Good morning anglers, this is Artificial Lure with your boots-on-the-ground fishing report for Lake Guntersville, Alabama, Wednesday, August 20th, 2025.
Weather’s starting out classic late-summer—by 7:30 AM, we’re already feeling a muggy 75 degrees, and it’ll top out around 90 this afternoon, heavy with humidity and just a touch of a southeast breeze. Skies are mostly cloudy this morning, which is doing us bass chasers a big favor keeping that bite alive a little longer before the sun bakes things out. Sunrise hit at 6:16 AM and sunset’s clocking in at 7:27 PM. No tidal swings to worry about on Guntersville but TVA is keeping water levels pretty stable, so no wild current shifts expected today.
Now, let’s talk fishing action. Reports from folks on Alabama Bass Trail TV and the local regulars say the August grind is real, but patient anglers are still bagging solid limits, especially around main lake grass, docks, and deeper channel ledges. Topwater is still the big thrill right after sunrise, with buzzbaits and frogs throwing up some GIANT blowups over that famous Guntersville hydrilla. If there’s cloud cover hanging in, keep tossing those topwaters longer through the morning—one fella barely moved 200 yards and had multiple 4-to-6 pounders smack a popping frog near Waterfront to Mink Creek.
Once the sun gets high, it’s time to slow down and probe that vegetation edge or fish under docks. Local pros swear by swim jigs and chatterbaits around the thicker stuff, while pitching a black-and-blue jig or a green pumpkin shaky head down deep or near brush piles is producing the more stubborn bites. This week’s catches have had a healthy dose of largemouth up to 7 pounds, decent numbers of 2-3 pounders, and a few good slabs of crappie coming out after sundown on minnows and small jigs off bridge pilings. Redear sunfish and some bull bluegill are packing in tight near the rocks and docks too.
As far as baits go, confidence is high around junebug, watermelon red, and green pumpkin plastics—tried-and-true Texas rig creatures or Senkos worked slow in those holes in the grass have been a consistent ticket. On harder structure and docks, don’t be afraid to reach for a heavier football jig or a wacky rig to trigger those lazy lurkers. And if there’s a little wind, throw a spinnerbait or vibrating jig along the outside grass lines—it’s a good bet for reaction strikes.
A couple of hot spots worth checking today: North Sauty’s main channel ledge is still holding fish—especially during the afternoon major feeding time around 1:15 to 3:15 PM per the solunar tables. The area around Seibold Creek and Honeycomb has also been firing with fish stacking up on grass edges and boat docks, especially early or again near dusk. For night owls, consider bridge riprap—there’s been some sneaky good crappie and bass action after dark.
Plant growth is thick as ever, especially hydrilla and eelgrass in the back ends of the creeks. Duckett Pro Series and TVA both note it’s providing ambush cover, so fish the edges but don’t overlook isolated clumps out off the main channel.
That’s the scoop for Guntersville on this sticky August morning. Appreciate y’all tuning in—be safe, respect your fellow anglers out there, and remember to subscribe so you never miss an update.
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