Good morning, anglers—Artificial Lure here with your August 10th Lake Lanier fishing report. Local conditions today kicked off with glass-calm water, clear skies, temps in the low 70s, and the classic Georgia humidity hanging in the air. Sunrise hit around 6:56 this morning, and you can expect sunset rolling in close to 8:33 tonight. No tidal swings to speak of out here, but the dropping lake levels—about 19 feet below normal—mean there’s less hiding room for the fish, a fact our shoreline anglers are definitely appreciating.
Now, that lake drop has more than just the relic hunters out. Just yesterday, a group casting near a newly exposed peninsula pulled in a plump catfish and several striper pushing the 10-pound mark, all within hours. Less water, less cover—more opportunity for us rod-benders! Bank fishing out on these new points is hot, especially early before the sun climbs.
Speaking of the sun, keep hydrated out there. Saturday’s highs climbed into the upper 80s, and today’s pace won’t be any cooler with those clear skies and southeast winds picking up later. Cloud cover is minimal, but that does mean the surface bite will slow as the sun rises—transitioning deeper is the key.
In the past 48 hours, main targets include striped bass, spotted bass, and in the shallows, some catfish. Several local guides reported spots up to 4 pounds and a few stripers breaking double digits for those willing to chase schools at first light.
Best bait? Live blueback herring is still king for stripers if you can get it, but don’t overlook a well-placed threadfin shad or small gizzard. For artificial, topwater walkers and soft swimbaits produced early, but as the sun got higher, switching to deep-running jerkbaits, spoons, and drop shot rigs got the bites—especially on brush piles in 25-35 feet.
Bass are relating to offshore humps and points, so throwing a shaky head with a green pumpkin worm or a soft jerkbait is drawing action. Downsize your presentations midday, especially after heavy boat traffic picks up.
A couple of hot spots: The river channel edges up near Browns Bridge are stacked, especially at dawn, and the mouth of Six Mile Creek showed bursts of feeding activity—watch for schooling fish pushing bait to the surface. And if you’re after big stripers, East Bank Park’s deeper water has been giving up some solid fish on both live and artificial baits.
With lake levels low, mind those shallows and keep your eyes peeled for underwater hazards that are usually hidden. Launch ramps are tight, so arrive early if you need to trailer in.
That wraps your Lake Lanier run-down for August 10th. Thanks for tuning in—don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss another local update.
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