Lake Lanier is waking up hot this August morning, with a slight chill in the air from the recent cool snap, but bright, steamy days are still dominating the forecast around north Georgia. Sunrise hit at 6:54 AM and sunset won’t roll in ’til 8:27 PM, so there’s plenty of daylight to get lines wet. No tides in a reservoir, but pay close attention to power generation schedules at Buford Dam – that release current can make or break your afternoon, especially for striped bass and spotted bass action.
With lake temps dipping following last week’s rain, bass have been noticeably on the move – Georgia Outdoor News reported a “drastic drop in water temp has Lake Lanier bass on the move.” That’s true on the water: spotted bass are schooling tight off humps and points, running bait hard from just before dawn through the mid-morning hours[2]. According to locals on Instagram, big spots are coming into the boat, with several anglers celebrating personal bests just yesterday – one post showed a truly impressive spotted bass caught near Browns Bridge[10].
Striped bass are hunting too, especially during water releases. As @extremestripers posted yesterday, “these fish are really eating well during generation times,” with multiple good fish taken just off the river channel ledges up around the mouth of Six Mile and Shoal Creek[6]. Mid-morning turns to a grind, with spots dropping deeper and striper schooling harder beneath the baitfish balls.
If you’re hunting numbers and size, the best bite right now is first light to about 10:00 AM. Drop a Queen Tackle tungsten ball head jig with a Keitech swimbait down around brush piles in 22–28 feet or cast a weightless fluke to surfacing schoolers. If it’s windy, tie on a KVD spinnerbait or a Berkley Choppo for that topwater blow-up – locals are having success burning these baits across main lake points[4][8]. Chatterbaits are also hot this summer, especially over submerged grass and shallows around the islands.
Live bait anglers are finding threadfin shad bringing in numbers of quality stripers, but if you’re sticking to lures, jerkbaits and underspins are pulling big spots suspended off long points. Crappie fishing is fair, mostly at night under lights in the backs of deeper creeks using live minnows.
The Georgia DNR is still running regular trout stockings in the Lanier tailwater below the dam, and August 11 saw another truckload hit the water – so if you need a break from the lake, wade the Chattahoochee below Buford Dam for fresh-stocked rainbows[1].
If you’re looking for hot spots, make sure to check:
- The humps at Vans Tavern: big schools of spots are pushing bait there at sunrise.
- Mouth of Six Mile Creek: strong striper bites reported during afternoon generation.
- Browns Bridge: several anglers have pulled trophy spots near the bridge pilings at dawn[10].
Remember, as the lake warms, those fish will drop deeper after mid-morning, so don’t be afraid to graph around until you see arcs off the bottom – and always keep that topwater handy if the bait gets nervous.
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