
Lake Lanier Fishing Report: Spots On Fire, Topwater Blitz, and Crappie Bites
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Lake Lanier is sitting just a touch over full pool at about 1.2 feet above 1071, with crystal-clear water across most of the main lake and only a little stain back in the creeks. Surface temps are holding steady in the high 70s, which is ideal for summertime fishing action. Sunrise this morning was at 6:26 AM and you can cast until sunset at 8:47 PM—plenty of light for those early and late golden-hour bites. While Lake Lanier isn’t tidal, those first few hours at dawn and last few at dusk have been pure dynamite for fish activity.
The spotted bass bite is on fire right now. Post-spawn, the spots are schooling up over deeper brush, especially on long main lake points and offshore humps. These fish are running in wolf packs; you’ll see them smashing topwater baits in classic June fashion. Bring your Zara Spook, Gunfish, or Chug Bug—throw them over brushpiles in 20 to 25 feet and hang on. The topwater bite is hard to beat this time of year, and there’s nothing like watching a Lanier spot blow up on your bait. For those favoring a soft jerkbait, the white Zoom Fluke is money—let it sink a bit, then swim it with a pause. On cloudy mornings, white Slick Sticks are hot, and if the sun pops out, swap to chrome. If they won’t rise, drop a Spot Choker jig or a 2.8" Keitech swimbait right into the brush and work it slow on the fall.
For you worm folks, a green pumpkin senko rigged on a shakey head and pitched around rocky points or shallow docks is producing numbers and some size, with several four-pound fish reported this past week. Over in the north end, schooling fish have been showing up shallow—keep a fast-moving topwater like a Gunfish or IMA Skimmer handy for the blitzes.
Crappie are still biting well in 15-25 feet, especially around brush. For panfish or a family outing, bluegill are hitting worms, crickets, and small spinners around docks and downed trees.
Hot spots this week include the mouths of Two Mile Creek and Sardis Creek, where both bass and stripers have been stacking up. For crappie, try the brushpiles off Gainesville Marina or the docks in Balus Creek.
The lake is full, ramps are open, and fishing pressure is up, so move quietly and be courteous. With the water clarity and temps this good, now is the time to get out, beat the heat with a sunrise start, and chase those aggressive summer fish.
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