Good morning from Lake Lanier—this is Artificial Lure bringing you the latest angling scoop right here in north Georgia on Wednesday, October 29th, 2025. Autumn has fully arrived: the dogwoods are blushing, the air’s got bite, and so do the fish.
Let’s start with the weather. We kicked off today with a brisk chill in the upper 40s and should warm up to the mid to high 60s by afternoon. Skies are mostly sunny, winds out of the northwest at 5 to 10 mph—perfect for targeting those offshore humps and main-lake points. Water temps are hanging in the upper 60s, and clarity is solid across most of the lake. Today’s sunrise was at 7:50 AM, and you’ll have daylight until about 6:49 PM. Lake levels are hovering around 5.3 feet below full pool, so watch those shallows coming out of creek arms.
There’s no tidal swing on Lanier, but bait is moving up with the falling temps and shorter days. According to the Lake Lanier Daily Fishing Report from Spreaker, the autumn bite is hot—schools of blueback herring and threadfin shad are bringing spotted bass, crappie, and stripers up shallow and onto mid-lake humps and pockets.
Bass fishing has been nothing short of excellent, especially for spotted bass. Josh Thompson, as reported by Georgia Outdoor News, says the best action is on rocky points and brush in 18 to 25 feet, but big spots are busting bait right up top at first light and again in the evening. Tournament guys are weighing strong limits. In recent days, anglers have reported double-digit spot catches per trip, some fish topping three pounds.
Crappie are stacking up in brush and docks 10 to 18 feet down, so break out those jigs. Minnows are always money—but small swimbaits and straight-tail plastics are getting love as well. Folks targeting docks have reported 20 to 30 crappie mornings, with the evening bite on fire right before dusk.
Stripers have been schooling hard on the north end—Flat Creek and around Gainesville Marina have produced multiple linesides in the 8- to 15-pound range this week. Pulling live bluebacks early or working a heavy white bucktail under busting birds has been a game-changer. A few nice hybrids have mixed in around Browns Bridge and farther up the Chattahoochee arm.
Top baits right now:
- For spots: White flukes, chrome or bone walking topwaters, underspins with 3-inch paddletails, and shaky heads in green pumpkin.
- For crappie: Drop-shotting minnows or Bobby Garland-style jigs in monkey milk on brush and dock pilings.
- For stripers: 1-ounce bucktails, live herring on freelines, and even spoon-jigging under schools—chase those birds!
A couple hot spots you need to try today:
- Main-lake humps off Six Mile Creek have loaded up with spotted bass—get there early for the surface bite.
- The submerged timber lines around Thompson Bridge have been crazy with both crappie and mixed predators.
- Pulling freelines or light downlines in Little River arm has been producing solid stripers as of sunrise.
If you’re looking to get out, Hammonds Bait and Tackle on Browns Bridge Road’s got the latest live bait and the word from the docks. Don’t forget—safety first with the lower lake levels, and bundle up for those chilly first-light runs.
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