
Lake Lanier Fishing Report: Topwater Smackdown for Spotted Bass
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Lake Lanier is currently just a hair above full pool, sitting at about 1.2 feet over 1071, with water temperatures holding steady in the high 70s. The main lake is running clear, but you’ll still find some stain tucked away in the backs of the creeks. Sunrise hit at 6:26 AM and sunset stretches all the way to 8:47 PM, giving you those long windows for early-morning and late-evening topwater action. No tides on Lanier, but make no mistake—these periods are still the ticket for big bites.
The post-spawn spotted bass bite is absolutely electric right now. The fish have bunched up over deep brush piles, especially on main lake long points, humps, and reef markers. These spots are prime: look for brush in the 20–30 foot range, and watch for schooling activity as the bass wolf-pack and push bait up top. This is your cue—throw topwater baits like a Zara Spook, Gunfish, Chug Bug, or a Slick Stick right over the brush and get ready for some adrenaline-charged blow-ups. Pro guides and local anglers report plenty of healthy spots, with more than a few fish topping four pounds hitting the decks this past week, especially during cloudy mornings and wind-swept points.
If the surface bite slows or the sun pops out overhead, switch to a Fluke—white Zoom Flukes have been money this week, especially on a slow and steady retrieve with a pause. On sunny days, chrome Slick Sticks are getting big looks, and for those calm, overcast windows, the bone and white colors shine. If you find the fish hugging the bottom, drop a Spot Choker jig or a Keitech swimbait—just let it fall through the brush and hang on.
For the worm crowd, a green pumpkin senko rigged on a shakey head has been productive around rocky docks and shallow points. Smaller bass are loaded up around docks, but don’t be surprised if a bigger spot cruises by and munches on your worm.
Stripers are pushing up in the water column and taking part in the topwater action as well, so keep that drag set right. Trollers pulling live herring and medium bucktails have also been reporting solid striper hookups around the river channel edges and the mouth of Flat Creek.
Top hot spots this week:
- Main lake points and humps between Browns Bridge and the mouth of Six Mile Creek
- Rocky points around the mouth of Flat Creek
- Offshore brush in front of Two Mile Creek and over the Saddle Dike area
Weather’s stable, with highs in the low 80s and only a stray shower or two in the forecast. The bite should hold strong, especially as skies clear and the lake stays calm.
That’s your June 18 Lanier report—thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure! Don’t forget to subscribe for the latest from your favorite Georgia waters.
This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease dot ai.
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