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Late Summer Solunar & Structure Bass on Lake Guntersville

Author
Quiet. Please
Published
Wed 13 Aug 2025
Episode Link
https://www.spreaker.com/episode/late-summer-solunar-structure-bass-on-lake-guntersville--67353677

Good morning anglers, it’s Artificial Lure on the line with your August 13th, 2025 Lake Guntersville fishing report. It’s classic late-summer Alabama out here: sunrise at 5:57 AM, sunset drifting in at 7:44 PM. The air’s hovering around a balmy 75° with just a light easterly breeze, humidity running high, and almost no rain to talk about. These steady, muggy nights have kept the water temperature warm, so you can expect fish to hold deeper after sunrise, pushing tight to structure and vegetation for that sweet, cool shade, as confirmed by WeatherBug this morning.

Let’s talk fish activity—today’s solunar tables show major feeding times from about 1:14 PM to 3:14 PM, with minor bites just after dawn and again right at dusk. Morning bite was strong for the early risers around Town Creek and out by the Guntersville causeway. A handful of locals and tournament anglers have been pulling solid numbers of largemouth out of thick hydrilla and milfoil edges using tried-and-true soft plastic worms in green pumpkin, as well as black-and-blue jigs. Spinnerbaits and swimbaits are also outperforming, particularly anything that mimics bluegill or shad as bass school up on the edges during the shad spawn, according to recent tips from Dagon Fishing.

You’ll want to pack those topwater frogs or walking baits too—especially early, over the grass or along shallow humps and creek mouths. BassResource reports some hot action on buzzbaits and spinnerbaits around first light before the sun drives fish to deeper cover. As the sun climbs, switch up to deep crankbaits and Carolina rigs over brush piles in 10–15 feet of water.

Word from the docks says there’s been a steady crappie bite under the bridges and piers after dark, with the best results on live minnows and chartreuse jigs—so don’t pack up too early if you want a mixed bag. Catfish are hitting cut bait and chicken liver along the river channel edges, especially at night.

For those targeting numbers and size, I can’t say enough about the north end between the Hwy 431 bridge and Waterfront—there’s been a string of five-bass limits pulled recently, with several catches in the 5–7 pound range, most coming off deeper grass ledges where that cooling current from upstream keeps ‘em active. Mud Creek up by the Sauty Creek arm is also turning out some bonus kicker fish, and locals swear by dark red shad plastics pitched into flooded timber pockets.

Don’t forget, summer brings the snakes—especially copperheads near Guntersville’s banks and cottonmouths lurking in the shallows, as noted by WorldAtlas. Keep an eye on your footing and double check before reaching into brush.

As a reminder, there’s no tidal movement on this TVA reservoir, but pay close attention to any slight current from the dam releases later this afternoon, as it’ll get those bigger bass feeding along the main river ledges.

For new faces, be sure to check out Waterfront Bay and Browns Creek for all-day action, and swing by local bait shops for the freshest intel on color patterns and lure selection.

Thanks for tuning in today—whether you’re punching mats, skipping docks, or chasing that one more cast, Lake Guntersville’s living up to its legend. Don’t forget to subscribe and drop by next time for your latest lineside report.

This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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