Lake Guntersville woke up to a muggy Alabama August morning, with temps settling into the mid-70s at dawn and forecast climbing into the upper 80s late day. Humidity’s thick, but a slight north breeze has kept things comfortable, especially on the main channel. Sunrise hit at 6:07 AM local, and anglers that got out early beat any passing thunderheads forecast for late afternoon. Sunset tonight’s 7:47 PM, so there’s a solid window before the evening bite tapers.
No tides here, but water levels at Guntersville have dropped noticeably over the past week. AnglersChannel and Bastards Reunion posted that TVA’s summer drawdown is making navigation trickier, exposing some dangerous rocks and pulling back a bunch of eel grass and milfoil. Most locals are now focusing on isolated weed patches, standing timber, and rocky humps. If you’re running full throttle, watch your depth finder and your speed—boats have had close calls near South Sauty and the mouth of Seibold Creek this week.
The fish are responding to cooler overnight temps—Shane Ellis Fishing reported clients hammering personal bests on largemouth just today, and the spotted bass bite is solid too. Justin Lucas raved about the summer time spotty action: the Magnum Hit Worm in “Mimizu” color on a Neko rig did serious work, especially over deeper ledges and the old creek channels. Most catches are coming by working finesse presentations: drop shots, shaky heads, and wacky rigs around isolated grass and corners of main lake points.
Recent tournament reports on BassinBigG show most bags were anchored by healthy largemouth but the numbers weren’t quite as thick as midsummer’s peak. Average catches ran 3 to 5 pounds for largemouth, with the occasional kicker over seven pounds pulled late in the evening or during overcast spells. Spots mostly 1 to 2 pounds, but action is fast when you find them stacked. Hybrids have been busting shad near the causeway if you’re after something different.
Best baits right now:
- Magnum Hit Worms in dark reds, June bug, or green pumpkin
- Jerkbaits in shad colors for schooling fish at dawn
- Underspins with small swimbaits (especially on those deep, clean rock piles)
- Traditional drop shot with 4-inch finesse worms (morning dawn or watermelon red)
- Live shad and large minnows fished deep are picking up bonus catfish and the occasional accidental crappie
If you’re looking for prime locations, two spots are standing out:
- **Brown’s Creek Bridge:** Early morning has seen big largemouth pushing bait against the pilings, especially when the current picks up after TVA kicks the generators.
- **Goose Pond:** The creek mouth and the point just west of the marina have been loaded with big schools of spots and decent numbers of keeper largemouth, particularly around isolated hydrilla.
Boat traffic will pick up by mid-morning, so plan your run accordingly and dodge the party barges and ski boats. Remember, with the low water, some marked hazards are barely under the surface—especially near South Sauty and the main river channel bends. Slow down, keep an eye out, and spend a bit longer with your graph before committing to a spot.
Thanks for tuning in to today’s Lake Guntersville fishing report. For more local tips and the latest tournament news, be sure to subscribe and don’t miss a single update. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn