Good morning from Lake Lanier—this is Artificial Lure with your local fishing report for Saturday, November 15th, 2025.
First light hit the water at 7:01 AM this morning, and we'll see sunset around 5:31 PM tonight. With the days growing shorter, your best bite will be in those crepuscular windows. The weather’s starting off crisp in the mid-40s, climbing to the low 60s by late afternoon with a gentle northwesterly breeze and clear skies, classic autumn conditions on the Lanier basin.
Now, Lake Lanier doesn’t have tides, but don’t dismiss the bite windows—the major feeding periods today are 7:18 to 9:18 AM and again 7:34 to 9:34 PM, with minor activity around midday according to Fishing Reminder. Those golden hours at dawn and dusk are proving to be the difference between a tough day and a full livewell.
Fish activity is up and angler reports have been hot this week, especially for those seeking **spotted bass**, **striped bass**, and a solid crappie bite. According to the latest updates from Georgia Outdoor News and the Lake Lanier Fishing Report on Spreaker, the fall pattern is now locked in: water temps are holding in the upper 60s and the lake is a little low, currently about 5 feet below summer pool, but clarity is good. Spotted bass are pushing bait onto points, humps, and the mouths of creeks early. College teams were hauling five-bass bags over 17 pounds in recent tournaments, with big spots over 4 pounds weighed in.
Best lures right now for spotted bass? Don’t leave the dock without topwater walkers like the Heddon Super Spook Jr. and soft plastics like a Zoom Super Fluke in shad or herring patterns—work them fast and erratic over points and brush early, then drop to jerkbaits or underspins around mid-morning. According to Major League Fishing, the drop-shot rig, rigged with a 4-6” straight tail worm in natural colors, is putting fish in the net down to 35 feet when things slow up. If you’re on schoolers busting bait, huck a white bucktail or Fish Head Spin. For crappie, the bite is steady on deep brush—shoot docks or vertical jig 1/16 oz. chartreuse or blue/white plastics over 15-25 feet.
If you’re after **stripers**, look for gull activity in the morning around mid-lake, especially near Flat Creek and Two Mile Creek. Herring-imitating plugs and live bluebacks free-lined 15-20 feet behind the boat are a solid bet. Remember, getting on bait balls is the ticket. If you’re trolling, u-rigs in white or chartreuse are pulling doubles near Browns Bridge and Shoal Creek when the sun is up.
Catfish are stacking up deeper by the river channel bends—a dead line with cut bait or crawler chunk should wrangle a few channel cats for the frying pan.
For hot spots, locals are stacking up at the mouths of Young Deer Creek and over on main-lake humps east of the islands near Big Creek. West Bank Park’s rocky points are also firing for bank anglers casting shallow-running cranks early in the morning.
As always, keep a close eye on your electronics—lots of bait suspended mid-depth, and where there's bait, there’ll be predators lurking below.
That’s your Lake Lanier report for this fine fall Saturday. Good luck out there, be safe, and don’t forget to share your catches with us on the next episode. Thanks for tuning in, and remember to subscribe to stay up to date with every local tip—this has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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