabs stacking on deeper brush piles, but bass remains the main draw this week. Catfish are biting well along the channel swings and main lake flats, especially if you soak some cut bait or chicken livers.

Hot spots right now include the Goose Pond area—where shallow grass and scattered eelgrass are holding both numbers and quality bass—and the ledge country from South Sauty down to the causeway, where you’ll find schools grouping up midday if you’re patient and persistent. Don’t overlook boat docks or bridge pilings; there’s always a few decent fish tucked in the shade.

Tidal action isn’t a factor at Guntersville, but pay close attention to current generated by TVA dam releases—it can make or break the bite out deep.

Tight lines out there, y’all. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for daily updates and the inside scoop on what’s working at Lake Guntersville. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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