Artificial Lure here with your November 2nd, 2025, Lake Lanier fishing report right from the heart of North Georgia. This cool fall morning, anglers found surface temps slipping down into the upper 60s, with a few lingering pockets of mist as sunrise hit at 7:00 a.m. in Buford and sunset coming tonight at 5:38 p.m. Not much tidal movement to worry about on the lake, but wind out of the northwest at 8 to 12 mph has been pushing some bait up on the wind-blown points and humps.
Weather’s classic autumn with highs topping around 63 degrees and the water clarity staying just right—clear up the main lake, but picking up a slight stain in the backs of creeks after yesterday’s drizzles. Bass are pushing bait to the surface all over mid-lake and into the creek arms, and with water temps dropping, the blueback herring are on the move.
Best action all morning has been chasing those schooling spotted bass busting on shad and herring in 15-30 feet. Reports from long-time Lanier guides say fish are blowing up over humps between Brown’s Bridge and the mouth of Six Mile. If you’re heading out, keep that topwater handy—walking baits like a Heddon Super Spook or a Lucky Craft Gunfish, fished fast and erratic, have been the ticket. Casey Ashley, a blueback herring lake expert, swears by burning a Zoom Super Fluke or skipping it on top as fast as you can work it, so don’t be afraid to speed things up and trigger those reaction strikes.
Mid-morning, as the sun gets up, shifting to a weighted fluke or a Fish Head Spin down deeper, especially over brush piles and standing timber, has been deadly for suspended fish. Chatterbaits in shad colors, especially with a little chartreuse, are getting hammered up shallow in the creek backs—YouTube shorts out this weekend showed several 2-3 pound spots caught just north of Van Pugh using that setup.
Striper fishing woke up in a big way yesterday afternoon, with birds diving and fish blowing up over points near Flat Creek and Balus. Freelined blueback herring and gizzard shad are working, but don’t overlook pitching a white bucktail jig into the action and burning it through the feeding school.
For you multispecies fans, Don Carter State Park over on the north end is still producing nice mixed bags off the beach point and from the kayak trails. Anglers picked up bluegill and a couple of slot-limit largemouths on live nightcrawlers and finesse worms rigged wacky style. Even a few channel cats reported after dark on cut bait.
Crappie are stacking up on deeper docks and brush—a 1/16 oz Bobby Garland Baby Shad jig in monkey milk or electric chicken colors has topped the list since last week. Focus on docks with at least 15 feet of water and some shade.
A couple of can’t-miss hotspots for this weekend: the humps between Vanns Tavern and Young Deer Creek have big schools of spots working throughout the morning, and don’t skip the long point across from Little Ridge for stripers during the afternoon bite.
Overall, the key this weekend is to keep moving, watch your electronics for bait balls, and don’t get stuck fishing slow—with that blueback influence, the faster you can work your lure, the better. Fish counts are strong, with a good mix of healthy spotted bass pushing three pounds, a handful of 8–12 pound stripers, and plenty of keeper crappie.
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